President Donald Trump is considering firing of deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein – and made moves to fire special counsel Robert Mueller late last year following reports of a subpoena of his financial records.
The president lashed out privately about Rosenstein, who he blames for approving the warrant application that allowed FBI officials to raid Cohen's office, home and hotel room.
CNN reported Trump is considering firing Rosenstein, who oversees the Mueller probe thanks to Attorney General Jeff Sessions's recusal. The report called Rosenstein Trump's most likely target, although firing Sessions is also a possibility. It cited people familiar with the discussions.
Advisors believe Rosenstein crossed a 'red line' by signing off on the Cohen raid – an action that reportedly included targeting documents relating to a porn star and a former Playboy model who each got payoffs and have claim they had affairs with Trump and signed nondisclosure agreements.
At two different periods Trump was prepared to make moves against Mueller, the New York Times reported.
Michael Cohen, a personal attorney for President Trump, had his hotel room and office both raided by the FBI acting on the instructions of the deputy attorney general. He was exclusively photographed by DailyMail.com entering the Loews Hotel on Park Avenue in Manhattan where his room was raided
In December, Trump was angered by reports of subpoenas of his financial records at Deutsche Bank. Initial media reports that the subpoenas were focused on him were walked back, and the president cooled.
Trump's own lawyers were later to learn that the subpoena related to a different federal inquiry into family finances of his son in law Jared Kushner, according to the account. After media clarifications, Trump dropped his push to get rid of Mueller.
Trump also tried to get rid of Mueller back in June, when White House counsel Don McGahn reportedly threatened to quit over it and the president backed off.
The White House said Tuesday Trump believes the FBI should never have raided his attorney's office on Monday in a hunt for documents about hush money paid to women who say they bedded the married president in the past.
Behind closed doors, President Trump (left) is fuming over Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein's (right) decision to sign off on a warrant of Trump's personal lawyer Michael Cohen's office, home and hotel room
'I think that the president has been clear that he thinks this that has gone too far,' press secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters during an afternoon briefing.
'The president has voiced his frustration about the situation,' she added.
Porn star Stormy Daniels is cooperating with prosecutors, NBC reported.
Trump vented Monday evening, saying a 'witch hunt' had been 'going on for over 12 months now – and actually ... you could say it was right after I won the nomination, it started.'
He called the evolving criminal probe 'a real disgrace' and 'an attack on our country, in a true sense. It's an attack on what we all stand for.'
'This is the president you're going to see more of from here on out: unvarnished, untethered,' one White House inside told Axios, as the Washington Post reported that Trump 'stewed' over Rosenstein's role in the raid, 'at times raising his voice.'
During these outbursts, Trump fumed that he wished Rosenstein was not in the job, and that no one was making prosecutors follow the rules, a Trump adviser told the Post.The New York Times later reported that it was indeed Rosenstein who signed off on asking a judge for the no-knock warrant.
Trump also contemplated firing Rosenstein, sources told the Times, as the newspaper described the episode as being 'deeply upsetting' to White House staff, officials at the Justice Department and lawmakers from both political parties.
On Tuesday, CNN reported Democratic senators were huddling and discussing what steps to take if Trump decided to show Rosenstein the door.
In public, Trump didn't go that far, as he first brought up Rosenstein in the context of his controversial decision to fire former FBI Director James Comey, pointing out to reporters that Rosenstein supported Comey's firing too.
'Deputy Rosenstein – Rod Rosenstein – he wrote the letter, very critical, of Comey,' Trump pointed out.
Trump then pointed out that Rosenstein had 'signed the FISA warrant,' referring to the warrant used to spy on the president's campaign associate Carter Page.
'So Rod Rosenstein, who's in charge of this, signed a FISA warrant, and he also signed a letter that was essentially saying to fire James Comey,' Trump said. 'And he was right about that. He was absolutely right.' So we'll see what happens,' the president added in a meeting with military advisers that was supposed to be about the strategy going forward in Syria after a reported chemical weapons attack.
'I think it's disgraceful, and so does a lot of people,' Trump said of the Cohen raid.
Trump circled back and again blamed Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who stepped away from all Russian-related matters because he had worked on Trump's presidential campaign.
