ed note–The fact that Judea, Inc was/is willing to risk all the probable blowback amongst Trump’s supporters by choosing Michael COHEN as the designated Judas Iscariot says a lot about the kind of machinations at work here. They want it known by Trump, Inc–as well as any other political leaders who might have similar aspirations–that it was/is the Jews who are out to destroy him and that they are even willing to risk the liability of putting a Jew out there FRONT AND CENTER as the turncoat, risking in the process what is sure to be a rekindling of all the time-proven charges of treachery and untrustworthyness on the part of Yahweh’s chosenites.

Nor should we underplay the obvious reference of Cohen as ‘Judas’ in the piece, something that normally riles up Jewry like no other, as well as the reference to the assassination of Julius Caesar with the lines ‘Et, Tu, Cohen?’, lifted right from Shakespeare’s famous play and the kinds of deep state/deep level conspiracy and intrigue that is at work in all of this.

Times of Israel

Michael Cohen’s transformation from loyal retainer promising to take a bullet for Donald Trump to Judas spotlights the strong arm of the US law and how determined the president’s former attorney is to limit his time in prison.

For more than a decade, Cohen was Trump’s personal lawyer and fixer, privy to multi-million-dollar deals and two purported secret lovers, whose claims could have potentially sabotaged his boss’s 2016 election.

Then Cohen hung Trump out to dry, sensationally testifying under oath in a federal court that the president directed him to break campaign finance law, while pleading guilty to bank and tax fraud.

As if referencing the enormity of his predicament, Cohen told the judge that the previous night at dinner he had indulged in a Glenlivet 12 on the rocks despite the Scotch not being his usual meal-time tipple.

Publicly Trump has denied doing anything wrong and mocked his former aide. Michael “The Rat” Cohen is how one person close to the president privately described him, a CNN journalist has reported.

So what next?

Implicating the billionaire commander-in-chief in a federal crime was a stunning move from a close former ally, signalling a willingness to cooperate with prosecutors and potentially lower his prison term, experts say.

“A good prosecution is like rolling out a good tube of toothpaste,” says Mitchell Epner, a former federal prosecutor turned criminal defense lawyer at New York firm Rottenberg Lipman Rich. “You get every bit out,” he told AFP.

Asset in Russia investigation?

In the US justice system, those who cooperate can substantially reduce their sentence. Cohen is already facing four to five years behind bars. Epner said serving up substantial dirt could reduce that to as little as probation.

“I think the larger question is does he (Cohen) somehow pivot,” says Diane Marie Amann, law professor at the University of Georgia, and become part of the probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election.

“That seems highly likely,” she added.

Cohen’s lawyer Lanny Davis told CBS News that his client had information about election tampering efforts during the 2016 campaign that would be “of interest to the special counsel.”

“Speaking publicly is a way to message to many different people what further damage Mr. Cohen may wreak against the president and his associates,” Amann told AFP when asked about Cohen’s possible strategy going forward.

“It may change the political climate in certain ways.”

Cohen’s plea deal does not obligate him to cooperate, but neither does it preclude cooperation. “He did not have to implicate anyone else,” said Lisa Kern Griffin, a law professor at Duke University.

“It certainly suggests a commitment to cooperate.”

So why did he do it?

What else does he have?

Even if Cohen wanted to tough it out, hoping the president would eventually pardon him, going to trial would have likely cost millions, with no indication that the Trump Organization would have picked up the tab.

Cohen’s relationship with his former boss steadily deteriorated.

Trump left the one-time personal injury lawyer for dust after moving to Washington. After news broke he was under federal investigation, the president washed his hands of Cohen, saying it had nothing to do with him.

No doubt that sounded like a betrayal to the ex-Trump Organization executive vice president, who may have been dreaming of a White House job himself.

In July, Cohen reportedly told investigators that the US president knew in advance of a June 2016 meeting in which Russians were expected to share dirt on his then-election rival Hillary Clinton, directly contradicting Trump denials.

But does Cohen have evidence to back up any claims against Trump? His credibility is shot to shreds, both as a felon and by a history of ducking, diving and lying repeatedly.

“The big question is what else does he have?” said Epner. “If the only thing he has to offer is his testimony it’s not worth a lot.”

FBI agents raided Cohen’s New York offices in April, seizing reams of documents that the lawyer could potentially authenticate and shed light on.

For the moment, Cohen’s sentencing date has been set for December 12. If that is pushed back, it will be a tell-tale sign that he is cooperating further.

3 thoughts on “Et tu, Cohen? Ex-aide could be tip of Trump iceberg”
  1. I’m sure Mossad agents have Cohen back. They probably told him that he and his family will get an all expense paid relocation to Tel Aviv, once this all is over with

  2. I think this ultimately won’t amount to a hill of beans. In fact, if Cohen had been smart, he’d have shut his mouth and not cooperated at all. Falling on his sword would’ve been the manly thing to do (since we can safely assume, as a lawyer, he can’t be naive to how things work in the world) but these people are not manly. They’re weasels.

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