Donald Trump’s hush money trial resumed Tuesday with Judge Juan M. Merchan first ruling on prosecutors’ prior request to hold the former president in contempt of court over alleged violations of a gag order that bars him from speaking publicly about witnesses and jurors in the case.
Here’s the latest:
Quick Read
- Robert Browning, the executive director of the C-SPAN archives, was called to the stand to verify the authenticity of video footage from a Trump campaign event.
- Browning’s role as a witness is part of the prosecution’s strategy to use video clips as evidence in the trial.
- The C-SPAN videos played in court included Trump denying allegations made by women after the “Access Hollywood” tape surfaced and praising Michael Cohen as a good lawyer and friend.
- The use of C-SPAN footage is aimed at corroborating the timeline and the public statements made by Trump during the campaign, which are central to the case’s allegations.
The Associated Press has the story:
Exec. director of C-SPAN’s archives called to stand in Trump’s hush money case
Newslooks- NEW YORK (AP) —
Donald Trump’s hush money trial resumed Tuesday with Judge Juan M. Merchan first ruling on prosecutors’ prior request to hold the former president in contempt of court over alleged violations of a gag order that bars him from speaking publicly about witnesses and jurors in the case.
Merchan ruled that Trump violated the gag order nine times and fined him $9,000. He will hold another hearing Thursday on four more alleged violations brought forth by prosecutors.
Gary Farro — the prosecution’s third witness and a banker who helped Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen open accounts — returned to the witness stand shortly thereafter to resume his testimony from last week.
Cohen used one such account to buy the silence of porn performer Stormy Daniels. She alleged a 2006 sexual encounter with Trump, which he denies.
The first week of testimony was the scene-setter for jurors: Manhattan prosecutors portrayed what they say was an illegal scheme to influence the 2016 presidential campaign by burying negative stories.
For his part, the former president and presumptive Republican nominee has been campaigning in his off-hours, but is required to be in court when it is in session, four days a week.
The charges center on $130,000 in payments that Trump’s company made to Cohen. Prosecutors say Trump obscured the true nature of those payments and falsely recorded them as legal expenses.
Trump has pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
The case is the first-ever criminal trial of a former U.S. president and the first of four prosecutions of Trump to reach a jury.
VIDEOS OF TRUMP DENYING ALLEGATIONS AND PRAISING COHEN PLAYED IN COURT
Prosecutors in Donald Trump’s hush money case played C-SPAN clips of the then-presidential candidate on the campaign trail in the final weeks leading up to the 2016 election. In the videos, Trump forcefully denied allegations made by several women after his infamous 2005 “Access Hollywood” tape was made public.
“The stories are total fiction. They’re 100% made up, they never happened, they never would happen,” Trump said in video from an Oct. 14, 2016 rally in North Carolina.
Another clip played for the jury, from January 2017, showed Trump praising Michael Cohen as as good lawyer and friend.
Trump did not appear to react in court to the clips, which were played on monitors throughout the courtroom, including directly in front of him on the defense table.
After confirming the veracity of the clips, Browning was dismissed from the witness stand. Trump’s attorneys declined to question him.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF C-SPAN ARCHIVES CALLED TO THE STAND
The next witness called to the stand Tuesday in Donald Trump’s hush money trial was Robert Browning, the executive director of the C-SPAN archives.
Browning, who manages the network’s video collection, was called to verify the authenticity of video of a Trump campaign event.
Prosecutors are calling people who are regarded as “records custodians” to verify evidence in the former president’s criminal case.
TRIAL WILL BREAK FOR 4 DAYS OVER MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND
Donald Trump’s hush money trial will get an extra day off for the Memorial Day weekend next month.
Court won’t be in session on Friday, May 24, to accommodate a juror who has a flight that morning, Judge Juan M. Merchan said on Tuesday.
That means the trial will be off for four straight days for the holiday weekend, resuming on Tuesday, May 28. Merchan also informed jurors there will not be court on May 17, though he didn’t give them a reason.
