Allen Weisselberg, the Trump Organization’s longtime executive vice president and chief financial officer, has been granted immunity by federal prosecutors, according to a report Friday.

Weisselberg gave the feds information about Trump’s former personal lawyer and longtime fixer Michael Cohen, who pleaded guilty to eight criminal charges in Manhattan federal court Tuesday, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Weisselberg was one of the Trump execs who arranged the $420,000 payment to Cohen to reimburse him for hush money paid to a porn star who alleged she had a fling with Trump in 2006.

The decision by the Manhattan US Attorney’s Office to give immunity to Weisselberg significantly ramped up the pressure on the president.

“Alan knows everything and anything about all the financials,” a former Trump Organization employee told The Washington Post. “He knows every dollar that goes in and every dollar that leaves. He knows where all the bodies are buried.”

Weisselberg for years has been what The Journal called Trump’s financial gatekeeper, and he took control of the president’s financial assets and business interests along with his sons Eric and Donald Jr. after the election. He originally worked for Trump’s father, Fred Trump, in the 1970s and has stuck with the company for decades.

Court documents said Cohen in early 2017 submitted an invoice to Weisselberg looking to be repaid for legal expenses and payments he said he made on Trump’s behalf. One of the payments was made to porn star Stormy Daniels, who got $130,000 to keep quiet about her alleged fling.

The exec wound up in the headlines last month when Cohen’s attorney, Lanny Davis, released a secret recording Cohen made of a conversation with then-candidate Trump in September 2016.

In the recording, Cohen talked about Trump’s need to buy the rights to Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal’s story of a 2006 affair with Trump and mentioned that he had discussed buying the rights to her story with Weisselberg.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan subpoenaed Weisselberg to appear before a grand jury after the recording went public.

While the Trump loyalist is only known to have provided information about Cohen, he could be questioned or even subpoenaed down the road by special counsel Robert Mueller’s team on a wide range of topics, including the president’s personal finances.