Avenatti drops bid to represent Stormy Daniels in Trump lawyer Michael Cohen’s case

FAN Editor

Michael Avenatti on Wednesday withdrew his motion to represent his client Stormy Daniels in the ongoing court proceedings involving President Donald Trump‘s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen.

The withdrawal came hours after Judge Kimba Wood said Avenatti would have to end his “publicity tour” if he was admitted as a lawyer for Daniels in Cohen’s case.

Avenatti has become a constant media presence and pugnacious critic of Trump and Cohen since his client sued them both to be released from a nondisclosure agreement she signed before the 2016 election. Daniels was paid $130,000 as part of the deal in exchange for her silence about an alleged affair with Trump from years earlier.

In a statement, Avenatti said “It is now not necessary because the motion to intervene is being held in abeyance by agreement with the government. We are on the verge of getting the documents we need.”

A trial lawyer in California, Avenatti would need to be granted permission by Wood to be admitted in New York federal court solely for Cohen’s case. Such “pro hac vice” admissions, are routinely requested by out-of-state lawyers and rarely denied.

But Wood said that if she was to grant Avenatti’s motion to intervene, he would be bound by a code of conduct that would prevent him from both stating his opinion on Cohen’s purported guilt, and from releasing non-public information related to Cohen.

Avenatti has done both — notably by releasing a report on May 8 showing payments made to Cohen’s company, Essential Consultants, after the election by corporations including telecoms giant AT&T, drug maker Novartis and Korea Aerospace Industries. He has recently indicated he plans to reveal more information about Cohen.

Lawyers for Cohen had questioned in a court filing howAvenatti could have obtained the information, which appeared to be drawn from confidential bank records.

In court Wednesday, Avenatti said he and his client “did not do anything improper relating to the release of any information concerning Mr. Cohen.”

Cohen’s lawyer, Stephen Ryan, said at the courthouse, “I’ve never seen an attorney conduct himself the way Mr. Avenatti conducted himself. What Mr. Avenatti did in releasing those records was entirely improper.”

Ryan did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on Avenatti’s withdrawal.

Avenatti withdrew the motion without prejudice in a court filing following the hearing, meaning it could “be re-filed, if necessary, at a later time.”

Wood also noted that it would be premature to rule on Avenatti’s request for admission in the case without first addressing the pending motion by him, on Daniels’ behalf, that Daniels be allowed to intervene in the case.

Both Trump and the Trump Organization have been granted such intervenor status, which allows them to make arguments related to evidence seized from Cohen which might be protected by the president’s and the company’s attorney-client privilege.

Avenatti has argued that Daniels is entitled to the same intervenor status by virtue of documents related to her and to her prior lawyer, Keith Davidson, which are believed to have been seized from Cohen by the FBI.

Avenatti said Wednesday that he had been contacted by a reporter with a recording he believes was made by Cohen that involved Davidson.

Davidson represented Daniels when she received the $130,000 payment from Cohen through Essential Consultants.

From what I understood there were audio recordings” between Cohen and Daniels’ former lawyer, Keith Davidson, “regarding attorney-client privilege,” Avenatti said.

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