That’s the day Donald Trump will be attending his son Barron’s high school graduation.
PROSECUTORS WANT TO QUESTION TRUMP ABOUT GAG ORDER VIOLATIONS IF HE TESTIFIES
Ahead of a midday break in Donald Trump’s hush money case, prosecutors asked the judge to let them question the former president about his gag order violations should he choose to testify.
The request came after Judge Juan M. Merchan ruled Tuesday morning that Trump had on nine occasions violated a court mandate barring him from speaking publicly about witnesses and jurors in the case. He ultimately fined Trump $9,000 and will hold another hearing Thursday on four more alleged gag order violations.
Prosecutors also requested permission to introduce evidence they said shows Trump orchestrated a “pressure campaign and intimidation effort” against Michael Cohen and Stormy Daniels.
Colangelo said Trump’s attorney opened the door to that evidence by seeking to undermine the credibility of the two witnesses in opening statements.
Merchan did not immediately rule, but said, “the door has been opened.”
He previously ruled to allow prosecutors to challenge Trump’s credibility by questioning him about a limited number of his recent legal setbacks if he ends up taking the witness stand.
Trump has said he wants to testify, but is under no obligation to do so.
NO RED FLAGS ABOUT COHEN’S ACCOUNTS AT THE TIME, FARRO SAYS
In his cross examination of banker Gary Farro on Tuesday, defense attorney Todd Blanche underscored that Michael Cohen made no mention that the accounts he opened in October 2016 had anything to do with deals involving then-presidential candidate Donald Trump or his company.
If Cohen had done so, “I would have asked questions,” Farro said.
Farro noted that he might not have opened a bank account for Cohen if he’d been told it was for what’s known as a shell corporation — one that receives and sends out money but doesn’t have an underlying business.
But Cohen, the banker said, told him the account was for a real estate consulting business.
he Daniels payout, he said. He testified for parts of four days.
Nothing about it raised “any red flags to you?” Blanche asked.
“Not based upon the answers I was given to the questions I asked,” Farro said.
Farro’s testimony shed light on his role in helping Cohen open a bank account that was later used to process a $130,000 wire transfer to a lawyer for Stormy Daniels.
DEFENSE BEGINS CROSS-EXAMINATION OF FARRO
Defense attorneys began their cross-examination of Gary Farro, the prosecution’s third witness in Donald Trump’s hush money trial, by asking the banker to describe his relationship with Michael Cohen.
Farro said he first met Cohen — then serving as the former president’s personal lawyer — in person at a meeting in Trump Tower, but primarily communicated over the phone. Pushed by Todd Blanche, Farro acknowledged that Cohen wasn’t always easy to work with.
“He was a challenging client because of his desire to get things done so quickly,” Farro said. “Ninety percent of the time it was an urgent matter.”
PROSECUTORS WRAP QUESTIONING OF FARRO
Prosecutors have wrapped up questioning of Gary Farro, their third witness in Donald Trump’s criminal hush money trial.
Farro told prosecutors on Tuesday that Michael Cohen had indicated that a 2016 $130,000 wire payment now at the heart of the case was related to a real estate transaction — not a political candidate, an adult film performer or buying up a potential media story.
“We might consider something like that a reputational risk,” Farro said.
Within a day of opening the Essential Consultants LLC bank account on Oct. 26, 2016 — and funding it with about $130,000 from his own home equity loan — Cohen wired out $130,000 to Keith Davidson, then a lawyer for Stormy Daniels, documents showed.
The 2016 presidential election was on Nov. 8.
FAMILY JOINS TRUMP IN COURT FOR THE FIRST TIME
Donald Trump’s son Eric joined his father in court on Tuesday, marking the first time any of the former president’s family members have attended his criminal hush money trial.
Prior to court proceedings resuming, Trump turned from the defense table and walked over to his son in the first row of the gallery. Trump put his hand on Eric’s arm as they chatted.
Trump had railed about the trial, as well as his other legal cases, to reporters on his way into the courtroom earlier in the morning.
