Inside the Payoff to a Porn Star That Could Lead
to Trump’s Indictment
Manhattan prosecutors investigating a payout to Stormy
Daniels may be poised to make Donald J. Trump the first former president ever
to be criminally indicted.
Donald J. Trump could become the first former
president to be indicted on a criminal charge, in a case that stems from a
hush-money payment to a porn star.
Michael
Rothfeld
By Michael
Rothfeld
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/19/nyregion/trump-stormy-daniels-felony-charges.html
Rothfeld,
an investigative reporter on the Metro desk, was the co-author of “The Fixers,”
a book about the people who took care of problems for Donald J. Trump. He was
formerly a reporter at The Wall Street Journal, where he was part of a team
that won a Pulitzer Prize for revealing hush-money deals made for the former
president.
March 19,
2023
Updated
7:42 a.m. ET
At the
time, it all was more tawdry than momentous. A reality star invited a porn
actress half his age to a hotel room after a round in a celebrity golf
tournament. She arrived in a spangly gold dress and strappy heels. He promised
to put her on television and then, she says, they slept together.
Yet the
chain of events flowing from the 2006 encounter that the adult film star,
Stormy Daniels, has said she had with the television personality, Donald J.
Trump, has led to the brink of a historic development: the first criminal
indictment of a former American president.
The
Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, has signaled he is preparing to
seek felony charges against Mr. Trump; Mr. Bragg is expected to accuse him of
concealing a $130,000 hush-money payment that Michael D. Cohen, Mr. Trump’s
lawyer and fixer, made to Ms. Daniels on the eve of the 2016 presidential
election.
A
conviction would be likely to hinge on prosecutors’ proving that Mr. Trump
reimbursed Mr. Cohen and falsified business records when he did so, possibly to
hide an election law violation.
It would
not be a simple case. Prosecutors are expected to use a legal theory that has
not been assessed in New York courts, raising the possibility that a judge
could throw out or limit the charges. The episode has been examined by both the
Federal Election Commission and federal prosecutors in New York; neither took
action against Mr. Trump.
Mr. Trump
has denied having sex with Ms. Daniels and said he did nothing wrong. The
former president, who is seeking the Republican nomination for the White House,
has made it clear that he will cast the indictment as a political “witch hunt”
and use it to rally his supporters. On Saturday, he predicted he would be
arrested on Tuesday and called for protests.
The
prosecutors’ chief witness would be Mr. Cohen, who pleaded guilty to federal
campaign finance violations in August 2018, admitting he helped arrange the
Daniels payment — and another to a former Playboy model — to aid Mr. Trump’s
presidential bid at the behest of Mr. Trump.
An
indictment would mark another extraordinary episode in the Trump era: The
former president — whose tenure closed with a riot at the Capitol, who tried to
overturn a fair election and who is under investigation for failing to return
classified material — may face his first criminal charge for paying off a porn
star.
A Lake
Tahoe encounter
Ms.
Daniels, born Stephanie Gregory and raised mostly in a ramshackle ranch house
in Baton Rouge, La., was 27 in July 2006, when she met Mr. Trump, then 60, at
the celebrity golf tournament in Nevada.
As a child,
she wrote in her 2018 memoir, “Full Disclosure,” she felt ashamed and motivated
after overhearing a friend’s father refer to her as “white trash.” Attracted by
the money she could make, Ms. Daniels started as an exotic dancer even before
she finished high school, working at a local joint called Cinnamon’s. At 23,
she began acting in pornographic movies and soon married the first of her four
husbands: Bartholomew Clifford, who directed adult films under the name “Pat
Myne.”
When he met
Ms. Daniels, Mr. Trump had largely transitioned from real estate mogul to
reality star; he had traveled to the tournament without his third wife,
Melania, who remained behind with their newborn son. Mr. Trump and Ms. Daniels
crossed paths on the golf course and later in the gift room, where they were
photographed together at a booth for her porn studio, Wicked Pictures. He
invited her to dinner.
As they
chatted that night in Mr. Trump’s penthouse at Harrah’s Lake Tahoe — she has
said he wore black silk pajamas and slippers — he told her that she should be
on “The Apprentice,” an NBC reality show. She doubted he could make it happen.
He assured her he could, she said.
