Longtime Trump attorney says he made $130,000 payment to Stormy Daniels with his money
Here is what we know about the allegation that an adult-film star reportedly was paid to remain silent about a sexual relationship with Donald Trump.
Michael Cohen, who had previously dismissed reports about the payment, said he paid Stormy Daniels — whose real name is Stephanie Clifford — using his own money, rather than involving the Trump Organization or the Trump presidential campaign. His comments came after a watchdog group argued that the payout should be viewed as an unreported campaign expense, which Cohen denied.
“I am Mr. Trump’s longtime special counsel and I have proudly served in that role for more than a decade,” Cohen said Tuesday night in a statement first reported by the New York Times. “In a private transaction in 2016, I used my own personal funds to facilitate a payment of $130,000 to Ms. Stephanie Clifford. Neither the Trump Organization nor the Trump campaign was a party to the transaction with Ms. Clifford, and neither reimbursed me for the payment, either directly or indirectly.”
(And as law professor Orin Kerr notes, Cohen’s statement also leaves unclear whether he is saying he paid the $130,000 himself or simply saying that he paid for her to receive the funds.)
Cohen, who has called himself the “fix-it guy” for Trump, had pushed back against the suggestion of a payout to Daniels ever since the Wall Street Journal first reported it last month. In response to that report, Cohen waved away “rumors” that he said “have circulated time and again since 2011,” and he also issued a statement bearing Daniels’s signature denying that she “received hush money from Donald Trump.”
Since that time, Daniels’s signature also appeared on another statement saying she never had an affair with Trump, though in recent public appearances, she has avoided explicitly denying an affair or saying whether she received a settlement.
The watchdog group Common Cause announced last month that it was filing federal
complaints alleging that the reported $130,000 payout may have violated campaign finance laws. The group argued that the payment was an unreported in-kind contribution to Trump’s campaign. In a letter to federal authorities, Paul S. Ryan, a campaign finance expert with Common Cause, said the settlement should have been considered a campaign expense “because the funds were paid for the purpose of influencing the 2016 presidential general election.”
The pair of complaints filed by Common Cause said that regardless of where the $130,000 payment originated — even “if Donald J. Trump provided the funds” — the money was aimed at affecting the election and then never reported.
After Cohen’s statement Tuesday night, Ryan said that “the timing and circumstances” of the payment “make it appear that the hush money was paid to Daniels in an effort to influence the election.” Ryan called again for the Federal Election Commission and Justice Department to investigate.
“Questions about the payment and the circumstances behind it must be answered, and they must be answered under oath,” Ryan said in a statement.
Cohen said Common Cause’s claims of campaign finance violations “are factually unsupported and without legal merit, and my counsel has submitted a response to the” Federal Election Commission.
“The payment to Ms. Clifford was lawful, and was not a campaign contribution or a campaign expenditure by anyone,” Cohen said, noting that he did not plan to make any further comments on the issue.
He added: “Just because something isn’t true doesn’t mean that it can’t cause you harm or damage. I will always protect Mr. Trump.”
The White House did not respond to a request for comment late Tuesday night.
After the Journal’s article was published, two news organizations — Slate and In Touch — revealed that Daniels had told at least two reporters her accounts of a relationship with Trump.
Daniels has said she met Trump at a celebrity golf tournament in July 2006, at a time when he was a reality television star whose wife, Melania, had recently given birth to their son, Barron. Daniels was working at a booth promoting the adult-film company Wicked Pictures.

Stormy Daniels at the 2007 Grammy Awards. (Matt Sayles/AP)
In that transcript, Daniels is quoted as mentioning Trump being riveted by “Shark Week” programming that aired when she saw him, his desire to buy her a condo in Tampa and his comments about putting her on “The Apprentice,” his television show.
Weisberg, in an account published by Slate, wrote that Daniels had “worked out an agreement for the presidential candidate to pay her a six-figure sum to keep quiet.” But Daniels was afraid Trump would not pay up, Weisberg wrote, so she spoke to Slate multiple times before she stopped responding about a week before the election. A friend of hers said that Daniels had “taken the money from Trump after all,” Weisberg wrote.
Daniels has appeared publicly since the payout story broke, but she has remained coy about what exactly happened. When she was asked on “Inside Edition” whether she had a sexual relationship with Trump and was paid not to discuss it, Daniels remained silent.
Adult-film actress Stormy Daniels appeared on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” on Jan. 30.
When Kimmel asked about the statement, Daniels avoided directly answering whether she signed it, saying that the signature did not look like hers. Rodriguez, her representative, emailed The Post after that interview to say Daniels signed the statement in front of her and Daniels’s lawyer. Rodriguez and the lawyer did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday night.
This report, first published at 12:23 a.m., has been updated.