Q&A: Cohen’s ties to Trump, corporate clients pose questions
WASHINGTON — Attorney Michael Cohen’s simultaneous relationship with Donald Trump and several blue chip companies that paid him for insight into the new president strikes legal experts as unusual and has triggered questions about client confidentiality.
Cohen’s arrangement stands out, even in Washington where corporations, trade associations and other organizations spend upward of $3 billion annually to influence legislation and get access to the highest levels of government. He appears to have worked as Trump’s personal lawyer while at the same time accepting tens of thousands of dollars from third parties to disclose information about his client.
“If Cohen was representing the president as an attorney, which he has certainly argued was the case, then Cohen’s obligations as a member of the bar would seemingly make this arrangement troubling,” said Josh Rosenstein, a partner with the Washington firm Sandler Reiff and a specialist in lobbying compliance.
Rosenstein said that if Cohen had Trump’s permission to reveal confidential information about him, then the implications may be significant. For example, it may be possible evidence that Trump knew what Cohen was doing and was involved, he said.