NBC Nightly News with Tom Llamas - Monday, May 13, 2024
Episode Date: May 14, 2024Michael Cohen testified against former President Trump is his ongoing hush money trial, 360,000 Palestinians are trying to flee as Israeli forces advance on Rafah, a teen with a gun was stopped as he ...tried to enter a Louisiana church service, and more on tonight’s broadcast.
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Tonight, the dramatic showdown at Donald Trump's hush money trial.
Michael Cohen testifying against his former boss.
Mr. Trump's former fixer turned foe, Michael Cohen,
taking the stand for his highly anticipated testimony,
telling the jury Mr. Trump directed him to pay off Stormy Daniels
to keep quiet about their alleged affair to protect his 2016 campaign.
Cohen saying Mr. Trump told him, quote, just take care of it.
The defense preparing to attack Cohen's credibility after calling him an admitted liar.
And the secret tape Cohen made of Trump played for the jury. Also tonight, the race to escape
Rafah, 360,000 people fleeing as Israeli forces advance on the southern Gaza city. Terrifying moments at
a Louisiana church during a live stream service. A teen with a gun stopped as he tries to get into
the building with 60 children inside for their first communion. Severe weather from Texas to
Florida. We're tracking it. Wildfire smoke from Canada moving into the U.S. Air quality alerts in multiple
states. Pro-Palestinian protests disrupting some graduations. Jerry Seinfeld's speech at Duke
prompting dozens to walk out. Just in, the dramatic controlled demolition of a massive
piece of Baltimore's collapsed bridge. This is NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt. Good evening and welcome. The
prosecution case against Donald Trump nearing its crescendo in a New York courtroom tonight
with the much anticipated testimony of former Trump lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen. Cohen
describing his role in trying to bury Stormy Daniels' claim of a sexual liaison with Mr. Trump
and his concerns about its impact on the 2016 election,
driving Cohen to pay hush money to Daniels that he says was at Mr. Trump's direction.
He wasn't thinking about Melania.
This was all about the campaign, Cohen testified.
The former president denies he had sex with Daniels
and has pleaded not guilty to falsifying business records to disguise the hush money payments.
Cohen facing a second day on the stand tomorrow, later followed by what could be a contentious cross-examination by the defense.
Laura Jarrett breaks down the day in court.
Tonight, a highly anticipated courtroom showdown. Prosecutor star witness Michael Cohen,
former President Trump's self-described fixer, turned fierce critic, telling the jury Mr. Trump
directed him to pay off an adult film actress days before the 2016 election to protect his campaign.
Everything required Mr. Trump's sign-off, Cohen told the jury, testifying Mr. Trump was furious in 2016 when he learned Stormy Daniels was still trying to sell her it resurfaced on the heels of the Access Hollywood
tape. And Cohen feared if Daniels went public, it would be, quote, catastrophic for the campaign,
saying Mr. Trump told him, just take care of it. This is a disaster. Women are going to hate me.
Guys may think this is cool, but this is going to be a disaster for the campaign.
Cohen said Mr. Trump told him he met Daniels at a golf tournament,
describing her as a beautiful woman.
Mr. Trump has denied he had sex with Daniels and pleaded not guilty to charges
of illegally disguising his reimbursement checks to Cohen
as legal expenses on his internal books and records.
The defense team arguing there was no crime,
that Cohen was his personal attorney at the time, handling a personal matter to avoid his family embarrassment.
Former Trump aide Hope Hicks previously testifying, Mr. Trump did not want newspapers with details of a hush money payment to a different woman delivered to their home.
But Cohen suggesting today that Mr. Trump wasn't concerned about Melania's reaction.
He wasn't thinking about Melania's reaction.
He wasn't thinking about Melania.
This was all about the campaign.
Cohen adding, Mr. Trump told him, I want you to just push it out as long as you can.
Just get past the election, because if I win, it will have no relevance.
And if I lose, I don't even care.
