National News

IRS Employee Charged With Leaking Records of Trump Lawyer Michael Cohen

Federal prosecutors in San Francisco on Thursday charged an employee of the IRS with illegally leaking banking records connected to Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer and fixer.

Posted Updated
IRS Employee Charged With Leaking Records of Trump Lawyer Michael Cohen
By
Maggie Haberman
, New York Times

Federal prosecutors in San Francisco on Thursday charged an employee of the IRS with illegally leaking banking records connected to Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer and fixer.

Prosecutors said that in his role working for the investigative unit of the IRS, John C. Fry, an employee of the agency since 2008, had access “to various law enforcement databases” and had used them to search for records related to Cohen multiple times. He then gave the information to Michael Avenatti, the lawyer for adult film actress Stephanie Clifford, also known as Stormy Daniels, who has claimed to have had an affair with Trump, according to the prosecutors.

Avenatti was not identified in the complaint filed by prosecutors, which only says Fry gave the information to an attorney “based in Newport Beach, California,” in May, and that the lawyer in question posted on Twitter the “confidential banking information related to the taxpayer and the taxpayer’s company.”

One of the reports that Fry downloaded listed payments to a bank account affiliated with Cohen, including $500,000 from a company connected to a Russian oligarch who donated money to Trump’s inauguration fund, according to an affidavit filed by prosecutors.

Avenatti then connected Fry to an investigative reporter, who also was not identified but was Ronan Farrow of The New Yorker magazine.

A spokeswoman for The New Yorker declined to comment.

Avenatti referred to tweets he posted on the topic: “Neither I nor R. Farrow did anything wrong or illegal with the financial info relating to Cohen’s crimes,” he posted on Twitter on Thursday. “And if we did (we didn’t), then every reporter in America would be jailed and unable to do their job.”

Cohen made a payment of $130,000 to Clifford in October 2016, with the aim of keeping her quiet during Trump’s campaign for president. When the leak took place, Avenatti and Cohen were in a legal fight after Clifford began speaking publicly. Cohen had acknowledged to The New York Times that he was the one who paid her during the campaign.

Fry was released on $50,000 bond. He faces a maximum sentence of five years and a $250,000 fine.

The charges came just days before Cohen is scheduled to appear before three congressional committees to give testimony.

Copyright 2024 New York Times News Service. All rights reserved.