Democrats are moving fast to investigate leads given to them by Michael Cohen, whose bombshell congressional testimony this week exposed President Trump and his family business to a crush of new legal threats. The bottom line: If Cohen mentioned your name at the hearing on Wednesday, you can probably expect a phone call from Democrats on Capitol Hill. That list includes: - Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg
- Trump Organization assistant Rhona Graff
- Trump's longtime bodyguard Matthew Calamari
- Trump attorney Jay Sekulow
- National Enquirer publisher David Pecker
- Trump business associate Felix Sater
- Trump's son Donald Trump Jr.
- Trump's daughter Ivanka Trump
- Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner
"They have a good chance of hearing from us." — House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) Cohen on Wednesday accused the president of a range of crimes, including bank fraud, tax fraud and campaign finance violations. Trump's former "fixer" repeatedly referred to Weisselberg, a top executive at the Trump Organization for decades, as the key to unlocking allegations of financial misconduct against the president. Weisselberg has an immunity deal with prosecutors at the Southern District of New York, who are said to be investigating Trump and his business empire. Jacqueline Thomsen reports that the House Intelligence Committee, led by Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), will seek an interview with Weisselberg soon (The Hill). Sater will appear before the committee for public testimony later this month. The Hill: Weisselberg emerges as key person of interest. The New York Times: Trump's money man could face scrutiny next. The Washington Post: House Democrats see new probes in Cohen testimony. Meanwhile, House Financial Services Committee Chairwoman Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) is ramping up an investigation into the now-defunct Trump Foundation after Cohen alleged the nonprofit was used to avoid taxes. Trump shuttered the charity last year after the attorney general in New York brought a lawsuit alleging a "shocking pattern of illegality." Waters is also seeking documents from Deutsche Bank, where the president conducts business. "We should be seeing what we can unveil about his finances and about his taxes and the crime that is being committed or has been committed because of the way that he has handled and managed money." — Waters Cohen, who spent a third day giving testimony before Congress on Thursday, will return next week for a follow-up interview with the House Intelligence Committee. Reuters: Cohen "fully cooperative" in third day of questioning. The Hill: House Intel interrogates Cohen for eight hours. The gripping testimony from Trump's former lawyer was a hit among Democrats and a bona fide juggernaut on the airwaves. The Hollywood Reporter: The Cohen hearing drew an audience of 13.5 million viewers, and final ratings reported Friday will be higher, according to Nielsen figures. It was the most-watched programming on Wednesday, but it drew a smaller audience than for the Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court confirmation hearing (20 million), and it had fewer viewers than former FBI Director James Comey's congressional testimony in 2017 (19.5 million). Of course, Cohen may also find himself in additional legal trouble. Reps. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), two of the president's fiercest defenders on the Oversight committee, referred Cohen to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution for perjury. Cohen has already pleaded guilty to lying to Congress once. He will begin a three-year prison sentence in May for that offense and several others. But the Republicans outlined a handful of instances where they say Cohen deliberately lied to Congress, including his insistence that he never sought a job at the White House. Media outlets, investigators and GOP insiders say Cohen pleaded for a top legal job within the administration. In an interview last night with Fox News Channel host Sean Hannity, Trump blamed Cohen for the payments to two women to stay silent about affairs they say they had with the president. Trump said Cohen told him "a dozen times that he made the decision on the payments." "He made the decision. And remember this, he is an attorney. Whatever decision he makes you are supposed to rely on the attorney to make a decision." — Trump Still, Democrats bought wholesale into Cohen's testimony, which reignited chatter in the House about impeaching Trump. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is working overtime to squash the idea (The Hill). Alan Dershowitz: Cohen helped and hurt Trump. Jonathan Turley: Cohen gives Congress a roadmap for collateral damage. © Getty Images
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