Ex-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen taken back into federal custody

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Thursday, July 9, 2020
Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen taken back into federal custody
President Donald Trump's former personal lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, was returned to federal prison, weeks after his early release to serve the remainder of his sentence at home.

WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump's former personal lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, was returned to federal prison, weeks after his early release to serve the remainder of his sentence at home because of the coronavirus pandemic, the federal Bureau of Prisons said Thursday.

Cohen was taken to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn after the Bureau of Prisons said he "refused the conditions of his home confinement."

His return to prison comes days after the New York Post published photos of him and his wife enjoying an outdoor meal with friends at a restaurant near his Manhattan home.

Defense attorney Jeffrey Levine said the decision left Cohen "shaken."

"The rug had been pulled out from underneath," Levine said. "This is not what we came here to do today. We came here to work out the terms and conditions of his home confinement."

Levine said Cohen had objected to an effective gag order the Bureau of Prisons wanted to impose.

"And BOP just didn't want to have anything to do with working any language out," Levine said.

According to a source familiar with the events, Cohen appeared with his attorney without any hint of a problem. Until, that is, he read, "No engagement of any kind with the media, including print, TV, film, books, or other form of media/news. Prohibition from all social media platforms, no posting on social media."

According to the source, Cohen said he had a problem with the language and said, "Let's work this out" before he was told to enter a waiting room.

Nobody ever got back to him.

"The next thing we knew, 90 minutes later, the marshals are coming with the shackles," the source said.

Cohen has a book deal, and the book is coming out regardless of whether he's in prison. The source said Cohen did not want to relinquish the right to publish just because he was on home confinement.

Cohen, who pleaded guilty to tax evasion, campaign finance fraud and lying to Congress, had been released May 21 on furlough as part of an attempt to slow the spread of the virus in federal prisons. Cohen, 53, began serving his sentence in May 2019 and had been scheduled to remain in prison until November 2021.

Cohen's convictions were related to crimes including dodging taxes on $4 million in income from his taxi business, lying during congressional testimony about the timing of discussions around an abandoned plan to build a Trump Tower in Russia, and orchestrating payments to two women to keep them from talking publicly about alleged affairs with Trump. Prosecutors said the payments amounted to illegal campaign contributions. Trump, who denied the affairs, said any payments were a personal matter.

Cohen was once one of Trump's closest advisors but became a loud critic after pleading guilty.

A federal judge had denied Cohen's attempt for an early release to home confinement after serving 10 months in prison and said in a May ruling that it "appears to be just another effort to inject himself into the news cycle." But the Bureau of Prisons can move prisoners to home confinement without a judicial order.

Prison advocates and congressional leaders had pressed the Justice Department to release at-risk inmates, arguing that the public health guidance to stay 6 feet away from other people is nearly impossible behind bars.

Attorney General William Barr ordered the Bureau of Prisons to increase the use of home confinement and expedite the release of eligible high-risk inmates, beginning at three prisons identified as coronavirus hot spots. Otisville, where Cohen was housed, was not one of those facilities.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report)

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