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Here’s What Michael Avenatti Wants from Michael Cohen and How He Plans to Get It

 

Monday night on CNN, attorney Michael Avenatti laid out his hopes and dreams for Michael Cohen. The appearance came after news that Avenatti just happened to bump into Cohen at a New York City restaurant. There, Avenatti said the two had a “cordial, lengthy, and frank discussion,” but Avenatti denied claims that he “pitched” to Cohen that the two should “team[] up” on Trump.

Avenatti then said the restaurant conversation lead to other, subsequent conversations with Cohen’s attorneys and that nobody complained that the conversation was improper. He then said the discussion was “productive,” but wouldn’t go into specifics about what was said.

As we have previously analyzed, the context matters. Under the Rules of Professional Conduct, Avenatti and Cohen can talk all they want — so long as they aren’t talking about whatever the two are contesting in a court of law. Since Avenatti’s client is suing Cohen, and since Cohen is represented by counsel, Avenatti has to go through Cohen’s attorneys unless they allow otherwise. It seems clear from Avenatti’s CNN interview that the two talked about more than the standard friendzone topics of weather and what was on the menu that night. But Avenatti, when pressed, refused to go into details.

What, then, did they discuss? Right now, we don’t know. However, in response to additional questions about whether Avenatti can cooperate with Cohen, Avenatti issued a wish list:

The only way that we’re going to cooperate with Michael Cohen or have him cooperate with us is if he makes it clear that he is truly ready to do the right thing, that if he is truly ready to release the documents, release the recordings, come clean with the American people, and talk about what he knows about the President, what he knows about the cover-up, what he knows about the payment to my client, and otherwise. If he’s not ready to do that or is unwilling to do that, we’re gonna continue to do what we’re doing:  we’re going to keep him a defendant in the cases and we’re gonna get to the bottom of this.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper then asked if Avenatti would demand information from Cohen about an alleged threat to Stormy Daniels in Las Vegas. Avenatti said, yes, information about that threat — if Cohen had any — would be a “precondition” to any cooperation with Cohen.

We would need to know exactly what happened relating to that incident in Vegas . . . that’s one example . . . of a number of examples that we would need to get to the bottom of. Another would be the payment of the $130,000; how that money flowed. Was there an agreement for reimbursement? Did he discuss with Donald Trump the campaign finance violation potential? There is a long list of answers that we would need to get before we agreed to do anything with Michael Cohen.

Avenatti and his increasing number of Twitter followers (641,000+ at present) would probably love to have that information. Avenatti seems to think he can get it. In emails to Law&Crime, Avenatti said that he “seriously doubt[s]” that any Trump/Cohen conversations were privileged.

“I doubt that Michael Cohen was often providing legal services to Mr. Trump and thus their communications would not be protected,” he explained. And, if a privilege does apply, Avenatti thinks a “crime fraud exception would likely apply.” (We previously analyzed that situation in a related but separate context here.)

Avenatti appears to be raising the age-old question: who is the client?   The payment made to Daniels was through Cohen’s shell company, Essential Consultants, LLC. Cohen owned the company himself and claimed he was representing the entity–not Trump–in the deal. If Cohen was actually representing his own company in his various talks, Cohen might — under this theory — be able to release and discuss any Trump conversations he wants.

[Image via screen capture from CNN.]

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Aaron Keller holds a juris doctor degree from the University of New Hampshire School of Law and a broadcast journalism degree from Syracuse University. He is a former anchor and executive producer for the Law&Crime Network and is now deputy editor-in-chief for the Law&Crime website. DISCLAIMER:  This website is for general informational purposes only. You should not rely on it for legal advice. Reading this site or interacting with the author via this site does not create an attorney-client relationship. This website is not a substitute for the advice of an attorney. Speak to a competent lawyer in your jurisdiction for legal advice and representation relevant to your situation.