Former Trump Lawyer Michael Cohen Sentenced to 3 Years in Prison

Cohen said his loyalty to Trump led him "to take a path of darkness"

Michael Cohen, the former longtime personal lawyer of President Donald Trump, was sentenced to three years in federal prison on Wednesday, taking a parting shot at the President after implicating him in hush money payments to two women over alleged affairs with Trump.

“It was my blind loyalty to this man that led me to take a path of darkness instead of light,” Cohen said in court, the Associated Press reported. “I felt it was my duty to cover up his dirty deeds.” Cohen said he had been “living in a personal and mental incarceration” since starting to work for Trump, the New York Times reported.

But U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III said a tough sentence was warranted because “as a lawyer, Mr. Cohen should have known better.”

In August, Cohen pleaded guilty to tax evasion, campaign finance violations and making false financial statements — charges brought by prosecutors in New York’s Southern District. Cohen admitted that he worked at the direction of Trump to pay former Playboy model Karen McDougal and adult film star Stormy Daniels to keep quiet about their alleged affairs with Trump — which Cohen said was an effort to influence the 2016 election.

Daniels’ lawyer, Michael Avenatti, was present for Cohen’s sentencing hearing Wednesday.

Trump — who has denied the affairs and denied that the payments were campaign contributions — has lashed out at Cohen throughout the trial, calling him “a weak person,” accusing him of lying and saying he deserves to “serve a full and complete sentence.”

In a filing on Friday, the federal prosecutors in New York recommended a harsh sentence for Cohen, who requested a sentence for time-served. “Now he seeks extraordinary leniency — a sentence of no jail time — based principally on his rose-colored view of the seriousness of the crimes,” prosecutors wrote. “But the crimes committed by Cohen were more serious than his submission allows and were marked by a pattern of deception that permeated his professional life.”

Prosecutors said Cohen deserved to serve “substantial” prison time, even though he had cooperated with investigators, suggesting a sentence of about three and a half years.

In a separate case, Cohen pleaded guilty last month to lying to Congress in 2017 about the timing and details of his work on a since-abandoned project to build a Trump tower in Russia. Those charges were brought by Special Counsel Robert Mueller as part of his investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

In his own filing on Friday, Mueller recommended that Cohen’s sentence for lying to Congress should be served concurrently with his sentence from the Southern District of New York case, crediting Cohen for providing “credible and consistent” information in cooperation with the Russia investigation.