FARRO RETURNS TO THE STAND
Testimony in Donald Trump’s hush money trial resumed with Gary Farro, a banker who helped Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen open accounts. Cohen used one such account to buy the silence of porn performer Stormy Daniels in the weeks before the 2016 election. She alleged a 2006 sexual encounter with Trump, which he denies.
Cohen indicated the account, opened in late October 2016 in the name of Essential Consultants LLC, would be used for real estate consulting, according to testimony and documents shown at the trial.
In response to prosecutor Becky Mangold’s questions, Farro said the bank would have asked more questions if there had been any mention of a connection to a political candidate, buying a story that was being pitched to the media or paying a porn performer.
The additional scrutiny would have delayed or even nixed opening the account, which Cohen had wanted to open right away. In particular, the adult film world “is an industry we don’t work with,” he said.
With only real estate in the picture, the account was opened within a day — “very quick,” Farro said.
MERCHAN FINDS POST ABOUT COHEN AND DANIELS WAS NOT A VIOLATION
Judge Juan M. Merchan found that one of Donald Trump’s online posts about his former lawyer Michael Cohen and porn actor Stormy Daniels did not violate a gag order barring him from speaking publicly about jurors and witnesses in his hush money case.
Merchan wrote that he was finding Trump “in criminal contempt for willfully disobeying a lawful mandate” of the court on nine separate occasions for posts made on Truth Social and his campaign website.
Merchan ruled that Trump’s April 10 post referring to Cohen and Daniels as “sleaze bags” was not a gag order violation. He said Trump’s contention that he was responding to previous posts by Cohen “is sufficient to give” him pause “as to whether the People have met their burden” as to that post.
However, the other nine “attack the credibility of arguably two of the more high-profile witnesses in this case.”
“To allow such attacks upon protected witnesses with blanket assertions that they are all responses to ‘political attacks’ would be an exception that swallowed the rule. The Expanded Order does not contain such an exception,” Merchan wrote.
JUDGE FINDS TRUMP VIOLATED GAG ORDER, FINES HIM $9K
Judge Juan M. Merchan ruled Tuesday morning that Donald Trump violated a gag order barring him from making public statements about witnesses and jurors in his hush money trial nine times. He fined the former president $9,000 for the violations.
Prosecutors had alleged the former president had violated the order 10 times, and Merchan concurred in all but one of those instances. The judge will hold a hearing Thursday on four more alleged violations.
The former president stared down at the table in front of him as Merchan read the ruling, frowning slightly but otherwise showing no expression.
Merchan wrote in his ruling that Trump “is hereby warned that the Court will not tolerate continued willful violations of its lawful orders” and raised the possibility of jail time if “necessary and appropriate under the circumstances.”
JUDGE TO ALLOW TRUMP TO ATTEND SON’S GRADUATION
Judge Juan M. Merchan said Tuesday morning that Donald Trump’s criminal hush money trial will not be held on May 17 so that the former president can attend his son’s graduation.
“I don’t think the May 17 date is a problem, so Mr. Trump can certainly attend that date, attend his son’s graduation,” Merchan said.
Trump had previously requested the day off from court to accommodate his son Barron’s high school graduation.
TRUMP ARRIVES AT COURT
Donald Trump’s motorcade arrived Tuesday morning at the courthouse in lower Manhattan just before 9 a.m., kicking off the second week of witness testimony in the former president’s hush money trial.
A crowd of around 60 Trump supporters had gathered across the street from the building, waving Trump and American flags on tall poles.
TRUMP LEAVES TRUMP TOWER FOR COURT
Donald Trump entered his motorcade outside Trump Tower in midtown, headed to the courthouse in lower Manhattan for the second week of trial testimony.
The former president on Tuesday will be in court for testimony from the third prosecution witness, Gary Farro, a banker who helped Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen open accounts.
Cohen used one to buy the silence of porn performer Stormy Daniels. She alleged a 2006 sexual encounter with Trump, which he denies.