Stormy Daniels’ lawyer says Russian firm’s US affiliate paid Trump’s attorney $500,000

An attorney for porn star Stormy
Daniels said on Tuesday that US president Donald Trump’s lawyer, Michael
Cohen, was paid $500,000 (€422,000) by
a company with ties to a Russian
oligarch who was hit last month with US sanctions to punish Moscow for
activities that included suspected meddling in the 2016 US election.
In a tweet and a report, Ms
Daniels’ attorney, Michael Avenatti, said a US-based company controlled
by Viktor Vekselberg, a businessman with ties to Russian president
Vladimir Putin, sent Mr Cohen the payment.
It was not immediately clear how
Mr Avenatti would know of any payments made to Mr Cohen. Ms Daniels,
whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, has said Mr Cohen paid her
$130,000 in October 2016 to stay quiet about a 2006 sexual encounter she
had with Mr Trump.
Neither Mr Avenatti nor Mr Cohen responded to requests from Reuters for comment.
The disclosures could add to
pressure on Mr Cohen, whose house, office and hotel room were raided by
the FBI a month ago as part of a criminal investigation into the hush
payment and other business dealings.
MR Avenatti said Mr Vekselberg and
his cousin, Andrew Intrater, made eight transfers to Mr Cohen between
January and August 2017 through a US-based company called Columbus Nova
LLC for a total of $500,000.
A lawyer for Columbus Nova said Mr Vekselberg had nothing to do with the transactions.
Columbus Nova was listed by Renova
Group as one of its companies as of November 2017, according to an
archived webpage for Renova, whose website now says it is under
construction. Renova Group is a conglomerate controlled by Mr
Vekselberg.
The United States imposed
sanctions last month on Mr Vekselberg and Renova to retaliate for the
Kremlin’s suspected meddling in the 2016 US election and other “malign
activity.”
The New York Times reported last
week that Mr Vekselberg was questioned by US agents this year as part of
special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian
interference and possible collusion by Donald Trump’s campaign.
Russia denies US intelligence
agencies’ accusations it meddled in the election, and Mr Trump has
denied any collusion. He also denies having had an affair with Ms
Daniels.
Mr Vekselberg and Intrater could
not be reached for comment, but Richard Owens, a lawyer for Columbus
Nova, said in a statement the company hired Mr Cohen after Trump’s
January 2017 inauguration “as a business consultant regarding sources of
capital and potential investments in real estate and other ventures.”
Mr Owens said Columbus Nova was
solely owned by Americans and that any claim that Mr Vekselberg was
involved in providing funding for the payments to Cohen was “patently
untrue.”
Mr Avenatti also detailed payments
he said were made to Cohen by US telecommunications company AT&T,
Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG and Korea Aerospace Industries Ltd . He said
all the payments were made in late 2017 and early 2018.
“There are too many unknowns to
reach conclusions as to whether anything involved with these
transactions was illegal,” said Michael Zeldin, a money-laundering
expert and former federal prosecutor who is now a legal analyst on CNN.
AT&T confirmed the payments,
saying they were aimed at gaining “insights” into the new
administration. AT&T has been pursuing an $85 billion takeover of
Time Warner Inc, which the US Justice Department is trying to stop.
Mr Avenatti also said he
discovered four payments of just under $100,000 each by Novartis to
Essential Consultants, the same company used by Cohen to make payments
to Daniels.
A Novartis representative said:
“Any agreements with Essential Consultants were entered before our
current CEO taking office in February of this year and have expired.”
AT&T said Essential
Consultants was one of several firms it “engaged in early 2017 to
provide insights into understanding the new administration” but that it
received no legal or lobbying services from Mr Cohen’s firm.
AT&T said the contract ended in December 2017.
A spokesman for Korea Aerospace
Industries said the company had signed a contract with Essential
Consultants last year for legal consulting concerning accounting
standards on production costs, and upon the expiration of the contract,
made a payment in November. - Reuters
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