'The attorney general made a terrible mistake when he did this, and when he recused himself,' Trump said. 'Or he should have certainly let us know if he was going to recuse himself, and we would have used a – put a different attorney general in.'
'So he made what I consider to be a very terrible mistake for our country,' Trump continued. 'But you'll figure that out.'
The FBI's warrant to raid President Trump's attorney Michael Cohen's spaces included documents related to hush money payments given to Stormy Daniels (left) and former Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal (right)
The FBI agents were looking for records about payments to two women who had alleged affairs with President Trump – porn star Stormy Daniels and ex-Playmate Karen McDougal.
Sources told the New York Times that investigators were interested in the role the publisher of the National Enquirer played in silencing McDougal with a $150,000 payment made by the parent company of the tabloid, American Media Inc.
Cohen, a longtime fixer for the president, has already said publicly that he paid $130,000 in hush money to Daniels in exchange for her signature on a non-disclosure agreement just weeks shy of the 2016 presidential election.
Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, has said she had a one-night stand with Trump in 2006, while McDougal alleged that she and the then-businessman had a year-long affair.
The raids on Cohen's office, home and hotel room have rocked Washington and infuriated President Trump, who has lashed out at a number of top officials, including the special counsel, federal investigators and his own attorney general.
FBI agents swooped in on the offices of Cohen on Monday – seizing a trove of documents – and whisked off the lawyer's phone, personal computer and bank records.
Cohen is now being investigated for both possible bank fraud and campaign finance violations.
This indicates that Cohen is being investigated for using a home equity line to borrow the $130,000 he paid porn star Stormy Daniels, according to Politico.
If Cohen did in fact lie to obtain credit from a 'federally insured financial institution', he could be charged with a felony punishable by up to 30 years in prison.
And if the payment is found to be an 'in-kind contribution' to Trump's campaign, as it came just days before the election, Cohen could be facing a second felony.
Violating campaign contribution limits is punishable by up to five years in prison.
Hours later at the White House, flanked by cabinet members who were there to discuss how to respond to a chemical weapons attack in Syria, Trump raged: 'They raid an office of a personal attorney early in the morning and I think it's a disgrace.'
Trump called it 'an attack on our country and what we all stand for'.
He said agents 'broke into' Cohen's Manhattan office, although the search warrants were perfectly legal.
Trump had been meeting senior military leaders and members of his national security team - including (right) his new national security advisor John Bolton - when he launched his angry tirade against the Mueller raid
Cohen had been living at the Loews Regency on Park Avenue, close to Trump Tower, and had FBI agents raid his room there on Monday morning
Cohen's offices are in 30 Rockefeller Plaza, which is also home to many of NBC's most high-profile shows including The Today Show, Nightly News and Saturday Night Live
The president also called Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigators 'the most conflicted group of people I have ever seen.'
'This is the most biased group of people. These people have the biggest conflicts of interest I've ever seen. Democrats all, just about all,' Trump said, although Mueller himself is a Republican.
Trump also went after Attorney General Jeff Sessions – whose decision to recuse himself set in motion events that led to the appointment of Mueller by deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein, who is revealed to have permitted the raid after hearing from Mueller.
'They continue to just go forward and here we are talking about Syria, we're talking about a lot of serious things ... and I have this witch hunt constantly going on for over 12 months now. Actually it's much more than that. You could say right after I won the nomination it started
Trump after raid on his attorney
'He should have certainly let us know if he was going to recuse himself and we would have put a different attorney general in,' said Trump, revising a longtime anger at the situation.
His admission that he would have replaced Sessions to head off the recusal could figure in Mueller's ongoing effort to establish obstruction of justice.
Trump continued to tout Mueller's failure to charge Trump or anyone on his team of colluding with the Russians, even as the probe continues to bring in members of his inner circle on other matters.
'They found no collusion whatsoever with Russia,' said Trump, seated in front of national security adviser John Bolton, experiencing his first day on the job.
Trump's remarks then meandered into territory explored by the Republican-led House Intelligence Committee and the early days of the Russia investigation.
They also dwelled on Rosenstein – a pivotal figure whose removal might be necessary in order to engineer Mueller's ouster.
Continuing to go after Rosenstein, Trump said: 'But it turns out he also signed the FISA warrant - Rod Rosenstein who's in charge also signed the FISA warrant and he also signed a letter that was essentially saying to fire James Comey and he was right about that. He was absolutely right about that.'
