Current:Home > MarketsTrump’s lawyers will grill ex-tabloid publisher as 1st week of hush money trial testimony wraps -Thrive Success Strategies
Trump’s lawyers will grill ex-tabloid publisher as 1st week of hush money trial testimony wraps
View
Date:2025-04-13 23:10:18
NEW YORK (AP) — After prosecutors’ lead witness painted a tawdry portrait of “catch and kill” tabloid schemes, defense lawyers in Donald Trump’s hush money trial are poised Friday to dig into an account of the former publisher of the National Enquirer and his efforts to protect Trump from negative stories during the 2016 election.
David Pecker will return to the witness stand for the fourth day as defense attorneys try to poke holes in the testimony of the former National Enquirer publisher, who has described helping bury embarrassing stories Trump feared could hurt his campaign.
It will cap a consequential week in the criminal cases the former president is facing as he vies to reclaim the White House in November.
At the same time jurors listened to testimony in Manhattan, the Supreme Court on Thursday signaled it was likely to reject Trump’s sweeping claims that he is immune from prosecution in his 2020 election interference case in Washington. But the conservative-majority high court seemed inclined to limit when former presidents could be prosecuted — a ruling that could benefit Trump by delaying that trial, potentially until after the November election.
In New York — the first of Trump’s four criminal cases to go to trial — the presumptive Republican presidential nominee faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in connection with hush money payments meant to stifle negative stories from surfacing in the final days of the 2016 campaign.
Prosecutors allege that Trump sought to illegally influence the 2016 race through a practice known in the tabloid industry as “catch-and-kill” — catching a potentially damaging story by buying the rights to it and then killing it through agreements that prevent the paid person from telling the story to anyone else.
Over several days on the witness stand, Pecker has described how he and the tabloid parlayed rumor-mongering into splashy stories that smeared Trump’s opponents and, just as crucially, leveraged his connections to suppress seamy stories about Trump.
The charges center on $130,000 in payments that Trump’s company made to his then-lawyer, Michael Cohen. He paid that sum on Trump’s behalf to keep porn actor Stormy Daniels from going public with her claims of a sexual encounter with Trump a decade earlier. Trump has denied the encounter ever happened.
During the cross-examination that began Thursday, defense attorney Emil Bove grilled Pecker on his recollection of specific dates and meanings. He appeared to be laying further groundwork for the defense’s argument that any dealings Trump had Pecker were intended to protect himself, his reputation and his family — not his campaign.
Pecker recalled how an editor told him that Daniels’ representative was trying to sell her story and that the tabloid could acquire it for $120,000. Pecker said he put his foot down, noting that the tabloid was already $180,000 in the hole for Trump-related catch-and-kill transactions. But, Pecker said, he told Cohen to buy the story himself to prevent Daniels from going public with her claim.
“I said to Michael, ‘My suggestion to you is that you should buy the story, and you should take it off the market because if you don’t and it gets out, I believe the boss will be very angry with you.’”
_____
Richer reported from Washington.
veryGood! (252)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Man shot to death in New York City subway car
- Dear Life Kit: My boyfriend says I need to live on my own before we move in together
- Bail is set at $4 million for an Ohio woman charged in her 5-year-old foster son’s suffocation death
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- West Virginia inmate enters plea in death of cellmate at Southern Regional Jail
- Trial over Black transgender woman’s death in rural South Carolina focuses on secret relationship
- Trial of ‘Rust’ armorer to begin in fatal film rehearsal shooting by Alec Baldwin
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Why Meta, Amazon, and other 'Magnificent Seven' stocks rallied today
Ranking
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Oklahoma man hacked government auction site to buy cars for a buck
- A look at Nvidia’s climb to prominence in the AI world, by the numbers
- Clues to a better understanding of chronic fatigue syndrome emerge from major study
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Emotional vigil held for 11-year-old Audrii Cunningham after family friend charged in her murder
- 4 charged in the deaths of two Navy SEALs boarding ship carrying Iranian-made weapons to Yemen
- Can you make calls using Wi-Fi while AT&T is down? What to know amid outage
Recommendation
Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
U.S. warns Russia against nuclear-capable anti-satellite weapon
US promises new sanctions on Iran for its support of Russia’s war in Ukraine, potential missile sale
Man shot to death in New York City subway car
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Massive fireball lights up night sky across large swath of U.S.
NFL cut candidates: Russell Wilson, Jamal Adams among veterans on shaky ground
Afrofuturist opera `Lalovavi’ to premiere in Cincinnati on Juneteenth 2025