Last week, we had a post on Donald Trump's surprising lack of financial contribution to Mitt Romney's presidential campaign.

We were surprised, given that Trump has been a prominent public backer of the former Massachusetts Governor since January, that the FEC reported the billionaire celebrity real estate mogul giving a lot less than we had expected.

But today got a call from Trump's executive vice president and special counsel Michael Cohen, who told us that Trump has actually donated a lot more money than the FEC has reported so far.

According to Cohen, Trump has given millions to SuperPACs supporting Romney's campaign, and is also one of the campaign's "bundlers" — an exclusive group of big-money fundraisers who the Romney campaign has kept secret. Cohen also said that Trump has gotten his whole family to pitch in to make Romney president.

It's still weird that the FEC doesn't have a public record of what was described to us as a series of contributions to Republican causes over the past two years, but what we were told is still really interesting.

It turns out that Trump has pulled out all the stops when it comes to donating to Romney, and the disclosures we were looking for haven't been released by the Federal Elections Commission.

Michael Cohen, the Executive Vice President and Special Council to Trump, gave us a full look into Trump's work on the campaign to elect Romney.

According to Cohen, Trump has donated "millions" to SuperPACs which support the Romney campaign. He wouldn't say which ones, and since disclosure requirements for SuperPACs are sketchy, we may not find out.

Still, looking at the Romney SuperPACs that have raised more than a million dollars to support the Republican, it's plausible that groups like Restore Our Future, Club for Growth Action, and American Crossroads have raised from Trump.

SuperPACs are organizations that can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money on elections, all without the same disclosure requirements of typical Political Action Committees.

Cohen also told us that Donald Trump is one of the people referred to as a bundler, or a person who uses their personal network to raise large amounts of cash from friends for political campaigns.

Controversially, the Romney campaign hasn't disclosed their bundlers, but Cohen told us that Trump has "raised mega-millions" for Romney and groups affiliated with him.

Even more, Trump has raised from his own friends and family. Cohen says that Trump has maxed out contributions to Romney, and — per his request — so have his three children Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric through the Romney Victory Fund,

The Romney Victory Fund is a way for donors to max out their contribution with a single check. It achieves the maximum amount of Party and PAC funding that the FEC allows — $70,800 per cycle — split between a number of different State PACs and Party Committees to stay legal.

It also maxes out the contribution to the Romney campaign, bringing the full donation to $75,800.

Cohen told us that Trump donated at the behest of his friend Woody Johnson, the New York Jets owner, and also did so through his attorney in Texas, Paul Jensen.

Cohen, on behalf of Trump, was very open about the whole process. The billionaire real estate developer has come out, according to Cohen, as Romney's "most active surrogate."

If this is all accurate, we stand corrected when it comes to what we said last week about Trump stiffing the Romney campaign.