'This is a pure and simple witch hunt,' Trump said.
Those close to Trump said that Cohen's looming troubles has struck the president far harder than those of former campaign aides Paul Manafort and Michael Flynn.
One person went so far to say that Cohen was 'the closest person to Trump that I have ever met who is not family', they told CNN.
Trump decided on his own to directly address the FBI raid during the Syria meeting.
It all goes back to this: Daniels claims she and Trump had an affair in 2006. She took a $130,000 payment from Cohen in return for signing a gag order just before the election. That appears to now be at the center of a federal probe
'You can see how angry he is,' one White House official said.
Trump also repeatedly sought to cast the probe as a hindrance to his ability to conduct his office, complaining that he was trying to plan to counter a chemical weapons attack in Syria.
And he called on Justice Department investigators to focus on 'crimes' on the 'other side' – meaning Democrats and the Hillary Clinton camp.
'It's a disgraceful situation. It's a total witch hunt. I've been saying it for a long time. I've wanted to keep it down. I've given over a million pages in documents to the special counsel,' he said.
'They continue to just go forward and here we are talking about Syria, we're talking about a lot of serious things...and I have this witch hunt constantly going on for over 12 months now. Actually it's much more than that. You could say right after I won the nomination it started.'
'When I saw this, when I heard about it, that is a whole new level of unfairness.'
Trump even blamed investigators allowed a raid on his attorney's office for spoiling what could have been an up day on the stock market.
'The stock market dropped a lot today as soon as they heard the noise you know of this nonsense that was going on. It dropped a lot,' Trump complained.
'It was up - it was way up. It dropped quite a bit at the end. That we have to go through that. We've had that hanging over us from the very, very beginning. And yet the other side they're not even looking.'
'And the other side is where there are crimes and those crimes are obvious - lies under oath all over the place, emails that are knocked out, that are acid washed and deleted, 33,000 emails were deleted after getting a subpoena from Congress. And nobody bothers looking at that,' Trump ranted.
Cohen's lawyer claims the referral came from special counsel Robert Mueller's office
The raid prompted a furious response from Cohen's own attorney, who said that 'privileged communications' had been seized.
'Today the US Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York executed a series of search warrants and seized the privileged communications between my client, Michael Cohen, and his clients,' said Stephen Ryan.
'I have been advised by federal prosecutors that the New York action is, in part, a referral by the Office of Special Counsel, Robert Mueller,' he said.
'The decision by the US Attorney's Office in New York to conduct their investigation using search warrants is completely inappropriate and unnecessary.
'It resulted in the unnecessary seizure of protected attorney client communications between a lawyer and his clients.'
Mueller is overseeing the probe of contacts between Russians and the Trump campaign.
Daniels is suing to have a nondisclosure agreement she and Cohen signed whereby she agreed not to disclose any details of a relationship with Trump.
Cohen says he made the payment with his own funds and without Trump's knowledge.
Bank records have revealed he set up a Delaware LLC called Essential Solutions just weeks before the payment was made to Daniels from the LLC.
The LLC was set up on October 17, 2016, the same day that Daniels' manager Gina Rodriguez was reportedly trying to sell the porn star's story to the media.
Some 10 days later, Essential Solutions paid Daniels $130,000 after she signed an agreement not to talk about Trump.
The agreement used pseudonyms — David Dennison for Trump and Peggy Peterson for Daniels.
Agents seized tax documents and business records as they raided the Loews Regency hotel on Park Avenue where Cohen had been staying, and his office in 30 Rockefeller Plaza, just above NBC's studios.
The raid comes just days after Trump made his first comments on the porn star aboard Air Force One Thursday – and denied any advance knowledge of the payment that appeared to benefit him and his campaign just days before the 2016 election.
Asked if he knew about the payment, the president said 'No.'
The actress Stephanie Clifford, who uses the stage name Stormy Daniels, performs at the Solid Gold Fort Lauderdale strip club on March 9, 2018 in Pompano Beach, Florida
Asked why Cohen made the payment, Trump said: 'Michael is my attorney. You'll have to ask Michael.'
Then, asked by reporters on Air Force One if he knew where the money came from, Trump said: 'No, I don't know.'
Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, is suing for relief from a non-disclosure agreement that her lawyer claims is null and invalid.
Daniels' lawyer, Michael Avenatti, has been keeping the story in the news, now claiming he has a forensic sketch of a man who threatened her to keep quiet in 2011.
Avenatti said Cohen 'has been placed in the crosshairs by Mr Trump. He has been set up to take the fall.'
He also filed court papers Sunday to try to force Trump to answer questions about the agreement.
Avenatti is seeking a jury trial and wants sworn testimony from Trump and Cohen about the payment made to Daniels days before the 2016 presidential election as part of a nondisclosure agreement she is seeking to invalidate.
Michael Avenatti tweeted the photo on Sunday of Stormy Daniels with Lois Gibson, who he referred to as 'the foremost forensic artist in the world''We're going to be releasing that tomorrow along with a significant reward asking that the public come forward,' Avenatti told CNN on Monday. 'We are very close to identifying this individual.'
He predicted that identifying the man his client says threatened her in a Las Vegas parking lot will ' tighten the noose, if you will.'
The threat 'could only have come from one of three places,' he said confidently.
'My client, which means she threatened herself, which makes no sense; In Touch magazine, which makes no sense because why would they threaten my client relating to the publication of an interview in their own magazine?; or someone associated with Trump or the Trump Organization.'
He (Trump) was like, 'Wow, you-- you are special. You remind me of my daughter.' You know-- he was like, 'You're smart and beautiful, and a woman to be reckoned with, and I like you. I like you.'
Daniels on the night she 'had sex' with Trump in 2006
Daniels said in a Los Angeles court filing she always thought Trump was a party to the deal.
'Such an agreement would not have made sense for many reasons,' she said in the filing.
'It was my understanding that Donald Trump was a party to the Settlement Agreement and that he was going to sign both documents,' Daniels said.
Her lawyer is trying to establish a basis for questioning Trump about the deal, even though he is not a signatory.
Beyond Cohen's attorney's statement, it is not clear what the overall objective of the search was.
Cohen appears in the infamous Steele Dossier of unverified information about President Trump and ties between his associates and Russia.
He is suing Buzzfeed for publishing the document.
Even if Stormy Documents got scooped up, it is possible warrants were seeking information of another variety.
Cohen was in contact for the Trump Organization with Russian-American businessman Felix Sater in 2015 about a proposed Trump Tower Moscow.
'Our boy can become president of the USA and we can engineer it,' Sater wrote.
Mueller is probing an array of contacts between Trump associates and Russians.
Trump has said repeatedly there was 'no collusion.'
The White House declined to comment on the raid when asked about it.
Watchdog group Common Cause has filed a complaint with the Federal Elections Commission arguing that the payments to Daniels constitute a possible violation of campaign finance laws.
Paul Ryan of Common Cause told USA Today: 'I'm happy to see the DOJ is doing its job. Donald Trump said he knew nothing about the payment to Stormy Daniels. The FBI will now quickly get to the bottom of whether Trump lied to the American people when he said no knowledge about Michael Cohen's payment to Stormy Daniels,' he said.
Cohen also hand-delivered a so-called peace plan for Russia and Ukraine that would have lifted sanctions on Russia to fired national security advisor Michael Flynn, according to a Times report on the February delivery of a sealed plan.
Cohen delivered it a week before Flynn resigned.
The raid on Trump's longtime consigliere and latest twist in the Russia probe comes as Trump called out Russian President Vladimir Putin on Twitter by name for the first time following a suspected chemical weapons attack by the pro-Russia regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Syrian rebel territory.
The White House kicked out 60 Russian diplomats following the poisoning of a former Russian spy in Britain, and leveled new sanctions on Russian entities.
The raid immediately raised issues of attorney-client privilege. Cohen was the president's personal lawyer during the presidential campaign, which means their communications are assumed to be beyond the reach of law enforcement and the courts.
A critical loophole exists, however: the 'crime-fraud exception.' That allows prosecutors to use privileged material if it shows a client intended to further or cover up a crime.
Because of the usually sacrosanct nature of attorney-client communications, the FBI will likely use a 'taint team' to keep prosecutors from seeing anything privileged that could later cause a criminal conviction to be voided.
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