Watchdog group wants DOJ to probe whether Trump lawyer violated lobbying laws

A watchdog group wants DOJ to probe whether Trump lawyer violated lobbying laws

The complaint filed by Public Citizen on Thursday comes after Michael Avenatti, the attorney for adult film actress Stormy Daniels, this week published what he said were bank transactions showing more than $4.4 million in payments from a number of companies, some foreign and some domestic, to Essential Consultants LLC., a corporation Cohen set up in late 2016. In some cases, these clients had significant business interests in Washington.

In statements obtained by ABC News, several of the companies, including foreign-owned Novartis and domestically owned AT&T, have indicated Cohen reportedly offered access to the Trump Administration.

"It's a very suspicious activity for Michael Cohen," Public Citizen lawyer-lobbyist Craig Holman, who authored the complaint, told ABC News on Wednesday. "The mere fact of Cohen's solicitation...to get payments from [these companies] sounds a lot like lobbying - and if that's the case he should have filed [the proper] disclosures," Holman added.

No such federal filings appear on public registries or databases, according to a records search by ABC News.

According to Avenatti’s document, Cohen used the same company to pay out a hush agreement with the actress, whose legal name is Stephanie Clifford.

"If you go beyond the lobbying laws it's quite possible there are more nefarious violations in foreign payments if they believe their payments are going to Cohen to influence the Trump administration," Holman explained.

Cohen’s attorney, Stephen Ryan, did not respond to multiple calls and emails from ABC News regarding the specific lobbying violation claims.