Afterward,
he would phone her occasionally from a blocked number, calling her
“Honeybunch.” They saw each other at least twice more in 2007, at a launch
party for the short-lived Trump Vodka and at the Beverly Hills Hotel, where
they watched “Shark Week.” But they did not sleep together again. And Mr. Trump
never put her on “The Apprentice.” Still, he kept calling, she has said.
Eventually, she stopped answering.
Selling
stories
Since 2000,
Mr. Trump had staged long-shot presidential runs that more resembled publicity
stunts than serious bids for office. He kicked off another in 2011, promoting
conspiracy theories that then-President Barack Obama had been born outside the
United States. As he did so, Ms. Daniels, still bitter, began working with an
agent to see if she could sell the story of their liaison.
They
negotiated a $15,000 deal with Life & Style, a celebrity magazine, telling
its reporter that Ms. Daniels believed Mr. Trump’s offer to make her a
contestant had been a lie, according to a transcript later published online.
“Just to
impress you, to try to sleep with you?” the reporter asked. “Yeah,” Ms. Daniels
responded. “And I guess it worked.”
When the
magazine contacted the Trump Organization for comment, Michael Cohen returned
the call. A lawyer who had joined the company four years earlier, Mr. Cohen had
become Mr. Trump’s fixer, diving headlong into resolving thorny problems for
his boss and the Trump family. Mr. Cohen threatened to sue, the magazine killed
the story, and Ms. Daniels did not get paid.
Mr. Trump,
for his part, dropped out of the race and continued hosting “The Apprentice.”
That
October, Ms. Daniels’s story about Mr. Trump surfaced briefly after her agent
leaked it to a gossip blog called “The Dirty,” trying to gin up interest from a
paying publication. A couple of media outlets followed up, but none offered
payment. Ms. Daniels denied the story, and her agent had a lawyer in Beverly
Hills, Calif., Keith Davidson, get the post taken down.
As Mr.
Obama prepared to leave office in 2015, Mr. Trump decided to run for president
once more. That August, he sat in his office at Trump Tower with Mr. Cohen and
David Pecker, the publisher of American Media Inc. and its flagship tabloid,
The National Enquirer.
Mr. Pecker,
a longtime friend of Mr. Trump’s, had used The Enquirer to boost Mr. Trump’s
past presidential runs. He promised to publish positive stories about Mr. Trump
and negative ones about opponents, according to three people familiar with the
meeting. Mr. Pecker also agreed to work with Mr. Cohen to find and suppress
stories that might damage Mr. Trump’s new efforts, a practice known as “catch
and kill.”
In spring
2016, Ms. Daniels attempted through her agent to sell her story again — this
time for more than $200,000. But the publications she approached all passed,
including The Enquirer.
Around the
same time, Karen McDougal, the former Playboy model, began exploring how to
monetize her own tale of sleeping with Mr. Trump. Ms. McDougal, Playboy’s 1998 Playmate
of the Year, has said she had an affair with Mr. Trump starting in 2006, when
she was 35. They had spent time together in his Trump Tower apartment and at
the same golf tournament where Ms. Daniels encountered him. But Ms. McDougal
ended the relationship in 2007, she has said. Mr. Trump has denied the affair.
In 2016,
with her modeling career flagging, Ms. McDougal hired Mr. Davidson, the same
lawyer who had helped Stormy Daniels remove the 2011 blog post.
Karen
McDougal, a former Playboy model, said she also had an affair with Mr. Trump
and was paid by The National Enquirer for her story, which was never
published.Credit...Bennett Raglin/Getty Images for Bacardi
The lawyer
approached The Enquirer’s editor, Dylan Howard, about buying Ms. McDougal’s
story, and Mr. Howard and Mr. Pecker both briefed Mr. Cohen, three people with
knowledge of the discussions have said. In late June, Mr. Trump personally
appealed to Mr. Pecker for help in keeping Ms. McDougal quiet, according to an
account Mr. Pecker gave federal prosecutors.
But the
tabloid did nothing until Ms. McDougal was about to give an interview to ABC
News. In early August, American Media agreed to pay Ms. McDougal $150,000 for
the exclusive rights to her story about Mr. Trump, camouflaging the real
purpose of the deal by guaranteeing she would appear on two magazine covers,
among other things, five people familiar with the events have said.