Cohen testifying that he told Mr. Trump he would pay Daniels as part of a nondisclosure agreement, opting to use money from a home equity line of credit. And Mr. Trump was
appreciative, saying words to the effective, don't worry, you'll get the money back.
The state trying to show that Daniels payoff wasn't isolated, but part of a pattern. Cohen
admitting he secretly recorded his client while they discussed repaying
the National Enquirer, which purchased the story of another woman who said she had sex with Mr.
Trump, which he denies. When it comes time for the financing, which will be...
Prosecutors have presented no direct evidence Mr. Trump knew about or told anyone
to falsify business records. So Cohen's credibility here, key. Telling jurors today,
Mr. Trump never used email because too many people have gone down once prosecutors obtain
their emails. Cohen now a disbarred attorney who has been convicted for lying under oath.
The defense argues he's out for revenge after he
didn't get a job in the White House. Today, Cohen testifying he would have liked to have been
considered for White House chief of staff for his, quote, ego. There's no fraud here. There's no crime
here. This is four weeks of keeping me from not campaigning. Laura, Michael Cohen's testimony seemed to be moving
pretty quickly today. Lester, so rapidly, in fact, that we could see his cross-examination
as soon as tomorrow. We saw the prosecution trying to get ahead of some of the defense
lines of questioning, tried to pre-rebut them, if you will. But no doubt this cross-examination
will be brutal as the defense
team is likely to focus on his past convictions for lying and credibility issues, trying to argue
that Michael Cohen is essentially using his attacks on the former boss as his meal ticket.
Lester. All right, lower Jared and lower Manhattan. Thank you. In the Middle East,
Israel is now battling Hamas militants that have regrouped in northern Gaza. Meanwhile, 360,000 people have fled Rafah in the south.
Richard Angle is in Israel with more.
Israel thought it had defeated Hamas in northern Gaza, but the militants have regrouped and
are now fighting from the rubble.
Once the government of Gaza had triggered a war when they stormed
into Israel and carried out a massacre, Hamas has become an insurgency. And as the United States
learned in Afghanistan and Iraq, insurgencies can last for decades. In southern Gaza, Israel is
expanding military operations in Rafah, despite warnings from President Biden about the risk to civilians.
Israel claims Hamas has four battalions of fighters in Rafah and has ordered the evacuation
of large sections of the city. The UN says around 360,000 people have already left.
For most, it's not the first time.
That's the sixth time I evacuate from anywhere I was in.
I feel so lost.
This time, Israel is telling Palestinians to go to an area on the Mediterranean coast.
But Palestinians say there's nothing for them there.
No tents, no food, no future.
Are we going to keep living in this ongoing loop?
Our crew found these men packing up pieces of their own bombed-out home
so they could build shelters with the debris,
while Hamas fighters are nowhere to be seen.
They brought this war to Gaza, but now provide no services and no help.
They've gone underground, ready for a long insurgency, apparently at any cost.
Richard, what does it say that Hamas has been able to regroup in the north?
Well, it raises very troubling questions about Israel's current strategy.
It shows that Hamas has been able to rearm its fighters, find new
fighting positions, and could maintain a guerrilla war for a very long time. Lester. Richard Engel,
thanks. In Louisiana, dramatic moments when parishioners acted fast to stop a teen with a
gun from entering a church with 60 children inside. Here's Blaine Alexander. It was the most sacred of spaces. At St. Mary
Magdalene Church in Abbeville, Louisiana, 60 children were poised to take their first
communion Saturday. When suddenly, a man approaches the priest, whispering in his ear.
Moments later, Father Nicholas Dupree abruptly stops the service as chaos erupts.
According to church officials, a suspicious person opened the back door.
Members immediately confronted him and led him outside, calling police.
Authorities say he was armed with a gun.
Inside, the video shows clergy members ducking for cover. Altar servers scrambling to safety as police rush in, guns drawn, checking for any additional threat.
Just get a hold of your child. Go slowly.
