Stormy Daniels to face tough questions from Trump lawyers at trial
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[May 09, 2024]
By Jack Queen, Luc Cohen and Andy Sullivan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Porn star Stormy Daniels will face tough
questioning from Donald Trump's lawyers on Thursday as they try to
dismantle the credibility of a woman whose story of a 2006 sexual
encounter ultimately led to the first criminal trial of a former U.S.
president.
Daniels' unflattering account of sex with Trump riveted jurors on
Tuesday, and served to remind U.S. voters of the more lurid aspects of
his 2017-2021 presidency as he campaigns to win back the White House
this year.
But Trump's legal team was able to punch some holes in her account.
Under questioning, Daniels admitted that she had not always told the
truth about the encounter, and acknowledged that she has refused to pay
Trump a judgment of more than $500,000 stemming from a failed defamation
lawsuit.
Daniels also did not provide a clear explanation about why she let Trump
buy her silence after she decided to go public with her account. She
agreed that she hated Trump and wanted to see him imprisoned if he is
found guilty.
Trump lawyer Susan Necheles accused Daniels of trying to profit off the
encounter and making up parts of her story entirely. Daniels
acknowledged that over the years she told some news outlets that she had
sex with Trump and told others she had not.
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"Isn't it a fact that what you said depended on who would pay you
money?" Necheles asked her.
Daniels said that was not the case.
Trump is charged with falsifying business records to cover up a $130,000
payment to Daniels to keep quiet during his 2016 presidential bid. He
has pleaded not guilty and denies ever having sex with Daniels.
Prosecutors say Trump's efforts to obscure the paper trail corrupted the
2016 election by preventing voters from learning about a story that
might have informed their vote.
In a sense, Daniels' testimony is peripheral to the case, and it may not
matter much to voters who have already heard other stories of Trump's
alleged sexual misbehavior.
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Trump's lawyers argued as much on Tuesday when they unsuccessfully
sought a mistrial, saying that she had "inflamed" the jury with
unnecessary details like claiming that Trump did not used a condom.
Daniels' testimony clearly frustrated Trump, who at one point
appeared to call it "bullshit," which drew a warning about witness
intimidation from Justice Juan Merchan.
Merchan has already fined Trump $10,000 for talking about jurors and
witnesses in the trial and has warned that further violations of a
gag order that is in place could lead to imprisonment.
The case is widely seen as the least consequential of the four
criminal prosecutions Trump faces. But the chances of the other
three going to trial before the Nov. 5 election are growing more
distant.
One federal case in Washington that accuses Trump of trying to
overturn his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden has been held
up for months by the Supreme Court.
Another federal case in Florida that accuses him of mishandling
classified documents has been delayed indefinitely as the judge,
appointed by Trump, considers legal objections by his lawyers.
A state case in Georgia that accuses Trump of election interference
likewise is on hold as an appeals court considers whether the
prosecutor improperly had a romantic affair with another lawyer who
is no longer on the case.
(Reporting by Jack Queen and Luc Cohen in New York and Andy Sullivan
in Washington; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Bill Berkrot)
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