WOLF BLITZER (HOST): Your reaction, now that six people say almost contemporaneously she spoke of this, of what she called this attack?
MICHAEL COHEN: Well again, those are all statements that she's made to other people. I don't believe that any of these people were there with them at Mar-A-Lago.
What I can tell you is that the accuser -- and I'd never want to turn around and tell an accuser that, you know, this story that you're relaying is a lie. I am not going to be one of those people that attack and accuse somebody who has been attacked, it's not who I am.
However, I will say, for example, the woman that was on the airplane in first class, I think most people who heard the story are somewhat, you know, confused as to her accounting of the story, that she sits down next to a stranger, and for 15 minutes, he is all over her.
Now, remember in first class, you have the steward and the stewardesses, they're on top of you 24/7 from the moment you sit down offering you orange juice or champagne, until the second you leave. Hard to imagine that somebody was all over another person who's a complete stranger. That person didn't within a second turn around and say, “Hey, what are you doing?” Right? And make a scene, or a steward or a stewardess or somebody who was sitting next to her.
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BLITZER: Were you -- Michael, very quickly, because we're almost out of time. Were you uncomfortable when he suggested these women weren't very attractive?
COHEN: You know, I don't even want to talk about that. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, you know, some people may think that they're beautiful, others don't. I don't think it's relevant to the conversation at all.
BLITZER: Well, he is the one who said, take a look at them, or you know, whatever he said. You know, he was suggesting that they weren't attractive enough for him to make such a move.
COHEN: Well, I think what Mr. Trump is really trying to say is that they're not -- they're not somebody that he would be attracted to, and therefore, the whole thing is nonsense.