Michael Cohen released from prison due to coronavirus concerns

Michael Cohen arrives at his Manhattan apartment on Thursday after he was released from federal prison.
Michael Cohen arrives at his Manhattan apartment on Thursday after he was released from federal prison.
John Minchillo/AP

President Trump's former personal attorney and fixer, Michael Cohen, was released from a federal prison and into home confinement Thursday.

His release comes amid concerns he could be exposed to COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

Cohen, 53, who once proclaimed he "would take a bullet for the president," was sentenced in 2018 to a three-year federal prison term following guilty pleas to a number of financial and political crimes, campaign finance violations and lying to Congress.

He had been serving at a medium-security federal correctional institution in Otisville, N.Y., about 75 miles northwest of New York City. He was scheduled to be released in November 2021.

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It is unclear why Cohen was released today. His release was originally granted in April but had been delayed.

Video posted by NBC News shows Cohen walking into his New York apartment wearing a white shirt, a dark blazer a University of Miami ball cap and a white mask.

Earlier this month, another former member of President Trump's inner circle — his one-time presidential campaign chairman Paul Manafort — was also released from prison due to concerns of virus exposure.

Manafort, 71, was sentenced to prison time by two federal courts.

In 2018, a jury in Virginia found him guilty on eight of 18 counts in his tax and bank fraud trial, related to work Manafort did in Ukraine. He later pleaded guilty to two additional felony counts in Washington, D.C.

U.S. Attorney General William Barr has ordered federal prisons to try to proactively stop the spread of the virus in their system.

A March 26 memo from Barr outlines that one of the Bureau of Prisons "tools" to help keep prison populations safe "is the ability to grant certain eligible prisoners home confinement in certain circumstances."

The memo states "there are some at-risk inmates who are non-violent and pose minimal likelihood of recidivism and who might be safer serving their sentences in home confinement rather than BOP facilities."

As of Thursday morning, the BOP said it has released 2,932 inmates to home confinement since late March.

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