Donald Trump's disgraced former lawyer Michael Cohen will be freed from prison tomorrow after Paul Manafort got out first - and has a book to release on his old boss

  • Michael Cohen will walk free from prison Thursday after serving just over a year of his three-year federal sentence, at Otisville in upstate New York 
  • 53-year-old is being furloughed first which technically means he can be recalled but is expected to transition to formally serving his sentence at home
  • Trump's felon former campaign manager Paul Manafort is already free from his almost seven year sentence after serving less than a year
  • DailyMail.com exclusively captured the tax conman playing with his grandson the day after he was released
  • Cohen has confided in people who visited him including actor Tom Arnold that he is writing a book about Trump

President Donald Trump's longtime personal lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen will be released from federal prison Thursday and is expected to serve the remainder of his sentence at home, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.

Cohen has been serving a federal prison sentence at FCI Otisville in New York after pleading guilty to numerous charges, including campaign finance fraud and lying to Congress.

He will be released on furlough with the expectation that he will transition to home confinement to serve the remainder of his sentence at home, the person said. 

Cohen, 53, began serving his sentence last May and was scheduled to be released from prison in November 2021.

The person could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Out: Michael Cohen will walk free from Otisville federal prison in upstate New York one year and 15 days after reporting for custody

Out: Michael Cohen will walk free from Otisville federal prison in upstate New York one year and 15 days after reporting for custody

Old boss: Michael Cohen has been writing a book about his time with Trump while behind bars, he has confided

Old boss: Michael Cohen has been writing a book about his time with Trump while behind bars, he has confided

Free already: Michael Cohen spent longer behind bars than Paul Manafort despite having a shorter sentence

Free already: Michael Cohen spent longer behind bars than Paul Manafort despite having a shorter sentence

Prison advocates and congressional leaders have been pressing the Justice Department for weeks to release at-risk inmates ahead of a potential outbreak, arguing that the public health guidance to stay 6 feet away from other people is nearly impossible behind bars.

Attorney General William Barr ordered the Bureau of Prisons in March and April to increase the use of home confinement and expedite the release of eligible high-risk inmates, beginning at three prisons identified as coronavirus hot spots. Otisville is not one of those facilities. 

Cohen was told last month he would be released to serve the rest of his three-year sentence at home in response to concerns about coronavirus. He had told associates he was expecting to be released earlier this month.

The Bureau of Prisons has placed him on furlough as it continues to process a move to home confinement, the person familiar with the matter said. The agency has the authority to release inmates on furlough for up to 30 days and has been doing so to make sure suitable inmates, who are expected to transition to home confinement, can be moved out of correctional facilities sooner, the person said.

A federal judge had denied Cohen´s attempt for an early release to home confinement after serving 10 months in prison and said in a ruling earlier this month that it 'appears to be just another effort to inject himself into the news cycle.' But the Bureau of Prisons can take action to move him to home confinement without a judicial order.

The Bureau of Prisons said last week that more than 2,400 inmates had been moved to home confinement since Barr first issued his memo on home confinement in late March, and 1,200 others had been approved and were expected to be released in the coming weeks.

Other high-profile inmates have also been released as the number of coronavirus cases soars in the federal prison system. 

Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was released on home confinement last week. Michael Avenatti, the attorney who rose to fame representing porn star Stormy Daniels in lawsuits against Trump, was temporarily freed from a federal jail in New York City and is staying at a friend´s house in Los Angeles.

Former New York state Senate leader Dean Skelos, 72, who was also serving a sentence at Otisville, was released on home confinement after testing positive for the coronavirus.

Last month it emerged he has been writing a book while behind bars. 

'He told me he's been writing a book and he's pissed. He told me he is going to spill the beans. What has he got to lose now?' comedian-and-actor Tom Arnold told The Daily Beast.

Comedian Tom Arnold (right) said: 'He told me he's been writing a book and he's pissed. He told me he is going to spill the beans. What has he got to lose now?'

Comedian Tom Arnold (right) said: 'He told me he's been writing a book and he's pissed. He told me he is going to spill the beans. What has he got to lose now?'

Cohen had told the publication in February 2018 that he was shopping a book and had interest from publishers including Hachette.

At the time the book was tentatively titled, Trump Revolution: From The Tower to The White House, Understanding Donald J. Trump.

But in December 2018 he was ordered to spend three years in federal prison and in February 2019 he was disbarred. He reported to federal detention on May 6, 2019.

In March 2019 Trump tweeted his acknowledgement of Cohen writing an expose.

'Wow, just revealed that Michael Cohen wrote a 'love letter to Trump' manuscript for a new book that he was pushing,' POTUS posted on social media. 'Written and submitted long after Charlottesville and Helsinki, his phony reasons for going rogue. Book is exact opposite of his fake testimony, which now is a lie!'

Arnold added that Trump has been expecting Cohen to release a book.

Now Cohen is being let out early alongside dozens of other inmates, the release could be sooner than Trump anticipated.

'It's like Jaws—you don't see Jaws very much, but you hear the music, and for Trump he knows Michael is coming and Trump better hear the Jaws music,' Arnold said.

'For 12 years, Michael cleaned up everything for Trump and his family. Stormy Daniels was a tiny moment in that. There's so much more that will come out in the book.'

He believes it will be a 'bestseller'.

Another person close to Cohen told the publication that the expose was a long time coming.

'He has been using his time wisely inside to write a book and no one should be surprised as he's always talked about writing a book,' the source told The Daily Beast.

'Michael's stories about Trump are incredible. He has saved a lot of them for when the time is right and the time is now right.

'Michael spent a long time with Trump—he is going to go into everything and he's not going to hold anything back. He has paid his dues and he's pissed he had to go to jail for this.' 

More than a year ago after Cohen's sentencing, Trump tweeted about knowledge of him shopping a book

More than a year ago after Cohen's sentencing, Trump tweeted about knowledge of him shopping a book

Cohen tried to get his sentence reduced in March but a judge shut him down. Now due to COVID-19 he and many other prisoners will be released from the Federal Correctional Facility in Otisville, New York (pictured)

Cohen tried to get his sentence reduced in March but a judge shut him down. Now due to COVID-19 he and many other prisoners will be released from the Federal Correctional Facility in Otisville, New York (pictured)

Sources suggest he will have no problem shopping the book and publishers have estimated Cohen could get hundreds of thousands for it.

'He was bragging he was going to have a one-hour television show on ABC and he said he would be like the Count of Monte Cristo and come back and get Trump,' one of Cohen's fellow inmates told The Daily Beast.

Cohen's attorney, Roger Bennet Adler, declined to comment to the publication.

Cohen began serving his sentence last May and was scheduled to be released from prison in November 2021.

Cohen tried to get his sentence reduced in March but a judge shut him down.

'That Cohen would seek to single himself out for release to home confinement appears to be just another effort to inject himself into the news cycle,' U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III wrote then.

'Ten months into his prison term, it's time that Cohen accept the consequences of his criminal convictions for serious crimes that had far reaching institutional harms.'