What A Day - Trump Takes ‘It All In’ At Hush Money Trial
Episode Date: May 3, 2024Thursday was Day 10 of former President Donald Trump’s criminal hush money trial in Manhattan. Before testimony resumed, Justice Juan Merchan held a second hearing on new allegations that Trump viol...ated his gag order. Later, Keith Davidson, a lawyer for Stormy Daniels, walked the jury through the deal he brokered between Trump and the adult film star in exchange for her silence. Hugo Lowell, political investigations reporter for The Guardian, shares the latest details from inside the courthouse.And in headlines: Hamas officials said they would meet with negotiators in Egypt to continue talks for a ceasefire in Gaza, President Biden condemned the violence breaking out on college campuses across the country, and Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a new law that bans and criminalizes the sale of lab-grown meat in the state.Show Notes:What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Friday, May 3rd. I'm Traevel Anderson.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi, and this is What A Day, where we can only dream of having the monthly budget of former New York City Mayor and Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani.
Yes, the New York Times reports that he is having trouble sticking to his $43,000 a month budget.
Priyanka, I don't even know what I would do with $43,000.
Unfortunately, I know too many things I would do with $43,000. Unfortunately, I know too many
things I would do with that money. On today's show, Hamas officials continue to negotiate a
ceasefire agreement, plus President Biden breaks his silence on campus protests. But first,
Thursday was day 10 of former President Donald Trump's hush money trial in Manhattan,
and things got interesting. So before the testimony even started, Justice Juan Merchan
held a second hearing on Trump's alleged violations of his gag order. Earlier this week,
Trump was fined $9,000 for nine violations. This time, prosecutors presented four additional
statements that were made since last Monday that they say violated Mershon's gag order as well.
Two of the statements were about Trump's former lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen,
and the other two were about the jury and former tabloid publisher David Pecker, who testified earlier.
Mershon didn't rule on these latest allegations,
but the Manhattan DA's office wants Trump fined an additional $1,000 for each violation.
Really just a slap on the wrist there in like the most minor way.
This man is not operating even on a Rudy Giuliani budget.
He is like bleeding millions of dollars.
Though jail time for further violations is reportedly on the table,
the prosecutors did not ask Mershon to consider that.
Yeah, this is a wild, wild situation that we are witnessing.
When it comes to the actual trial, what happened on Thursday there?
Yes.
So on the stand on Thursday was Keith Davidson.
He is the lawyer who negotiated the hush money agreements with two women who said that they
had affairs with Donald Trump and were paid to stay quiet about it.
The first being adult film star Stormy Daniels and the second former Playboy playmate Karen
McDougal.
Davidson walked the jury through the deal that he brokered between Trump and Daniels, and the second, former Playboy playmate Karen McDougal. Davidson walked
the jury through the deal that he brokered between Trump and Daniels in exchange for her silence.
The trial obviously is not televised for the public to watch, but we are in luck. I spoke
with Hugo Lowell earlier. He is a political investigations reporter for The Guardian,
and he has been at the courthouse throughout this entire trial. I started by asking him how
the gag order hearing unfolded on Thursday.
It was not a good day for Trump again before Judge Merchant with respect to the contempt
element. I think he is going to be fined further with respect to the gag order. It's very clearly
violated the provision about attacking the jury. At least that's what Judge Merchant
indicated from the
bench. He didn't rule immediately. Basically, we're just waiting for Merchant to write out his
formal order and the decision will take effect. And it was very clear from the colloquy today
that Merchant really thought Trump had violated the order. He really thought Trump had gone after
the jurors and he seemed unimpressed at the Trump lawyer's argument,
essentially, that because Trump didn't identify a specific jury, it was allowed under the terms
of the gag order. And it seems very much like Trump is headed for further punishment.
So after all of this, Trump said that he might not actually testify because of the gag order
after previously saying that he would. Here is
a little clip of that. It's such a rigged court. So I'm not allowed to testify because of an
unconstitutional gag order. We're appealing the gag order. And let's see what happens. Thank you
very much. Did we ever really expect him to testify here? It was an open question. You know,
I had spoken to Trump's legal advisors and his campaign staff in the lead up to this
trial and the question was always up to Trump.
If Trump felt like he wanted to testify, then at the end of the day, what Trump wanted would
go.
