WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump ordered his personal attorney to make threats for him about 500 times over the last 10 years, former lawyer Michael Cohen told lawmakers on Wednesday.

During testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives’ Oversight Committee, Trump’s longtime “fixer” described a boss who was “intoxicating” but also deeply flawed, a “conman” who lied without hesitation.

Cohen lamented his “misplaced loyalty” to Trump and said he was ashamed of “concealing Mr. Trump’s illicit acts.”

“How many times did Mr. Trump order you to threaten an individual or entity on his behalf?” Democratic U.S. Representative Jackie Speier asked him.

“Quite a few times,” Cohen responded.

“50 times?”

“More.”

“100 times?”

“More.”

Michael Cohen, the former personal attorney of U.S. President Donald Trump, testifies before a House Committee on Oversight and Reform hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., February 27, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

“200 times?”

“More.”

“500 times?”

“Probably,” Cohen replied, saying the threats sometimes involved litigation or “an argument with a nasty reporter that is writing an article.”

Cohen provided the committee with copies of letters he wrote at Mr. Trump’s behest threatening his high school and colleges not to release his grades or test scores.

"We will hold your institution liable to the fullest extent of the law including damages and criminality," Cohen wrote in a letter to Fordham University tmsnrt.rs/2BPK4Kz.

The panel’s top Republican, U.S. Representative Jim Jordan, read from a profanity-laced threat of legal action made by Cohen to a Daily Beast reporter in 2015. Cohen acknowledged he made the comments to protect Trump from a negative story.

Speier also asked Cohen about stories purchased but never published by American Media Inc, publisher of tabloid National Enquirer, which is headed by Trump friend David Pecker.

“So he paid off someone about a love child that doesn’t exist?” Speier asked, referring to one such story.

“Correct,” Cohen said.

American Media said Pecker met with Cohen and at least one other member of Trump’s presidential campaign in August 2015 and offered to help with negative stories about Trump’s relationships with women by buying the rights to those stories, according to a deal made public in December by federal prosecutors in New York.

Cohen acknowledged lying for Trump and expressed remorse in particular about heeding Trump’s demand that Cohen lie to his wife about hush money payments to an adult film star.

“Lying to the first lady is one of my biggest regrets,” he said.