(CNN) President Donald Trump's attorney Rudy Giuliani said Sunday that he is still getting up to speed on the facts of the President's legal situation, but the payment to Stormy Daniels did not require him to have a full accounting of the details at hand.

"Well, I have just on been on board couple of weeks," Giuliani said in a phone interview with CNN.

"I haven't been able to read the 1.2 million documents," he continued. "I am focused on the law more than the facts right now. A couple of things were fairly easy to dispose of. The whole situation of the $130,000 doesn't require an analysis of the facts because it wasn't intended as a campaign contribution. It was intended as a personal, embarrassing, harassing claim."

Giuliani's comments come after a whirlwind week of news interviews in which the former New York City mayor made several eye-opening remarks. Earlier Sunday, he did not rule out to ABC News that Trump could plead the Fifth Amendment in special counsel Robert Mueller's probe and insisted that Trump would not have to comply with a potential subpoena. Giuliani also told ABC's George Stephanopoulos that Trump's personal attorney, Michael Cohen, could have doled out payments like the one he made to Daniels to other women, though he said he had "no knowledge" of other such agreements.

Giuliani spoke with CNN after meeting with Trump on what the former New York mayor described as a "mostly social" visit.

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