Well, the story was that Cohen was ignoring Stormy and McDougal until the Access Hollywood outtake tape came out. Then he came to the table. Again, that's one narrative.Whens lunch said:I don't know the answer to this and am personally too lazy to research it, but when was he actually approached ("blackmailed") and felt like he had to make it go away?policywonk98 said:Whens lunch said:
Also...was this $130,000 "expense" one that could have existed and been paid if he was not a candidate...no campaign finance violation.
Seems very hard to prove it wasent since the payment happened so long after the affair and so close to election.
As a "big league" developer, he had his fixer make issues go away regularly.
What is lost here is the successful extortion, a/k/a blackmail by Stormy and McDougal.
One thing I confess to be confused about with respect to the Cohen plea---the corporate contribution that was (supposedly) in violation of campaign finance laws. Originally I thought that was a tacked on charge because the contract with Stormy was in the name of one of Cohen's corporations. Now it appears that was in reference to the catch-and-kill by the National Enquirer for McDougal. And that is troublesome in many respects.
ETA: Spelling.