Live updates: Michael Cohen sentenced to 3 years in prison | CNN Politics

Michael Cohen sentenced to 3 years in prison

NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 12: Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump's former personal attorney and fixer, exits federal court after his sentencing hearing, December 12, 2018 in New York City. Cohen was sentenced to three years in prison by a federal judge after pleading guilty to several charges, including multiple counts of tax evasion, a campaign finance violation and lying to Congress. (Photo by Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images)
Michael Cohen sentenced to 3 years in prison
2:31 • Source: CNN
NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 12: Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump's former personal attorney and fixer, exits federal court after his sentencing hearing, December 12, 2018 in New York City. Cohen was sentenced to three years in prison by a federal judge after pleading guilty to several charges, including multiple counts of tax evasion, a campaign finance violation and lying to Congress. (Photo by Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images)
2:31

What we covered here

  • Michael Cohen: President Trump’s former private attorney was sentenced to three years in prison.
  • Why this matters: Cohen is the first member of Trump’s inner circle to receive a significant prison term in connection with Mueller’s investigation.
  • The charges: Cohen pleaded guilty in August to eight charges, including several counts of tax fraud and campaign finance violations. He also pleaded guilty last month to a charge of lying to Congress from Mueller’s office.
25 Posts

Our live coverage of Michael Cohen’s sentencing has ended. Scroll through the posts below to see how it unfolded or follow CNN Politics for more.

Sketches show what it looked like at Cohen's sentencing today

Artist Christine Cornell was in the courtroom today for Michael Cohen’s sentencing and created these sketches. (It’s a federal courtroom, so no photography was permitted.)

Here’s what it looked like inside his hearing:

Cohen is the 4th person to be sentenced to prison in Mueller's investigation

So far, 36 people and entities have been charged in special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation.

Of those, seven people pleaded guilty. They are….

  • George Papadopoulos
  • Michael Flynn
  • Paul Manafort
  • Rick Gates
  • Richard Pinedo
  • Alex van der Zwaan
  • Michael Cohen

And now, four of the seven sentenced to prison:

  • Papadopoulos
  • Pinedo
  • van der Zwaan
  • Cohen

 One person — Paul Manafort — was convicted at trial.

Read more about the numbers behind the Mueller investigation here.

Sobbing could be heard in the courtroom when Cohen was sentenced

The sentencing hearing for Michael Cohen was emotional at times, CNN’s Kara Scannell reported.

Scannell, who was inside the courtroom, said Cohen teared up as he spoke to the judge about bringing pain and shame to his family. Sobbing could be heard in the courtroom when Cohen was finally sentenced to three years in prison.

“His family members were all very emotional. He was surrounded by friends and family. His daughter sitting right behind him, his wife, son, his mother, father, in-law, cousins, they all came over after the sentencing, which seemed like an absolute shock to them,” Scannell said.

After the sentencing, Cohen and his family hugged and engaged in “long embraces,” she reported. Handshakes were exchanged.

“Everyone looked very shocked and I think they were expecting him to have a much lighter sentence, if not any time at all,” Scannell said.

Watch below for more:

Cohen's former attorney Lanny Davis: He "owned up to his mistakes"

Lanny Davis, Michael Cohen’s former attorney, just issued a statement about Cohen’s sentencing, saying that he “owned up to his mistakes and fully cooperated” with the special counsel’s investigation.

Davis said he will no longer serve as Cohen’s attorney since the sentencing is over.

Instead, he said he will serve as Cohen’s communications adviser.

Read his full statement:

Michael Cohen and his family just left the court, saying nothing

President Trump’s former “fixer” Michael Cohen, who was just sentenced to three years in federal prison, emerged from the courtroom moments ago and said nothing to the scores of press assembled there.

His wife and children left moments before.

They squeezed into a waiting black SUV.

Watch the moment:

Cohen must pay more than $1 million in restitution

In addition to the three-year prison sentence, Judge William Pauley imposed more than $1 million in restitution for Michael Cohen. 

Pauley imposed $500,000 in forfeiture to Cohen, and $1.39 million in restitution.

Cohen is scheduled to surrender on March 6.

Cohen's sentencing is over, and he's been ordered to surrender on March 6

The sentencing of Michael Cohen has concluded. 

Cohen has been ordered to surrender on March 6.

The judge agreed to recommend Otisville Federal Correctional Facility, in Upstate New York, as the prison where Cohen will spend his time. It’s less than a two hour drive from Manhattan.

JUST IN: Cohen sentenced to 3 years in prison

Michael Cohen, President Trump’s former personal attorney, was just sentenced to three years in prison.

Cohen was sentenced for eight criminal counts he pleaded guilty to in August. The judge gave him an additional two months for the special counsel charge, to be served concurrently with the US attorney’s New York office term.

He has been ordered to surrender on March 6. 

Watch more below:

Judge: Each of the crimes Cohen committed "is a serious offense against the United States"

Judge William Pauley walked through each of the counts against Cohen, saying “each of these crimes is a serious offense against the United States.”

“Mr. Cohen pled guilty to a veritable smorgasbord of fraudulent conduct,” he said.

Cohen just finished speaking

Michael Cohen has finished speaking in his sentencing hearing.

In his statement to the judge, he took responsibility “for each act that I pled guilty to: The personal ones to me and those involving the President of the United States of America.”

