I feel like this could really backfire on Hannity. He just added himself to to the investigation. And the DOJ is probably in a position to argue that Hannity could be implicated in some of this and consequently his communications with Cohen aren't privileged. And since there are only three clients, that screws up Cohen's argument. If Cohen had just shut up and let the DOJ use a taint team, he mightve at least gotten Hannity's documents excluded. But now that Hannity is out in the open, the DOJ might just add him into this.
...this, again, works only if you assume that Sean Hannity has anything like a general intelligence quotient over 70... ...and that the people he routinely talks to and interacts with are roughly that same level of stupid...
Now Hannity is admitting maybe he paid a little to Cohen, you know, like "$10" or something. LOL. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-client/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.401813fbdb81 The analogy alone could darn near cure the blues.
I knew it wasn't a coincidence that Michael Cohen looks like the the lawyer from Arrested Development. On a more serious note, I'm afraid that having Hannity under review only gives the Trump movement more ammo to paint this as a political witch hunt going after conservatives in general.
Latest update is Sean Hannity has "revised" his denial to now say he may have paid Cohen at some point, maybe "$10" just to ensure there was in fact attorney client privilege attached to these friendly conversations he was having.
Judge ruled it. Why didn’t Hannity reveal the conflict of interest when covering the Cohen raid on his opinion journalism program?