Here’s a summary of what Michael Cohen, the former personal lawyer to President Donald Trump, is now alleging after pleading guilty to lying to Congress.

Cohen last year testified before both the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, as both explored possible collusion between the Trump presidential campaign and Russia.

In October 2017, Cohen testified — and said publicly — that the Trump Organization’s discussions about a prospective real-estate development in Moscow ended in January 2016, before the Iowa caucuses.

Now, Cohen says he and a person identified as “Individual-2” — who, according to press reports, is Felix Sater, a property developer who’s alleged to have ties to Russian organized crime — were talking as late as June 2016 about getting Russian government approval for the Moscow project. Trump was by then the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.

Cohen is now testifying that he discussed the status of the Moscow project on more than three occasions with Trump and also briefed family members — it doesn’t identify whether the family members included Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump and/or Ivanka Trump — who worked at the company. Ivanka Trump is now a White House adviser, as is her husband, Jared Kushner, while Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. run the Trump Organization.

Cohen in January 2016 emailed the press secretary to Russian President Vladimir Putin about the prospect of Kremlin support for the project. He talked with an assistant in that office for approximately 20 minutes, outlining the proposed Moscow project, and requested assistance in moving it forward.

Donald Trump, Tevfik Arif and Felix Sater at the September 2007 launch party for a Trump-branded hotel in the Soho section of Lower Manhattan. By late 2017, the Trump Organization, in the face of local opposition and partisan protest as well as scrutiny of the project’s alleged ties to Russian funding, had backed out of the property. Getty Images

After his call, Sater emailed. “It’s about [the President of Russia] they called today,” he wrote.

In May 2016, Sater again emailed Cohen, saying he had “had a chat with Moscow. Assuming the trip does happen the question is before or after the convention,” according to the email presented in Cohen’s information. “Obviously the pre-meeting trip (you only) can happen anything you want but the 2 big guys where [sic] the question. I said I would confirm and revert.”

Cohen replied that he would conduct the trip before Cleveland, referring to the site of the Republican convention that summer.

Sater then wrote Cohen and told him that a Russian official wanted to invite him in June to what he called “Russia’s Davos” to possibly introduce Cohen to either Putin or Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. While Cohen replied, “works for me,” he canceled the trip in June. Cohen’s reason for that cancellation isn’t explained in the court document.

Trump on Thursday called Cohen a liar trying to get a reduced sentence for crimes unrelated to his work for the Trump Organization. He said there would have been nothing wrong with the Trump Tower deal in Moscow going through, and that he decided not to pursue it in order to focus on his presidential aspirations.

Read:Ex-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen pleads guilty to lying over Russia investigation