EXCLUSIVE: "I will not be the villain of his story," Michael Cohen tells @ABC News' @GStephanopoulos, saying that Pres. Trump knew it was wrong to make hush-money payments during 2016 presidential campaign.



Watch the exclusive interview only on @GMA. https://t.co/84huhn7jOE pic.twitter.com/PS0WZJNfpF — ABC News (@ABC) December 14, 2018

NEW YORK -- Michael Cohen said that he knew that making hush payments to women who had alleged affairs with then-candidate Trump was wrong, and he said that the president knew that, too. Following his sentencing to three years in prison, President Donald Trump's longtime former lawyer sat down exclusively with ABC's George Stephanopoulos on "Good Morning America" in an interview which aired on Friday morning.U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III said on Wednesday that Cohen deserved a harsh punishment for crimes including tax evasion, lying to Congress and arranging illicit payments to silence women who posed a risk to Trump's presidential campaign."I stood up before the world yesterday, and I accepted the responsibility of my actions," Cohen told Stephanopoulos.The judge rejected arguments by Cohen's lawyers that he should be spared jail time because he cooperated in multiple federal investigations involving Trump.When Stephanopoulos asked whether the president knew it was wrong to make the payments, Cohen replied, "Of course," but he did not elaborate."I will not be the villain of his story," Cohen said.He added that his "blind loyalty" to Trump made him feel a duty to "cover up" the president's "dirty deeds.""I gave loyalty to someone who, truthfully, does not deserve loyalty," Cohen said.Cohen's crimes included evading $1.4 million in taxes and misleading Congress about his talks with Russians about a Trump skyscraper project in Moscow.Trump had called for a tough sentence for Cohen, whom he labeled a liar. Cohen told ABC he no longer feels any loyalty to the president."My first loyalty belongs to my wife, my daughter, my son and this country," he said.