The Influence of Roy Cohn

Published in El Heraldo de Mexico
(Mexico) on 5 April 2024
by José Carreño Figueras (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Stephen Routledge. Edited by Patricia Simoni.

 

 

He taught Trump how to exploit power and instill fear through a simple formula: Attack, counterattack and never apologize.

Never surrender. Always counterattack and countersue.

Never admit defeat; claim victory no matter how bad the situation.

If someone wants it that way, you can define those principles as a political mantra or as a legal practice.

Or both.

In fact, those are the principles that guide former President Donald Trump’s outlook, and not just today, but from the moment he arrived on the island of Manhattan in 1973 from the neighboring borough of Queens and hired Roy Cohn as his lawyer.

"Other than his father, the most important influence on the future president was Roy Cohn," Maggie Haberman of The New York Times wrote in her biography of Trump, “Confidence Man.”

"Confidence man" in Spanish translates as conman, and Cohn's teachings fit the description well. His principles were those he applied as the lawyer for Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the famous anti-Communist witch hunt gave the senator’s name to McCarthyism, a form of ideological (in that case anti-Communist) persecution without respect for due process.

The game that McCarthy and Cohn played was so intense and so brutal that it stopped only when a U.S. Army lawyer publicly questioned their sense of decency. The question was harsh, but what lay behind it was even harsher – growing anger at a policy of persecution.

When McCarthy was forced to end his hearings in 1954, Cohn moved to New York. He moved to Manhattan, where, among other things, he became legal counsel to the Italian Gambino Mafia family, headed by Anthony Salerno and Paul Castellano who had at least partial control of the construction industry unions: a perfect point of contact for a real estate entrepreneur. Cohn began a work relationship with Trump in 1973.

You could describe Cohn as a combative lawyer, one for whom every case was personal and for whom it was about winning by any means. And just like Trump, there was no room for negotiation, one was either with him or against him.

You can see the influence of Cohn, who died in 1988, in the way Trump tries to undermine the legitimacy of the cases against him and, incidentally, his effort to intimidate judges and prosecutors by attacking their families.

Cohn was Trump's mentor, and you can see his influence in more than 4,000 lawsuits filed against the former and possibly future president's companies between 1975 and 2016, and in the tricks he used to discourage witnesses, force settlements and secure victories.

Cohn also taught him how to exploit power and instill fear through a simple formula: Attack, counterattack and never apologize.

These are Mafia principles. And now, thanks to Cohn, they are part of Trump's political strategy.


Le enseñó a Trump cómo explotar el poder e infundir miedo mediante una fórmula simple: atacar, contraatacar y nunca disculparse

Nunca rendirse. Siempre contraatacar y contrademandar.

Jamás admitir la derrota y cantar victoria, sin importar que tan mala sea la situación.

Si alguien lo quiere así, esos principios pueden ser definidos como un mantra político o como una práctica de leguleyos.
O ambos.

El hecho es que esos son los principios que gobiernan la actitud del expresidente Donald Trump, y no de ahora, sino desde que llegó en 1973 a la isla de Manhattan, desde el vecino barrio neoyorquino de Queens, y contrató a Roy Cohn como su abogado.
"Aparte de su padre, la influencia más importante sobre el futuro presidente fue Roy Cohn", escribió Maggie Haberman del New York Times en su biografía de Trump, Confidence Man.

En español Confidence Man quiere decir timador, y las enseñanzas de Cohn se adaptan bien: esos fueron los principios con que participó como abogado del senador Joe McCarthy en la famosa "cacería de brujas" anticomunista que le dio su nombre al "macartismo", una forma de persecución ideológica (en ese caso anticomunista) sin el debido respeto a un proceso legal justo.

El juego de McCarthy y Cohn fue tan intenso y tan brutal que solo se detuvo cuando un abogado del Ejército estadounidense les preguntó públicamente si acaso tenían algún sentido de la decencia. La pregunta fue dura, pero más lo que había detrás: el enojo creciente ante una política de persecución.

Cuando McCarthy se vio obligado a terminar sus audiencias en 1954, Cohn se mudó a Nueva York. A Manhattan, donde entre otras cosas, se hizo consejero legal de la "familia" Gambino, de la Mafia italiana, que encabezada por Anthny Salerno y Paul Castellano tenía control por lo menos parcial de los sindicatos de la industria de la construcción. Un contacto perfecto para un empresario de bienes raíces y en 1973, inició una relación laboral con Donald Trump.

Cohn puede ser definido como un abogado combativo, uno para el que cada caso era personal y para quien se trataba de ganar por cualquier medio. Y como para Trump, no hay espacio de negociación, las cosas son "conmigo o contra mí".
Y la influencia de Cohn, muerto en 1988, se deja ver en la forma en que Trump trata de restar legitimidad a los casos en su contra y de paso sus intentos de intimidar a los jueces y fiscales a cargo de ellos mediante ataques a sus familias.
Cohn fue el mentor de Trump y su influencia es visible en los más de cuatro mil juicios en que las empresas del ex y quizá futuro presidente se vieron involucradas entre 1975 y 2016, en los trucos que aplicó para desalentar testigos, para forzar arreglos y asegurarse victorias.

Cohn también le enseñó cómo explotar el poder e infundir miedo mediante una fórmula simple: atacar, contraatacar y nunca disculparse.

Son principios de la Mafia. Y ahora, gracias a Cohn, parte de la estrategia político-electoral de Trump.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

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