The suspect was a 16-year-old white male, police say, dressed in all black.
He was arrested, then taken to a hospital for mental evaluation, charged with terrorizing and two counts of juvenile gun possession.
Incredibly, police say there were no injuries.
Hallelujah.
But at today's service, the scars were clear.
It bears a shocking similarity to yet another close call last week at a Pittsburgh church
when a man approached the pulpit and aimed directly at
the pastor who was spared, police say, only when the gun jammed. Back in Louisiana, the church
plans to have law enforcement stand guard at every service going forward as more houses of worship
are forced to mix the power of prayer with the presence of police.
Blaine Alexander, NBC News.
We are watching for more severe weather tonight.
A brilliant lightning strike captured in Houston as a very large hailstorm pelted parts of Texas.
Bill Cairns is here.
Bill, we're going to see more of that sort of thing tonight?
Unfortunately, yeah.
The Gulf Coast can't catch a break.
We've already seen isolated reports of tornadoes,
a lot of wind damage,
especially in areas of Louisiana with this line of storms rolling through.
So severe thunderstorm watch goes through this evening.
I'm watching this line of storms that just went through Lake Charles,
60-mile-per-hour wind gusts, up to 80-mile-per-hour winds are possible along Interstate 10 here as it heads towards Lafayette.
We'll watch and see if that holds together this evening
as it approaches Baton Rouge and the New Orleans area. And besides that, it's been raining so much, so often,
it doesn't take much to get flash flooding. We have flash flood warnings out there,
8 million people impacted. And unfortunately, tomorrow we're going to do more severe weather,
but this time in areas of North Florida and Southern Georgia. All right, Bill, thank you.
We'll turn now to the demonstrations on campus. Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupting some commencements this
weekend, including at Duke, where Jerry Seinfeld was the speaker. Here's Stephanie Gosk.
A moment to celebrate achievement becoming another chance to protest the war in Gaza.
After a turbulent spring, multiple universities facing disruption at graduation, including Duke.
Dozens of students walked out on Jerry Seinfeld's commencement address Sunday.
The comedian was later cheered.
I say, use your privilege. I grew up a Jewish boy from New York. That is a privilege if you
want to be a comedian.
After the initial Hamas attack on October 7th, Seinfeld posted on Instagram,
I will always stand with Israel and the Jewish people,
and visited the country back in December to show his support. Duke releasing a statement that says, in part,
we respect the right of everyone at Duke to express their views peacefully
without preventing graduates and their families from celebrating their achievement. In Southern California, Pomona chose a new location for
graduation. Protesters blocked the entrances. Campuses have been dealing with scenes like this
since October 7th. We deserve to know what our university is invested in. I think that for many
of your students on campus, we feel unsafe, including myself. In a new survey, 67 percent of students at the country's top
schools say anti-Semitism is a problem and 38 percent say they feel unsafe. Now, graduation
ceremonies are flashpoints. With the school year ending, it's probably the last big audience for
this student to express its opposition to the war in Gaza. NYU professor Robert Cohen studies student activism.
What is the challenge for universities going into a new school year next fall?
If there is a ceasefire, then I think obviously this will dissipate.
If it continues, I think the university needs to find a way to be able to engage the students
rather than kind of exile them.
Until then, at some schools,
a difficult year is coming to a difficult close. Stephanie Gosk, NBC News. In 60 seconds,
the dramatic explosion just carried out to bring parts of the collapsed bridge in Baltimore up
right after this. A major step in the mission to clear the wreckage of that collapsed bridge in Baltimore.
Crews conducting a controlled demolition today on a section of the bridge still atop the ship that knocked it down.
George Solis has late details.
With a reverberating boom, a major section of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge disappearing in a cloud of smoke.
The controlled demolition comes after weeks of careful planning to remove a massive piece of the bridge that's sitting on top of the 984-foot container ship.
Captain, did everything go according to plan?
Yes, so we did the blast. The section separated, so it went according to plan.
