George Washington University (GWU) law professor Jonathan Turley believes disgraced and disbarred attorney Michael Cohen may have perjured himself again during Monday’s testimony in former President Donald J. Trump‘s hush money trial. Cohen previously pleaded guilty to lying to Congress — a felony — in 2018 and was sentenced to two months in prison for the crime.
Turley noted that Cohen‘s reasoning for secretly recording a phone conversation with then-President-elect Trump was questionable. “The one thing about yesterday that was striking is I thought that Michael Cohen may have committed perjury again,” the GWU law professor told Fox News‘s Dana Perino on Tuesday.
He continued: “In my view, one of his answers just made no sense at all. He said that he taped his client, former President Trump, in order to keep David Pecker, the former publisher of the National Enquirer, honest and make sure he paid. First of all, it made no sense at all why he would do that, Pecker had been in communication with Trump himself, but it didn’t make any sense at all.” The distinguished law professor also noted that such behavior breaks professional ethical standards.
Previously sentenced for tax evasion and disbarred, Cohen is a key witness for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg‘s prosecution of former President Trump. What crime Trump committed has yet to be made clear in the course of the Manhattan hush money trial. Cohen was recently dubbed a “serial perjurer” and ethically “perverse” by a federal judge after the disgraced attorney asked for an end to the conditions of his early release.