Trump's lawyer accuses Michael Cohen of lying at hush money trial
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[May 17, 2024]
By Jody Godoy, Jack Queen, Luc Cohen and Andy Sullivan
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Donald Trump's lawyer on Thursday accused star
witness Michael Cohen of lying at the former U.S. president's trial
about a phone conversation he claimed to have had with Trump about a
hush money payment to a porn star shortly before the 2016 presidential
election.
Trump's lawyer Todd Blanche said the phone conversation was about
harassment from a prank caller and not, as Cohen had asserted in
previous testimony, about a $130,000 payment that bought the silence of
porn star Stormy Daniels at the center of the month-long trial.
"That is a lie," Blanche said. "You can admit it!"
"No sir I can't, because I am not certain that is accurate," Cohen
responded. He said he believed that he spoke with Trump's then-bodyguard
Keith Schiller about the harassment and also spoke briefly with Trump
about the payment.
"We are not asking for your belief," Blanche said, raising his voice.
The exchange took place during several hours of questioning by Blanche
designed to cast Trump's former fixer as a spiteful turncoat eager to
see his former boss behind bars.
Blanche played jurors audio clips of Cohen saying that the case "fills
me with delight" and that he felt "giddy with hope and laughter"
imagining Trump and his family in prison.
He told them that Cohen had previously lied to Congress and to the U.S.
Justice Department and had lied in court as well. He pointed out that
Cohen had privately sought a pardon from Trump while publicly saying he
would not accept one.
Cohen agreed that he had blamed others, including Trump, in the wake of
his own criminal convictions on tax and campaign-finance charges.
"Does the outcome of this trial affect you personally?" Blanche asked.
"Yes," Cohen said, maintaining his composure while answering questions,
in contrast with his aggressive and often profane public comments.
Cohen was due to return to the witness stand for more questioning when
the trial resumes on Monday.
Trump has pleaded not guilty in the first criminal trial of a former
U.S. president and denies having sex with Daniels.
The New York case, one of four criminal prosecutions he faces, is likely
to be the only one with a jury verdict before his Nov. 5 election
rematch with Democratic President Joe Biden.
Cohen is central to the case. He testified earlier this week that Trump
ordered him to pay Daniels to protect Trump's presidential campaign, and
discussed a plan to reimburse Cohen, 57, through a series of bogus
invoices for legal fees. Their chats included one in the White House
Oval Office when Trump was president in 2017, Cohen said.
Cohen carries baggage as a witness. He has pleaded guilty to federal
charges stemming from the Daniels payment, and has admitted that he lied
repeatedly about the Daniels scandal.
But some of Cohen's testimony has been corroborated by other evidence,
including records from Trump's company.
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Lawyers meet with Justice Juan Merchan during former U.S. President
Donald Trump's criminal trial on charges that he falsified business
records to conceal money paid to silence porn star Stormy Daniels in
2016, in Manhattan state court in New York City, U.S. May 16, 2024
in this courtroom sketch. REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
He said he could clearly remember some conversations from the hectic
2016 campaign, including one where he spoke with Trump about an
effort to buy the silence of another woman who claimed to have sex
with him. "These phone calls are things that I've been talking about
for the past six years," he said.
TRUMP STANDS ACCUSED OF FALSIFYING BUSINESS RECORDS
Trump, 77, faces 34 counts of falsifying business records in New
York to cover up the payment to Daniels.
Under questioning by Blanche, Cohen said the hush-money deal itself
was legal.
But prosecutors say the altered records covered up election-law and
tax-law violations - since the money was essentially an unreported
contribution to Trump's campaign - that elevate the crimes from
misdemeanors to felonies punishable by up to four years in prison.
Trump characterizes the case and three other prosecutions as an
attempt to interfere with his campaign to take back the White House.
Members of the far-right U.S. House of Representatives Freedom
Caucus attended the trial on Thursday and echoed his complaints.
"We're seeing today what lengths the Democratic Party will go to to
try to rig or steal another election," the group's chairman,
Republican Representative Bob Good, said outside the courthouse.
UNCERTAINTY OVER WHETHER TRUMP WILL TESTIFY
Trump has argued that his monthly payments to Cohen throughout 2017
were for his work as his personal lawyer to the president, meaning
there was nothing improper about the word "retainer" being written
on the checks Trump signed.
Prosecutors say the reimbursement payments were falsely labeled as
legal expenses in the Trump Organization's records to conceal the
Daniels payoff, which they say violated U.S. election campaign
finance law.
Cohen is the 20th and final witness to be called to testify by
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office at the trial, which
began on April 15.
It was unclear whether Trump would testify next week, when the
defense will have an opportunity to present its case. Before the
trial Trump said he would testify, but Blanche has since said Trump
has yet to decide whether to do so.
The defense is not required to present a case, and Trump does not
have to decide ahead of time whether he will testify.
(Reporting by Jody Godoy and Jack Queen in New York and Andy
Sullivan in Washington; Writing by Andy Sullivan and Luc Cohen;
Editing by Noeleen Walder and Howard Goller)
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