Michael Cohen, who turned on Trump with glee, now claims he was 'coerced' to cooperate
Published in News & Features
NEW YORK — Michael Cohen, Donald Trump’s faithful fixer-turned-gleeful antagonist after he famously flipped, is now claiming he did so under duress.
In a Substack post, Cohen claimed the Manhattan district attorney and the state attorney general forced his hand in their sweeping criminal and civil cases against the president, which ultimately branded Trump a convicted felon on the eve of his return to power and hamstrung his real estate company’s New York operations.
During both the investigations and subsequent trials, Cohen now claims, he “felt pressured and coerced” to provide testimony that would secure Trump’s conviction.
An analysis of Cohen’s statements over the years belies his claims. He often reflected enthusiasm about his cooperation in the Trump probes and concern with getting credit.
“I brought the whole mishegas, the whole bulls–t to the surface,” he defiantly told the Daily News in June 2021.
When District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s hush money probe kicked into high gear in early 2023, a beaming Cohen was effusive, heaping praise on the prosecutors he now accuses of unprofessionalism.
“The level of specificity to which they are unpacking the various issues is extraordinary, and they are really professional,” he told The News after a sitdown with prosecutors that March. “There’s so much that I would really like to spill and just tell you, but out of respect to the DA’s office, I’m gonna refrain from doing so.”
After testifying before the grand jury on March 15, Cohen didn’t mince words.
“Donald Trump needs to be held accountable for his dirty deeds,” he said, standing beside his lawyer Lanny Davis, later adding he was “certain” he’d provided the most complete account yet of the hush money saga.
Davis praised Cohen at the news conference, lauding him for taking responsibility. Reached for comment Monday, the high-profile defense attorney declined to comment on Cohen’s about-face.
“I don’t represent Michael anymore,” Davis said. “He has his own world now, and I’ve definitely not talked to him for a long time.”
Trump was indicted weeks after Cohen’s grand jury testimony on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records, all of which he was convicted of in May 2024. Cohen described himself as the “key witness” at the trial in his new piece, though he really played a supporting role. Acknowledging his record of dishonesty, prosecutors called him at the very end to act as a tour guide of incontrovertible physical evidence.
Cohen’s turnaround seems to have Trump convinced, at the very least. In what appears to be his first post in years about his former fixer without an insult, the president claimed vindication on his Truth Social site.
“These horrible Radical Left people, doing everything possible to destroy our Country, should pay a big price for this! It was a SET UP from the beginning,” Trump wrote.
Turning on Trump
Trump’s right-hand man for a decade, Cohen parted with Trump after he was arrested by the feds two years into Trump’s first term.
He first served as an executive vice president at the Trump Organization and later as Trump’s special counsel. At the 2024 hush money trial, he told jurors his job had been to handle for Trump “whatever concerned him, whatever he wanted.”
Federal agents stormed his Manhattan residences and office in the spring of 2018, leading to his arrest and disbarment. That August, he pleaded guilty to violating campaign finance laws by paying porn star Stormy Daniels to hide her claims of a tryst with Trump from voters and to an assortment of other crimes, what the late Federal Judge William Pauley described as a “veritable smorgasbord of fraudulent misconduct.”
While he implicated Trump in his plea, Cohen refused to be forthcoming with the feds about other criminality he’d witnessed.
Before reporting to prison, he cooperated in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian election interference, and accused Trump, in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, of fraudulently inflating his net worth.
State Attorney General Letitia James would later credit the testimony with sparking her office’s probe into the Trump Organization, which resulted in Trump, his adult sons, and top company executives being found liable for large-scale fraud. Cohen explicitly detailed the same allegations when he testified at the trial, an account he now claims was forced out of him.
While now accusing James of coercion, Cohen happily took credit for being the catalyst for her case when Trump was found liable.
“Had I remained silent and stayed on Donald’s desired messaging,” he said in a text, “none of this would have been exposed.”
Hundreds of hours cooperating
Cohen first began talking to Manhattan DA investigators weighing criminal charges against Trump in August 2019, a few months into his prison sentence. By April 2021, The News reported, he’d clocked at least 300 hours being interviewed.
Upon his release from house arrest that June, Cohen boasted about how willing he’d been to help state prosecutors and lamented it hadn’t resulted in a shaved-down sentence.
“Despite providing over 400 hours of testimony that led to 18 different investigations — including (Trump’s) tax returns, including indictments of (former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen) Weisselberg and others — they basically rode me door-to-door,” he said, adding he had no plans to stop cooperating.
In his Substack piece, Cohen said he had only wanted to participate in the probes in the beginning to lessen his sentence, and that Bragg and James had pushed him to cooperate to further their own ambitions. Spokesmen for both officials declined to comment.
“They blurred the line between justice and politics, and in that blur, the credibility of both suffered,” Cohen wrote.
The narrative seems at odds with Cohen’s position in early 2022, when Bragg took over the Trump probe and Cohen appeared mainly concerned with being left out. The new DA wasn’t confident in Cohen’s credibility — a concern he, by that point more than a year out of custody, sought to allay.
“Any doubts DA Bragg or others might have had regarding my credibility should be reconsidered as the person corroborating the information I provided to the prosecutorial team is none other than Donald J. Trump himself,” he said in a statement.
Why now?
By his own admission, Cohen’s metamorphosis to liberal resistance hero was lucrative.
He made millions from two best-selling memoirs about his time working for Trump, became a cable TV fixture, and launched the popular Trump resistance podcast “Mea Culpa.” The left-leaning network MeidasTouch said Sunday it would no longer carry the show. In a followup piece on Substack, Cohen said, “Losing that partnership feels like losing family.”
Cohen, who sought a pardon from former President Joe Biden in vain, has insisted his motivation isn’t to get one from Trump, but rather to advance criminal justice reform via a proposed executive order that would erase the records of felons convicted of nonviolent offenses.
“Some have claimed that my Friday post was motivated by a desire for a pardon. Let me be honest. Of course I would welcome the erasure of a felony conviction. Who wouldn’t?” Cohen wrote. “But the request I have before the White House is far larger than me.”
Reached by The News, Cohen declined to elaborate.
“Suffice it to say, have a wonderful day. You have my statement,” Cohen said. “You’ve seen the article. Now write about it.”
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