American
Media would later admit, in a deal to avoid federal prosecution, that the
principal purpose of the agreement was to suppress Ms. McDougal’s story, which
the company had no intention of publishing.
Stormy
Daniels, meanwhile, still had not found any takers for her story. Her luck
changed in early October.
‘It could
look awfully bad’
The news
hit the presidential race like a bomb. On Oct. 7, 2016, The Washington Post
published what would become known as the “Access Hollywood” tape, in which Mr.
Trump, unwittingly on a live microphone, was recorded describing in lewd terms
how he groped women.
The people
surrounding Stormy Daniels immediately realized that Mr. Trump’s new
vulnerability made her more of a threat — and thus gave her story value.Mr.
Davidson, the Los Angeles lawyer, was also friendly with Ms. Daniels’s agent,
Gina Rodriguez, and with The Enquirer’s editor, Mr. Howard. On the day after
the “Access Hollywood” tape emerged, Mr. Davidson and Mr. Howard texted about
the damage it had done to Mr. Trump’s campaign. Then Mr. Howard asked Ms.
Daniels’s agent to send another pitch for his boss, Mr. Pecker.
The
Enquirer executives alerted Mr. Cohen; Mr. Cohen asked Mr. Pecker for help
containing it.
Mr. Howard
haggled with Ms. Daniels’s agent, but when he presented Mr. Pecker with an
offer to buy the story for $120,000, the publisher refused.
“Perhaps I
call Michael and advise him and he can take it from there,” Mr. Howard wrote.
That night,
Mr. Cohen spoke by phone to Mr. Trump, Mr. Pecker and Mr. Howard, according to
records obtained by federal authorities. Mr. Howard connected him to the
lawyer, Mr. Davidson, who would negotiate the deal for Ms. Daniels.
Three days
after the “Access Hollywood" tape’s release, Mr. Cohen agreed to pay
$130,000 in a deal that threatened severe financial penalties for Ms. Daniels
if she ever spoke about her affair with Mr. Trump. The contract used
pseudonyms: Peggy Peterson, or “P.P.,” for Ms. Daniels, and David Dennison, or
“D.D.,” for Mr. Trump. Their identities were revealed only in a side letter.
Ms. Daniels
signed her copy on the trunk of a car near a porn set in Calabasas, Calif. Mr.
Cohen signed on Mr. Trump’s behalf.
But Mr.
Cohen delayed paying. He has said he was trying to figure out where to get the
money while Mr. Trump campaigned. According to Mr. Cohen, Mr. Trump had
approved the payment and delegated to him and the Trump Organization’s chief
financial officer the task of arranging it. They considered options for
funneling the money through the company, Mr. Cohen said, but did not settle on
a solution.
Ms. Daniels
began to believe that Mr. Trump was trying to stall until after the Nov. 8
election; if he lost, her story would lose its value. In mid October, after Mr.
Cohen had blown two deadlines, Ms. Daniels’s lawyer canceled the deal, and the
porn actress again began shopping the story. The next week, Mr. Howard texted
Mr. Cohen that if Ms. Daniels went public, their work to cover up the sexual
encounter might also become known.
“It could
look awfully bad for everyone,” Mr. Howard wrote.
Mr. Cohen
agreed to make the payment himself. He spoke briefly by phone with Mr. Trump,
twice. Then he transferred about $130,000 from his home equity line of credit
into the account of a Delaware shell company and wired it to Ms. Daniels’s
lawyer.
Mr.
Davidson circulated a new hush-money agreement. Ms. Daniels signed and
notarized it at a UPS store near a Walmart Supercenter in Forney, Texas, near
her home.
“I hope we
are good,” Mr. Cohen texted Mr. Davidson afterward.
“I assure
you we are very good,” the lawyer replied.
Ms. Daniels
remained silent. A week and a half later, Mr. Trump won the election.
Once he was
in the White House, Mr. Trump handled one more piece of business related to
Stormy Daniels. He signed checks to reimburse Mr. Cohen for paying her off.
Jonah E.
Bromwich contributed reporting.
Michael
Rothfeld is an investigative reporter on the Metro desk and co-author of the
book “The Fixers.” He was part of a team at The Wall Street Journal that won
the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for national reporting for stories about hush money
deals made on behalf of Donald Trump and a federal investigation of the
president's personal lawyer. @mrothfeld



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