John C. Fry admits he leaked confidential financial transactions made by Michael Cohen to Michael Avenatti
Michael Avenatti tweeted Thursday evening: "Neither I nor R. Farrow did anything
wrong or illegal with the financial info relating to Cohen’s crimes
(the courts have found that the [federal Bank Secrecy Act] does not
apply ... And if we did (we didn’t), then every reporter in America
would be jailed and unable to do their job."
Neither I nor R. Farrow did anything wrong or illegal with the financial info relating to Cohen’s crimes (the courts have found that the BSA does not apply - see below). And if we did (we didn’t), then every reporter in America would be jailed and unable to do their job.— Michael Avenatti (@MichaelAvenatti) February 21, 2019
At the time of the disclosures, Avenatti was locked in a legal battle
with Cohen over a $130,000 payment to Daniels in the days leading up to
the 2016 presidential election. The payment was made in exchange for
Daniels' silence about an alleged sexual encounter with the
married Trump that took place more than a decade ago. Cohen pleaded
guilty last August to federal campaign finance and other violations and
has been sentenced to three years in prison.
We finally know who leaked Michael Cohen’s records to the despicable Porny Daniels lawyer Michael Avenatti.
John Fry, and IRS investigative analyst, has been charged with the offense:
CNN – Federal prosecutors have charged an analyst with the Internal Revenue Service with illegally disclosing confidential reports about Michael Cohen’s bank records that revealed that President Donald Trump’s former lawyer had sought to profit from his proximity to the White House, according to a complaint unsealed on Thursday.The analyst, John C. Fry, was charged with the unauthorized disclosure of a document called a suspicious activity report, which banks file when they review transactions that raise red flags.CNN previously reported that the Justice Department was investigating the leak last year of the confidential reports related to Cohen’s banking activity.Fry, an investigative analyst with the IRS’s law enforcement arm, is accused of turning over the reports in the spring of 2018 to an attorney, Michael Avenatti, and of confirming confidential banking information in them to a reporter for The New Yorker, according to the complaint, which was filed under seal earlier this month.On Thursday, Fry appeared before US Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler in federal court in San Francisco, according to the US Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California, which charged Fry, and was released on a $50,000 bond.
Note they say he didn’t just leak the information to Avenatti, but he also confirmed it to a reporter at the New Yorker: Ronan Farrow.
They go on to explain how Fry got the information to Avenatti:
In May 2018, Fry, who works in the IRS’ San Francisco office, accessed and downloaded five suspicious activity reports connected to Cohen, according to the complaint. Those reports contained information about a bank account opened for Essential Consultants LLC, a shell company Cohen created, and detailed “numerous suspicious payments” from a company linked to a Russian oligarch, pharmaceutical giant Novartis, AT&T — which owns CNN — and others.Another report contained information that matches the $130,000 that Cohen paid to Avenatti’s client, adult-film actress Stormy Daniels, to silence her allegations of an affair with Trump. (Trump has denied having an affair with Daniels.)Yet another “discussed possible fraudulent and illegal financial transactions” by Cohen in 2016 and 2017 in Singapore, Hungary, Malaysia, Canada, Taiwan, Kenya and Israel, according to the complaint.About 20 minutes after Fry began accessing the reports, he placed two calls to a number associated with Avenatti, the complaint says, and shortly thereafter, Fry attempted to access two other Cohen-connected suspicious activity reports that the system told him were “unavailable.”According to the complaint, several days later Fry again called Avenatti, and Avenatti subsequently “used his public Twitter account to circulate a dossier releasing confidential banking information related to Cohen and his company Essential Consultants.”Fry also called a reporter at The New Yorker, who isn’t named in the complaint but, based on the description of the reporter’s work, appears to be Ronan Farrow. After weeks of WhatsApp messages between Fry and the reporter, Farrow published a story that quoted a “law enforcement officer” responsible for the leak of Cohen’s banking information as saying he did so because he became alarmed that he was unable to find two of the reports on Cohen.In fact, the complaint says, the suspicious activity reports that were not available to Fry had been given “restricted access” in the system “because they were related to a sensitive open investigation.” At the time, Cohen was being investigated by the Manhattan US attorney’s office, which later charged him with eight counts, to which he pleaded guilty.
Another leaker bites the dust. I hope they prosecute him to the fullest extent of the law and he sits in a jail cell for the most time possible under the law.
I mean seriously, these people need to understand that whether it’s just confidential or classified, they will pay the cost for leaking.
As a side note I kinda wonder, after all we’ve seen from the despicable Avenatti, if this guy ever regrets leaking to such a low rate character. Probably not, because he sounds pretty low rate himself.
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