I think increasingly as this trial has gone on and with Trump now hit with at least $9,000
in punitive fines with respect to his earlier violations of
the gag order. There does seem to have been some deterrence effect at this trial. You know, Trump,
even today, leaving the courthouse, said he didn't want to get into discussing one of the
witness's testimony, Keith Davidson, because he was banned by the gag order. It seems to me that
he is now using the gag order as an excuse
for getting out of testifying because this is a way for him to save face to his fans after
previously saying, you know, I'm going to testify and I'm going to clear my name.
Right, exactly. And, you know, you mentioned Keith Davidson. He is the lawyer who represented
Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal and negotiated agreements for both of those women.
What did he say while he was testifying that really, you know, stuck out to you?
The thing that stuck out to me from Keith Davidson was actually how much it helped Trump in some respects.
You know, he was quite a hostile and reluctant witness, at least towards the end of his testimony.
And there was an interesting part when Davidson testified that he would never call the money paid to Stormy Daniels hush money.
He would call it basically part of a settlement agreement.
And that was interesting because I was texting some of the Trump lawyers at the time and they seized upon that.
And they said to me that that was the sort of thing that they would pursue. And that's the sort of thing they wanted to seize upon. The fact that if not even the guy that helped broker the deal saw it as hush money, then is there really an underlying
charge here for falsifying the business records? It's a small point, but it's I think the first
opening that Trump's legal team has had. And I think that is significant. But on the other side,
you know, Keith Davidson testified over the previous few days to all of the big moments that the district attorney needed.
And Keith Davidson basically put together the narrative of how the hush money payments and the catch and kill schemes came together.
And I think that was quite important for the jury.
We also know that there was a secret recording that was played for the jurors.
It is Trump and Michael Cohen during the 2016 campaign.
They're talking about the hush money payment details.
So can you tell us about that recording and how the reaction in the court seemed?
Yeah, that was a very seminal moment at the end of the trial proceedings.
It's basically a tape recorded of Michael Cohen telling Donald Trump that they needed to set up a shell company in order to set up an arrangement to pay Karen McDougal. And Cohen has this line where he
says, quote, I need to open up a company for the transfer about our friend David, David being David
Pecker. And that's really significant for multiple reasons, not least because it showed that Cohen
was keeping Trump apprised of all the key moments in these catch and kill schemes. Trump's legal team suggested
in opening statements that Trump had nothing to do with any of these schemes. It was all Michael
Cohen doing of his own accord. Trump was busy running the country as president or when he was
signing off on the checks and earlier was leaving all of this stuff up to his personal lawyer and
fixer, Michael Cohen. And this tape indicated, to some extent, that Trump was being told in real time about what was going on and that he was being
kept abreast of the biggest developments. Right. And just one last thing for you. Can you set the
record straight for all of us? Was Trump sleeping or was he just, as he said, resting his quote, beautiful blue eyes?
Look, we don't know what Trump is actually doing in the courtroom. His eyes certainly are closed
for long stretches at a time. There are moments when he jerks upright in his chair, consistent
with how someone might awake if they've been kind of dozing off or falling asleep at a classical
music concert, for instance. And there have been other times when he has kind of been closing his eyes and he does seem to have been contemplating.
And then he like nods with his eyes closed when one of his lawyers reaches over to kind of say
something in his ear. So it's not exactly clear all the time, but he is certainly spending long
stretches of this trial with his eyes closed. Whether or not he is actually sleeping is one thing, but it certainly would be accurate to say he is resting his eyes. And rest his eyes, he will, Trafal.
I'm sure he will. Those apparently beautiful. I've never had that thought before. I don't know
if anyone else has either, but sure. Something to laugh at for all of us. That was my conversation
with Hugo Lowell, political investigations reporter for The Guardian.
And there surely will be more on all of this very soon.
But that is the latest for now.
We'll get to some headlines in a moment.
But if you like our show, make sure to subscribe and share with your friends.
We'll be back to some headlines.
Headlines.
Hamas officials said Thursday that they will meet with negotiators in Egypt to continue talks for a ceasefire in Gaza. That's according
to a statement from Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh. He wrote that the move is meant to, quote,
mature a deal that achieves the demands of our people and ends the aggression. This could signal
that both sides are getting closer to a deal, but it's worth noting that Hamas's key demand
is for Israel to completely pull out of Gaza, something that
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly refused to do. Earlier this week,
he vowed to invade the southern Gaza city of Rafah with or without a deal on a ceasefire.