During his remarks to the courtroom Cohen, while referring to President Trump, said that he is committed to “ensuring that history will not remember me as the villain of his story.”

The federal judge is now speaking.

Cohen: Today is "one of the most meaningful days of my life"

Michael Cohen just addressed a tweet from his former boss, President Donald Trump.

“Recently the President tweeted a statement calling me weak and it was correct but for a much different reason than he was implying. It was because time and time again I felt it was my duty to cover up his dirty deeds.”

Cohen also called this “one of the most meaningful days of his life.”

That real estate mogul, of course, is Trump.

Cohen addresses the court: "I take full responsibility"

Michael Cohen is now addressing the court at his sentencing in Manhattan.

Cohen pleaded guilty in August to eight charges, including several counts of tax fraud and campaign finance violations. He also pleaded guilty last month to a charge of lying to Congress from Mueller’s office.

Prosecutors say Cohen's campaign finance crimes carried "tremendous social cost"

Assistant US Attorney Nicholas Roos addressed the campaign-finance crimes, saying they carried a “tremendous societal cost.” 

Roos said “in committing these crimes, Mr. Cohen has eroded faith in the electoral process and compromised the rule of law.”

Mueller's office says Cohen "has told the truth"

Jeannie Rhee, with special counsel Robert Mueller’s team, said Cohen has been honest.

“He has told the truth,” she told the court.

Last week, the special counsel’s team released a memo about Cohen saying he has cooperated with its inquiries.

After Rhee spoke, Assistant US Attorney Nicholas Roos addressed the court on behalf of the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.

“For all the hypothesizing that Mr. Petrillo has done, Mr. Cohen can’t have it both ways,” he said, referencing Cohen’s lawyer, Guy Petrillo’s speech to the court. “There is a standard way this office conducts cooperation.”

He added: “We’ve treated Mr. Cohen just the way we treat every other defendant that deal with the us attorney’s office.”

The Manhattan US attorney’s office has asked for Cohen to receive a “substantial” sentence of roughly four years. However, Cohen and his legal team has asked for no prison time, citing his cooperation with multiple investigations — including the special counsel’s Russia probe.

Lawyer: Cohen had the "misfortune to have been counsel to the President"

Michael Cohen’s lawyer, Guy Petrillo, said Cohen has been treated unlike other defendants by prosecutors, noting that “Mr. Cohen had the misfortune to have been counsel to the President.” 

Cohen long served as the President’s personal attorney and Trump’s “fixer.” Cohen even once boasted he would “take a bullet” to protect his longtime boss.

Petrillo, in court today, said Cohen wants to cooperate but that “he’s wary of a long term cooperation agreement.”

“He wants both to remove himself and remove his family from the glare of the cameras,” he said.

Cohen's lawyer, comparing Mueller's investigation to Watergate, says his client came forward "against the most powerful person in our country"

Michael Cohen’s lawyer Guy Petrillo, addressing the court, said that his client “came forward to offer evidence against the most powerful person in our country,” alluding to Cohen’s testimony about President Trump.

Cohen, Petrillo said, couldn’t “anticipate the full measure of attack that would be made against him” by both the President and “partisans and citizens who happen to be aligned with the President.”

Petrillo said special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election “is of utmost national significance, no less than seen 40 years ago in Watergate.”

Petrillo also noted Cohen’s actions “stand in profound contrast to the decision of some others not to cooperate and allegedly to double deal while pretending to cooperate.”

Michael Cohen's in-laws don't think he's coming home today

CNN caught up with Michael Cohen’s in-laws, Fima and Ania Shusterman, as they made their way to court this morning. Asked it they felt Cohen would be coming home today, they were doubtful.

Cohen pleaded guilty in August to two campaign finance violations tied to payments he made or orchestrated to women during the campaign to stay silent about alleged sexual encounters with Trump, five counts of tax fraud and one count of making false statements to a bank.

The Manhattan US Attorney’s office has asked for Cohen to receive a “substantial” sentence of roughly four years.

Watch below:

Here's how the judge explained the sentencing guidelines

US District Court Judge William Pauley III is speaking in court and addressing the discrepancy between how the defense and the government view the grouping of the counts against Michael Cohen for the purposes of sentencing.

Pauley says the government’s argument is correct in terms of how to group the tax evasion counts for sentencing purposes.

Here’s how the guidelines break down, according to Pauley:

  • For the charges from New York prosecutors: Cohen’s guideline range is 51 to 63 months in prison
  • For the special counsel charges: The guideline range is zero to six months of imprisonment

The sentencing has started

The Michael Cohen sentencing just started at the Manhattan federal courthouse.

Cohen’s sentence today will be the result of both the special counsel’s investigation and a related case from Manhattan federal prosecutors.

He is facing years in prison: The Manhattan US attorney’s office has asked for Cohen to receive a “substantial” sentence of roughly four years. Meanwhile, special counsel Robert Mueller’s office did not give a sentence recommendation but said Cohen had cooperated with its inquiries.

Download the CNN app

Scan the QR code to download the CNN app on Google Play.

Scan the QR code to download the CNN app from Google Play.

Download the CNN app

Scan the QR code to download the CNN app from the Apple Store.

Scan the QR code to download the CNN app from the Apple Store.