Donald Trump's long-time personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, is a man who seems to be doing his best job of living life as a Barry Zuckercorn impersonator. And that's extremely unfortunate for him, because a more competent lawyer might be better equipped to deal with being squarely in the FBI's crosshairs.

On Monday, the FBI raided Cohen's office, and since then we've learned that they were specifically looking for any material related to paying off Stormy Daniels and another woman. The New York Times has also discovered that the warrant was surprisingly broad, also covering anything related to the infamous Access Hollywood tape. Per the Times:

The warrant also covered emails and other documents that could reveal Mr. Cohen’s private communications with Mr. Trump during a tense period in the presidential campaign when Mr. Trump confronted the possibility of embarrassing details of his extramarital affairs. And it delved deeply into Mr. Cohen’s past, including documents about Mr. Cohen’s personal and business finances, including his work as a New York taxi fleet manager.

But that's not the end of Cohen's headaches. The Associated Press reported on Thursday that the FBI is now also looking at Cohen's relationship with the National Enquirer, and to explain that, we need to back up a bit. Months before the election, the Enquirer's parent company, American Media Inc., paid $30,000 to Trump's ex-doorman, Dino Sajudin. The money was part of a deal where Sajudin signed over all rights to a rumor he'd heard that Trump fathered a child with an employee at Trump World Tower. But the Enquirer never ran the story; they effectively bought it from Sajudin and sat on it, while Sajudin faced a $1 million fine if he shared the story or deal with anyone.

If this sounds familiar, it's because it's happened before. AMI paid a former Playmate, Karen McDougal, $150,000 for the rights to her story that she's had an affair with Trump, and that only became public when the Wall Street Journal published the story, not the Enquirer. As the AP reports:

The parallel between the ex-Playmate’s and the ex-doorman’s dealings with the Enquirer raises new questions about the roles that the Enquirer and Cohen may have played in protecting Trump’s image during a hard-fought presidential election. Prosecutors are probing whether Cohen broke banking or campaign laws in connection with AMI’s payment to McDougal and a $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels that Cohen said he paid out of his own pocket.

So on top of everything else, the FBI is now also looking at all correspondence Cohen and top brass at both AMI and the Enquirer. It's starting to make a lot more sense why Trump was spitting mad over Monday's raid.