New York – U.S. President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, received a secret payment of at least $400,000 to arrange talks between Trump and Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko last year, the British Broadcasting Corp reported on Wednesday.

The payment was arranged by intermediaries acting for Poroshenko who wanted to open a back channel to the Republican U.S. president, the BBC said, citing unnamed sources in Kiev.

The task was given to a former aide, who asked a loyal Ukrainian MP for help. He in turn used personal contacts in a Jewish charity in New York state, Chabad of Port Washington. This eventually led to Michael Cohen, the president’s lawyer and trusted fixer. Mr Cohen was paid $400,000.

Cohen, who was not registered as a representative of Ukraine, was brought in because Ukraine’s registered lobbyists and its embassy in Washington could get Poroshenko little more than a photo op with Trump while the Ukrainian leader “needed something that could be portrayed as ‘talks,'” the broadcaster reported.

“This story is completely false,” Cohen said in a text message to Reuters. The White House did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

In an emailed statement to Reuters, Poroshenko’s office also said the story was false. “Blatant lie, slander and fake,” it said.

The two Ukrainians said to have opened the back channel denied the story, the BBC reported.

Trump met with Poroshenko at the White House on June 20, 2017, in what was officially called a “drop-by” visit after the Ukrainian leader’s separate talks with Vice President Mike Pence.

Poroshenko, speaking to reporters after his session with Trump, said he came away pleased with what he called a “full, detailed meeting.”

There is no suggestion that Trump was aware of the payment to Cohen, the BBC said.

Poroshenko was desperate to meet with Trump because of what had happened during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, the BBC said.

According to the BBC, several sources in Ukraine said Poroshenko, believing that Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton was sure to win the presidency, had authorized the leak of a document published by the New York Times in August 2016 that appeared to show Paul Manafort, Trump’s presidential campaign manager, had received millions of dollars from pro-Russian interests in Ukraine. Manafort resigned a few days later.

A week after Poroshenko returned home from the meeting with Trump, Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau announced it was no longer investigating Manafort, the BBC said.

A Ukrainian official said Cohen was paid $400,000 while another source put the figure at $600,000, the BBC reported.

Cohen is being investigated for possible bank and tax fraud, possible campaign law violations linked to a hush-money payment to a woman, and perhaps other matters related to Trump’s presidential campaign, a person familiar with the probe has said.

Rabbi Shalom Paltiel of Chabad of Port Washington, said The BBC’s claim that their organization played a role in any of this is false and unsubstantiated.

“Neither I nor any of our staff know, or have been in contact with, any current or former members of the Ukrainian parliament, nor Michael Cohen.” Rabbi Paltiel said.

“Nobody at the BBC bothered to verify the claim with us, or even request comment, as is basic journalistic practice. Despite the fast-paced news culture we live in and the understandable desire to get a story out first, someone from the BBC could have easily picked up the phone or sent us an email.”