Senate Intelligence Committee subpoenas President Trump's former fixer, Michael Cohen: Lawyer originally appeared on abcnews.go.com

The Senate Intelligence Committee subpoenaed President Donald Trump's former longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen on Thursday morning, according to his lawyer, Lanny Davis. According to a source familiar with the matter, he was requested to appear on Feb. 12.

A second source says the subpoena is a request for testimony behind closed doors. The same source adds that one reason for bringing him back is to see if he may have misled them at times beyond what has already been publicly outlined by special counsel Robert Mueller and Cohen.

When asked if Cohen would comply with a subpoena, Davis told ABC News, "We will comply and hope to agree upon reasonable terms, ground rules and a date."

The issue of the subpoena comes as Cohen's and Trump's legal teams publicly face off.

In an interview Thursday on ABC's "Good Morning America," Davis said the president's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani should be indicted for "witness tampering" following his comments on national television earlier this week.

"Calling out a man's father-in-law and wife in order to intimidate the witness is not fair game and it needs to be investigated," Davis told ABC News' chief anchor George Stephanopoulos.

(MORE: Michael Cohen postpones House testimony due to 'threats against his family' from Trump, Giuliani, his attorney says)

Davis was referring to Giuliani's remarks during an appearance last Sunday on CNN, in which he said that Cohen's father-in-law, "may have ties to something called organized crime."

The president himself said via Twitter two days earlier to "watch" Cohen's father-in-law. Trump has posted other tweets in recent weeks suggesting that Cohen's father-in-law and wife may have links to criminal activity.

"Does the American people, even Trump voters, have any sympathy for attacking a man’s family?" Cohen's lawyer said on "GMA" in response. "Does any American Trump or non-Trump supporter support that kind of demagogic, reckless interference with Congress as well as obstruction of justice?"

PHOTO: Rudy Giuliani, former New York City mayor and current lawyer for President Donald Trump, speaks to members of the media at the White House, May 30, 2018 in Washington. (Alex Wong/Getty Images, FILE) More

Davis said "family is out of bounds," adding that Congress should censure Trump for his comments and investigate Giuliani.

"The House of Representatives now has an obligation," he said. "A resolution of censure when the president of the United States indisputably intimidates and obstructs justice to prevent a witness from testifying is an order. So is a federal criminal investigation of Rudy Giuliani for witness tampering."

"Mr. Trump has immunity from indictments, so it's alleged or argued in the Justice Department," he added. "But Mr. Giuliani has committed a crime or at least should be indicted for that crime on the face of what he said on national television."

(MORE: Parts of Buzzfeed article tying Trump to Cohen’s lies to Congress are not accurate, special counsel says)

President Trump tweeted on Thursday morning, apparently in response to Davis' interview, "So interesting that bad lawyer Michael Cohen, who sadly will not be testifying before Congress, is using the lawyer of Crooked Hillary Clinton to represent him - Gee, how did that happen? Remember July 4th weekend when Crooked went before FBI & wasn’t sworn in, no tape, nothing?"

Davis worked with President Bill Clinton in the '90s.

PHOTO: Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump's former personal attorney arrives at federal court for his sentencing hearing in New York City, Dec. 12, 2018. (Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images, FILE) More

Davis had announced on Wednesday that Cohen was postponing his highly-anticipated testimony before Congress out of concern for his family.

Trump's former attorney and longtime fixer had volunteered to appear before the House of Representatives' Committee on Oversight and Reform on Feb. 7, just weeks before beginning a 3-year sentence in federal prison for an array of crimes he pleaded guilty to committing while working for Trump.

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