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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow Michael Avenatti got Michael Cohen's emails
Over the past few days, Michael Avenatti, the attorney for Stormy Daniels, has been steadily releasing what appear to be private communications between Michael Cohen, Donald Trumps longtime attorney, and Keith Davidson, who represented Daniels when she inked a $130,000 hush-money agreement that was facilitated through a shell company set up by Cohen.
These emails are evidence of questionable, if not unethical, collusion between Cohen and Davidson, who are ostensibly representing opposing sides of the dispute.
One email, released by Avenatti on Twitter on Thursday, shows that Cohen was communicating with Davidson in the days after the FBI raided his home and office and seized his phones. This email suggests an ongoing collaboration between Davidson and Cohen, even though the two are not known to be involved in any current legal matter.
Link to tweet
On Friday, Avenatti posted another email between Davidson and Cohen, from February, in which Cohen argues that Davidson should not forward part of the hush money agreement to Davidsons new lawyer. (This didnt work, as Avenatti obtained the Side Letter Agreement and released it as part of Daniels lawsuit against Cohen and Trump, filed in March.)
Link to tweet
This second email is not actually new and was released to NBC News in March. But it raises the question: How is Avenatti getting these emails?
As a matter of practice, lawyers maintain case files for the benefit of their clients. If the client decides to seek new representation, the information in the case file is generally deemed to belong to the client, and its then forwarded to the new attorney. In this case, it appears that Davidson turned over these communications to Avenatti as part of Daniels case file.
Avenatti hinted as much during a hearing in New York in late April in which he sought to intervene in a dispute about how the materials seized in the raid of Michael Cohens office would be handled. Avenatti argued that Davidson and Cohen were continuing to discuss his clients case and that those communications were part of her case file, which belongs to her.
Of course, those communications, whether they be by email, text messages, or otherwise, would technically belong to my client because it would be part of her attorney-client file.
In other words, Avenatti is concerned there are more materials that belong to his client that were among those seized in the raid. The judge has not yet ruled on his request.
Either way, Avenattis stockpile of emails potentially presents big problems for Cohen, Davidson and possibly President Donald Trump.
https://thinkprogress.org/how-michael-avenatti-got-michael-cohens-emails-b37184b7017d/
Stonepounder
(4,033 posts)The above explanation makes perfect sense. Thanks for posting!
Cha
(296,836 posts)Leghorn21
(13,522 posts)truly seriously DOES NOT LIKE this Davidson guy, not even one little bit.
Veddddy interesting
Basta!!