Testimony for the week concluded with Hope Hicks, the longtime Trump press aide, who was overcome with tears during questioning.
This is a special weekend edition of our newsletter focusing on the first-ever criminal trial of a former president, Donald Trump. If you do not wish to receive this weekend update click here. |
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| From sex tapes to tears, Trump’s hush money trial delves into the allegations and side stories |
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Hope Hicks, the longtime aide to Donald Trump who was at his side during his rise to power, was the final witness to take the stand this week, capping three days of testimony that further illustrated the inner workings of his operation and how the alleged hush money payments came about. If the prosecution is trying to tell a story, Hicks was a reluctant narrator. She admitted to feeling nervous as she took the stand. She wasn’t effusive in her details of what happened, even as she offered praise for Trump’s skills at messaging and branding. But she still continued to tie together the points that the prosecution is trying to make, chiefly that Trump was upset about accusations that he had an affair and was willing to pay to cover them up. Hicks testified very little about the payment itself, but she did say the 2016 presidential campaign was in “crisis” when the “Access Hollywood” tape went public, as it scrambled to prevent any further damage. Hicks’ testimony came after that of Keith Davidson, a lawyer in Los Angeles who admitted on cross-examination to being involved in a litany of agreements involving celebrities and stories they didn’t want to see become public. While his motives were far different, Davidson also appeared reluctant to dish the details on the stand, giving very concise answers and at times invoking attorney-client privilege. That may play to the prosecution’s benefit. Trump’s defense is going to try to paint Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen as seeking revenge on Trump and attention to line his own pockets. The prosecution is using witnesses like Hicks and Davidson to corroborate Cohen’s testimony, and that they’re doing so without much glee may help undermine the argument that everyone presented by the prosecution is simply out to get Trump. |
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| Listen to Laura Jarrett and Lawrence Hurley discuss this week in Trump's legal cases on Chuck Todd's podcast: Listen here→ |
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The trial resumes Monday. The prosecution has not yet said which witness will be called next, but there is a cast of characters who were listed as possible witnesses at the beginning of the trial who remain: former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus, former White House executive assistant Madeleine Westerhout, Stormy Daniels and Cohen. The trial is expected to meet Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday next week. |
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Longtime Trump aide Hope Hicks on Michael Cohen: “He liked to call himself a ‘fixer’ or ‘Mr. Fix-it,’ but it was only because he had broken it in the first place." |
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| The must-have accessory at Donald Trump’s hush money trial? Binoculars. |
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| Trump has worried that Republicans aren't doing enough to support him while he sits in court. |
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| By Adam Reiss, Jillian Frankel, Gary Grumbach and Dareh Gregorian |
Stormy Daniels attorney recounted hush money deal struck before 2016 election. |
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| Salacious stories involving Lindsay Lohan, Hulk Hogan, Charlie Sheen and others came up during cross-examination of Stormy Daniels' former lawyer. |
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This is a special weekend edition of our newsletter focusing on the first-ever criminal trial of a former president, Donald Trump. If you do not wish to receive this weekend update click here. |
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