Demolition crews made small cuts into the steel,
then placed small charges to ensure accuracy of the blasts.
The dolly has been sitting essentially frozen in time
since it lost power and rammed the bridge on March 26.
New police body camera footage obtained by NBC News
shows the shock of first responders that night.
Like there is no bridge.
Six people were killed.
All Latino immigrants who were filling potholes when the collision occurred.
The body, the final victim, was found just last week.
The ship's 21-member crew has remained on board and sheltered in place during the controlled explosion.
Federal investigators are still looking into how and why the ship lost power.
But tonight, the governor says the port of Baltimore is close to fully reopening and
vowing to rebuild. Rebuilding the Francis Scott Key Bridge is not about nostalgia.
It's about necessity. This is a critical artery. The dolly will be refloated and moved back to
the Port of Baltimore within a few days. Now, the goal is to fully reopen the channel by the end of
the month. Lester. Okay, George Solis, thank you. Up next, intense wildfires in Canada and the new smoke
threat and the unseen danger some firefighters gear has chemicals connected with cancer. That's next.
We're back now with the wildfires raging in Canada and the air concerns here in the U.S. About 140 fires are burning across Canada and the smoke is drifting south,
prompting air quality alerts in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa.
In British Columbia, one rapidly spreading fire has forced thousands to evacuate.
Also tonight, San Francisco is on the verge of something historic.
Tomorrow, it could become the first U.S. city to ban some types of firefighter uniforms
out of fear their protective chemicals may cause cancer.
Big Ed Chaban of our Bay Area station has more.
Need water coming?
Lieutenant Magali Sadim is teaching the next generation of San Francisco firefighters
about what to expect on the front lines.
There you go.
Our whole job is to work under pressure,
manage your emotions and your fears, and get the job done.
Regardless of how dangerous it may be.
Regardless.
That includes the risks they can see and the ones they can't.
Sadie is a two-time cancer survivor.
Here in San Francisco, female firefighters have a six times higher rate of breast cancer than the national average.
For first responders, ongoing exposure to smoke and other chemicals is so serious,
the WHO classifies firefighting as carcinogenic.
And in recent years, studies have shown even the pants and jackets firefighters wear
are made with materials known to cause cancer.
So-called PFAS are added to fire clothing to repel flammable liquids and resist extreme
heat.
They're known as forever chemicals because they don't easily break down once absorbed
in the skin.
"...to put something in the equipment to people who are already there to risk their life for
you seems really malicious.
We're tired and we're dying.
On the steps of San Francisco City Hall, behind a mound of uniforms,
firefighters and lawmakers recently announced plans to enact a first-in-the-nation ban
on protective gear manufactured with forever chemicals.
It is morally right and it's financially right.
But alternative gear that doesn't use PFAS still isn't widely available,
even though the potential health hazards have been known for years.
The Firefighters Union blames industry standards released by the National Fire Protection
Association, saying they favor the use of fabrics that contain forever chemicals.
In a lawsuit, the Firefighters Union accuses the NFPA of being reckless and deceptive,
which the NFPA denies, calling the allegations misguided and ill-informed.
The NFPA tells us it doesn't create or dictate standards,
but instead relies on expert volunteers, including the firefighting community.
New PFAS-free uniforms are now being tested at fire departments in at least five cities,
including San Francisco, where firefighters say so far they're just as effective repelling flames.
So that char goes all the way through.
Chemists at NC State are currently testing if those alternative fabrics are reliable with long-term use.
We don't want to just trade one hazard for another.
We can break it down.
Lieutenant Sadie says she's fighting for PFAS-free uniforms so firefighters can focus on saving lives instead of worrying about their own. This would affect the future and if it changes and
legislation goes forward then yeah then it was all worth it.. Begachaban, NBC News, San Francisco.
That's nightly news for this Monday.
Thank you for watching.
I'm Lester Holt.
Please take care of yourself and each other.
Good night.