This comes after the UN released a report detailing the extent of the damage in Gaza
after Israel's months-long assault on the densely populated strip. According to the report, even if Israel's assault on Gaza ended now,
it would still take until 2040 to rebuild everything that's been destroyed,
and it would cost at least $30 billion.
Yeah, just an incredibly staggering toll.
Meanwhile, here in the U.S., demonstrations at colleges over the war in Gaza continue as
university administrators crack down on pro-Palestinian encampments on campuses all
across the country. President Biden weighed in on Thursday after remaining largely silent on
the issue. And in an address from the White House, he said that he supported the right to
peacefully protest, but condemned the violence breaking out on college campuses across the country.
Violent protest is not protected.
Peaceful protest is vandalism, trespassing, breaking windows,
shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations.
None of this is a peaceful protest.
The president also condemned anti-Semitism,
and he pushed back on Republicans who have called on him
to deploy the National Guard to quell the unrest.
Now, remember that bridge in Baltimore that collapsed back in March?
Well, there's now a timeline and a price tag for rebuilding it.
A Maryland transportation official said on Thursday that rebuilding the Francis Scott Key Bridge will take a little more than four years and cost as much as $1.9 billion. And that's just
a preliminary estimate. Crews on Wednesday also recovered the body of a fifth person who died in
the bridge collapse. The body of Miguel Angel Luna Gonzalez was recovered from inside a red
construction vehicle. The remains of one person are still missing. The Key Bridge collapsed in
late March after a cargo ship called the Dolly lost power
and smashed into a bridge support.
The FBI has reportedly opened a criminal investigation
into the incident.
Investigators are said to be looking into
whether the ship's crew knew about the risk
of mechanical issues when it left the port.
And while millions of people in Florida this week
lost their reproductive rights
because of a new six-week abortion ban in the state, Republican Governor Ron DeSantis the port. And while millions of people in Florida this week lost their reproductive rights because
of a new six-week abortion ban in the state, Republican Governor Ron DeSantis turned his
attention to fighting businesses that are trying to do something about climate change. DeSantis
on Wednesday signed a new law that bans and criminalizes the sale of lab-grown meat in
Florida. Lab-grown meat, for the record, is seen as a climate-friendly alternative to the meat that
we can buy in the store because it is grown from animal cells, meaning that no animal has to be raised and killed for us to eat it.
Last year, federal regulators gave two startups approval to start selling lab-grown chicken, but commercial availability is still likely years away.
So not really an issue at all for these people in Florida.
But who wants to help the planet when you can stick
it to the quote unquote elites? Am I right? Here is Rhonda Santos at a press conference on Wednesday
for the bill signing. They've not only told you that the consumption of meat is, quote,
the source of greenhouse gas and climate change. Obviously, they've said that. They also want you
to believe that consuming insects is a, quote, overlooked source of protein and a way to battle climate change.
My God, read a book, Rhonda Santis.
All I have to say about that.
Three other states have passed similar laws.
A good thing Florida isn't among the states that are most heavily affected by climate change because of rising sea levels and intensifying hurricanes.
But oh, wait, it is.
This man just continues to prove how foolish he is over and over.
And I don't even know if I want to eat lab grown meat, Priyanka.
But this does not, you know, make sense here to me.
Is this helping anybody?
Is it posing a health risk to people?
It is pointless.
Right.
No sense.
Not even available in stores.
A non-issue.
It seems to me that he just has not gotten enough attention
and just is pivoting to doing the most outlandish things possible
to get the spotlight back.
I guess he misses the opportunity to wear the cowboy boots with the lifts
and misses the attention.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go,
you know Crooked loves to support the non-binary community
and you know we also love wordplay.
So of course we have a new tee in the Crooked store
that does both they, thems, the rules.
It's been a highly requested merch item
and now it is finally here.
So head to crooked.com slash store to pick up a shirt.
It's such a cute shirt.
FYI, in case y'all were wondering.
That is all for today.
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I'm Priyanka Arabindi. I'm Trevelle Anderson. And make a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe. I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Trevail Anderson.
And make a budget, Rudy.
It's really that simple.
Yeah, get in there on Google Sheets.
Do your expenses like me every month.
It's fine.
Get in there.
It really helps.
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