Let’s be clear: Michael Cohen is a great witness against Donald Trump in the latter’s ongoing Manhattan trial — and a terrible person to rely on for the prosecution’s case. As Trump’s onetime lawyer and “fixer,” Cohen was in the middle of the alleged scheme undergirding the case against the former president. At the same time, he’s also a known liar, having gone to federal prison in 2019 for, among other things, lying to Congress.
As Cohen himself said repeatedly under the people’s questioning, the lies were told in the interest of protecting his client, the man currently on trial.
Trump’s defense lawyer Todd Blanche tried to seize on this discrepancy during cross-examination Tuesday, albeit in a wildly scattershot fashion. “Questioning of Cohen has jumped around between lies, casting Cohen as jilted, as motivated to provide dirt to Trump to get out of prison early, and his podcast attacks,” NBC News’ Laura Jarrett reported from the courtroom over an hour into the cross-examination. “It’s all an effort to say he can’t be trusted, but it’s a sprawling effort.”
Blanche’s scattered efforts aside, this line of attack might work out well for the defense in most cases. After all, if Cohen is the prosecution’s best witness, poking holes in his credibility is an obvious strategy. But there’s just one problem: As Cohen himself said repeatedly under the people’s questioning, the lies were told in the interest of protecting his client, the man currently on trial.
Cohen was sentenced in 2018 after pleading guilty to a number of federal crimes, including, crucially, “causing an unlawful corporate contribution” to a candidate and “making an excessive campaign contribution.” Those two charges are key elements of the current allegations against Trump, who stands accused of falsifying business records to cover up the payments Cohen made to an adult film star ahead of the 2016 election. Cohen was reimbursed for $130,000 for the hush money payments, which were falsely logged as legal fees, after Trump was in office.
As for the charges of lying to Congress, Cohen was brought in to testify on Capitol Hill as part of the Russia investigation in 2017. He falsely told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Trump had no business ties in Russia as of the 2016 primaries, when in fact Cohen was pursuing Russian approval for a Trump Tower in Moscow as late as June that year. He also lied about not traveling to Moscow to pursue that project, when he had done so and suggested that Trump make the trip, as well.
His statements to the Senate committee didn’t match up with what he’d told Robert Mueller, the special counsel leading the Russia investigation. He passed that information on to the FBI, which then seized Cohen’s documents, leading to the charges against him. (It’s worth noting that, unlike on Tuesday, Cohen wasn’t under oath when he lied to Congress — he was accordingly charged under the federal false statements statute, not the federal law governing perjury.)
Cohen was sentenced to three years in prison for the various crimes he’d committed. By this point, he’d fallen out of favor with Trump for his “disloyalty” in pleading guilty and cooperating with law enforcement. Much as was the case Tuesday, at the time of his sentencing he told the judge that his “weakness can be characterized as a blind loyalty to Donald Trump, and I was weak for not having the strength to question and to refuse his demands.”
In 2019, BuzzFeed News published a story claiming that Trump had ordered Cohen to lie to Congress. It prompted a firestorm of drama that prompted the normally tight-lipped Mueller to issue a denial. But in further testimony to a House committee later that year, Cohen gave one of the sharpest views into how Trump operates:








