Stormy Daniels returns for more testimony

Stormy Daniels returns for more testimony
Stormy Daniels returns for more testimony
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Stormy Daniels says Donald Trump greets her in silky pajamas

Adult film actress Stormy Daniels took the stand to testify about her alleged sexual encounter with Donald Trump in his hush money trial.

Stormy Daniels is back on the witness stand Thursday, where she is facing more cross-examination from former President Donald Trump’s lawyer in his New York hush money trial.

The adult film star described on Tuesday having sex with Trump after meeting him at a 2006 Lake Tahoe golf tournament and having dinner with him in his hotel suite. Trump denies that happened.

Daniels’ story of that 2006 evening formed the basis for a $130,000 hush money payment she got from Trump lawyer Michael Cohen less than two weeks before the 2016 presidential election. Prosecutors allege that the payment violated federal campaign finance laws and that Trump falsified records to cover it up.

Keep up with USA TODAY’s live updates from inside and outside the Manhattan courtroom:

Necheles has continued to press Daniels on whether she wanted to publicize her story in 2016 or was instead after money. Necheles asked Daniels about talking with a reporter at Slate Magazine about potentially going public. Necheles suggested Daniels wanted money from that reporter, when she could have just had him publish the story.

The better alternative was to protect my story with a “paper trail,” Daniels said. “It was a perfect solution.”

–Aysha Bagchi

Donald Trump’s youngest son Barron Trump is making his big political debut as an at-large delegate at the Republican National Convention this year.

Barron, now 18 years old, was still a kid during Donald Trump’s presidency. But now he appears to be joining Trump’s other family members on the political scene. Ivanka Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump and son-in-law Jared Kushner have all been intimately involved in Donald Trump’s campaigns and administration.

The hush money trial is on a break on May 17 so Donald Trump can attend Barron Trump’s high school graduation.

–Kinsey Crowley

Trump lawyer Susan Necheles has begun cross-examining Daniels again. Necheles is focusing her opening questions today on Daniels’ claim that she wanted to share her story about Trump in 2016, before she took a hush money deal to keep quiet.

Daniels explained she took the deal because she chose to be “safe.”

“You chose to make money, right?” Necheles shot back.

“I chose to take the non-disclosure,” Daniels replied.

–Aysha Bagchi

Former President Donald Trump complained again about the security outside the New York courthouse for his hush money trial, arguing police were needed more for protests at Columbia and New York universities.

“Outside of this building it’s closed down like Fort Knox,” Trump told reporters in a hallway statement outside the courtroom. “This is like an armed camp down here.”

Trump argued that college protests were organized by people on the left side of the political spectrum rather than the right, and that those protests were a bigger threat to the country than China or Russia.

“You have nothing to worry about. The problem is from the left, not the right,” Trump said. “In my opinion, it’s a bigger danger than China or Russia.”

– Bart Jansen

Former President Donald Trump predicted “some very revealing things” as his New York hush money trial continues Thursday with testimony from porn actress Stormy Daniels.

Daniels testified Tuesday about having sex with Trump in 2006 while he was married, which he has denied. Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, paid Daniels $130,000 to silence her claim before the 2016 election, which prosecutors contended was election interference.

Under cross-examination, Daniels acknowledged hating Trump and refusing to pay him hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees from an unsuccessful defamation suit against him.

“I think you’ll see some very revealing things today,” Trump said in the hallway Thursday.

Trump entered the courtroom after reading a series of statements from lawyers, academics and Republican politicians criticizing the case.

“No evidence of any crime,” Trump said.

– Bart Jansen

Porn star Stormy Daniels was brought into the courtroom at 9:32 am EDT to continue testifying in the hush money case. The judge has now asked for the jury to be brought in.

–Aysha Bagchi

Judge Juan Merchan entered the courtroom at about 9:30 am EDT.

–Aysha Bagchi

Former President Donald Trump entered the courtroom at 9:24 am EDT, flanked by his legal team. He is wearing a blue tie.

Alina Habba, who represented Trump in his recent E. Jean Carroll and civil fraud trials and is a big personality defending him on television shows, is here again today on one of the benches behind the defense trial team’s table. I haven’t seen Eric Trump, the former president’s middle son, who was present for Stormy Daniels’ testimony on Tuesday.

–Aysha Bagchi

The prosecution team began arriving in the courtroom at 9:16 am EDT and is getting set up. So far, prosecutors Joshua Steinglass, Matthew Colangelo, Rebecca Mangold, Christopher Conroy, and Susan Hoffinger are here. Hoffinger is handling the prosecution’s questioning of Stormy Daniels.

–Aysha Bagchi

Trump’s criminal trial starts back up at 9:30 am EDT on Thursday, after having a day off on Wednesday.

–Aysha Bagchi

After Judge Juan Merchan threatened Donald Trump on Monday with possible jail if he violates a gag order in his New York hush money trial again, experts said the detention could range from a holding cell behind the courtroom to infamous Rikers Island.

Ronald Kuby, a veteran New York defense lawyer who has visited clients in city jails and also spent time in them for various acts of protest, said Trump is unlikely to enjoy any detention because the cells can be tiny, the metal doors loud and the food unappetizing.

“It’s a bad experience,” Kuby told USA TODAY. “Trust me. “I’ve been there.”

For overnight detention, Rikers Island is an option, although experts called it unlikely. City jails on Rikers Island have been criticized for decades for violence and unsanitary conditions.

James Oleson, an associate professor of criminology at the University of Auckland’s school of social sciences, who previously served as a staffer on the US Judicial Conference’s committee on criminal law, said the theater of putting Trump behind bars for a few hours might not be more effective than purposes in curbing Trump’s comments. Merchan has fined Trump $10,000 for 10 violations of the gag order, for commenting on witnesses and jurors participating in the trial.

“It is terra incognita: unknown land, off the existing maps,” Oleson said of potentially jailing a former president.

– Bart Jansen and Josh Meyer

Trump lawyer Susan Necheles began cross-examining Stormy Daniels on Tuesday. Necheles focused on challenging Daniels’ credibility and suggesting Daniels is a person motivated by money.

Necheles noted that Daniels publicly denied she had sex with Trump before she said they did have sex. The jury has already seen evidence of that. Daniels’ former lawyer Keith Davidson testified to his own involvement in preparing a denial by Daniels in early 2018.

Necheles also painted Daniels’ hush money deal in 2016 as extortion. “False,” Daniels shot back emphatically.

–Aysha Bagchi

Two House Republican chairmen urged Attorney General Merrick Garland to consider criminal charges against Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, for allegedly lying to Congress.

Cohen, a key witness in Trump’s New York hush money trial, has already pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about a Trump real estate project in Russia. But Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Oversight and Accountability Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., urged Garland to consider more charges against Cohen because he is a key witness in Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s criminal trial against Trump, where his credibility will be at stake.

The accused accused Cohen of lying at least six times, including by denying he committed fraudulent acts that he’d already pleaded guilty to and by testifying he did not seek a job in Trump’s White House.

The accusations are based on Cohen’s testimony to Comer’s committee in February 2019, which outlined the current criminal case against Trump. Trump is charged with falsifying business records to hide his reimbursement from her to Cohen, who paid porn actress Stormy Daniels to remain silent before the 2016 election about her claim she had sex with Trump while he was married.

Trump denied having sex and said he was paying Cohen for legal expenses, not to pay off Daniels.

“In short, to prosecute President Trump, Bragg has revived this ‘zombie’ case relying on a known – and convicted – liar and his testimony at a congressional hearing in which he lied at least six times,” the legislators wrote.

– Bart Jansen

Trump faces 34 criminal counts of falsifying business records. Prosecutors allege Trump falsified records to cover up unlawfully interfering in the 2016 presidential election through a $130,000 hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels. The payment was made by former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen less than two weeks before Election Day.

–Aysha Bagchi

The trial is generally off on Wednesdays. Judge Juan Merchan designated those days to preside over special court programs for criminal defendants who have mental health issues or are veterans, according to the Associated Press.

–Aysha Bagchi

Judge Juan Merchan said in a private conversation at his bench Tuesday that he heard Trump cursing during Daniels’ testimony and he “won’t tolerate that.”

“I understand that your client is upset at this point, but he is cursing audibly, and he is shaking his head visually and that’s contemptuous,” Merchan said, according to a transcript that has now been released. “It has the potential to intimidate the witness and the jury can see that.”

Merchan said he saw Trump shake his head and look down when Daniels described lightly spanking him with a magazine at dinner before their alleged sexual encounter.

When there was discussion about The Apprentice, Trump “again uttered a vulgarity,” the judge said, according to the transcript.

“I am speaking to you here at the bench because I don’t want to embarrass him,” Merchan told Blanche, who said he would talk to his client and later confirmed having done so.

–Aysha Bagchi

 
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