Donald Trump apparently does have a thing for “golden showers,” a sexual fetish involving urination, according to former consigliere Michael Cohen. The revelation is both tittering and ominous.
Cohen reveals in the forward to his Trump tell-all, “Disloyal,” that the President frequented a Las Vegas strip club where naked women engaged in golden showers for sexual titillation.
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That caused #goldenshowerstrump and #UrinTroubleTrump to go viral on social media.
“Uhoh I think some pee pee information seems to have been unmasked!” wrote one Twitter wag.
“And he’s got the nerve to call Kamila Harris “Nasty!” Ewwwww #goldenshowersTrump,” wrote another.
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But the implications of Cohen’s disclosure involve more than just a laugh. It suggests that a similar revelation in the so-called “Steele Dossier” is likely true.
The dossier, also known as the Trump–Russia dossier, was assembled by former British MI6 spy Christopher Steele on behalf of Fusion GPS during the run-up to the 2016 presidential election.
Fusion GPS hired Orbis Business Intelligence, co-founded by Steele, to look into Trump’s Russia connections.
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Among the more startling findings was a report that the Russian intelligence agency FSB recorded Trump enjoying a golden showers performance by Russian prostitutes while he was in the country in 2013 for the Miss Universe pageant.
According to the dossier, the President stayed in a Ritz-Carlton Hotel suite in Moscow once used by President Obama and his wife.
Trump reportedly hired “a number of prostitutes to perform a ‘golden showers’ show in front of him” to defile the bed used by the Obamas.
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The Kremlin reportedly held onto the tape as “kompromat,” the Russian word for “compromising material,” to blackmail the president.
Trump told then FBI Director James Comey that he never stayed in Moscow during the event. But private plane records later surfaced that showed he spent 37 hours in the Russian capital, including an overnight stay, during the show.
Publicly, Trump has denounced the allegation as “crap” compiled by “sick people.”
But former federal prosecutor Pete Zeidenberg told Politico last November that such “false statements about the trip could demonstrate that Trump has “consciousness of guilt.”
Thomas Roberts, the host of the Miss Universe contest, confirmed that “Trump was in Moscow for one full night and at least part of another.”
Congressional testimony from Trump’s bodyguard and contemporaneous photographs and social media posts also corroborated his stay there.
Trump’s long-time confidant and bodyguard Keith Schiller privately testified that he rejected a Russian offer to send five women to Trump’s hotel room during their 2013 trip. He said he mentioned the offer to Trump, who “laughed it off.”
Comey later said in an interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos that he did not know if the “golden showers” allegation was true, but he came to believe it was possible.
“I honestly never thought these words would come out of my mouth, but I don’t know whether the current president of the United States was with prostitutes peeing on each other in Moscow in 2013. It’s possible, but I don’t know,” he said.
Steele later said his confidence in the Ritz-Carlton allegation was 50-50, according to The New Yorker magazine.
The ex-spy treated everything in the dossier as raw intelligence material—not proven fact.” The founders of Fusion GPS said that Steele received the “hotel anecdote” from seven Russian sources.
In the book, “Russian Roulette: The Inside Story of Putin’s War on America and the Election of Donald Trump,” co-authors Michael Isikoff and David Corn uncovered similar allegations.
In the early-morning hours of June 15, 2013, some five months before the alleged Moscow incident, Trump visited a Las Vegas night club called “The Act.” It was infamous for its sexually explicit strip shows.
In one show, two semi-nude women simulated urination onstage.
“It is unclear whether these skits were performed on the night that Trump visited the club. But court records confirm that they were in the club’s regular repertoire,” according to the book.
Cohen only made a passing reference to Trump’s Las Vegas golden showers in the preface to his book.
“I stiffed contractors on his behalf, ripped off his business partners, lied to his wife Melania to hide his sexual infidelities, and bullied and screamed at anyone who threatened Trump’s path to power. From golden showers in a sex club in Vegas, to tax fraud, to deals with corrupt officials from the former Soviet Union, to catch and kill conspiracies to silence Trump’s clandestine lovers, I wasn’t just a witness to the president’s rise—I was an active and eager participant.”
He did not provide further details but will likely do so in the text of the book. If so, he appears poised to lend credence to the Moscow pee allegations when the book is released next month.