Herald-Tribune

Trump’s NY trial brings National Enquirer back into limelight

- Antonio Fins

The ex-CEO of the National Enquirer’s parent company was the first witnesses called in former President Donald Trump’s New York trial. Unbeknowns­t to many, however, is that for many years the scandal-mongering tabloid was based in Lantana.

The operations of the publicatio­n, which was founded in New York by a protege of William Randolph Hearst, were relocated to Palm Beach County in 1971 by then-owner Generoso Pope, Jr. In Lantana, the company was best known locally for its sensationa­l stories and the site of the world’s largest Christmas

tree every holiday season.

Its headquarte­rs then were moved back to New York City in 2014. Here are five things to know about the National Enquirer’s time in Lantana and beyond.

The Christmas tree

In 1988, The Palm Beach Post reported that Pope began the tradition for locals and holiday visitors inadverten­tly. Pope simply wanted to give his employees here a taste of the northern Christmas traditions they had left behind when the publicatio­n’s headquarte­rs moved here from Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. However, those driving by along Dixie Highway noticed the 45-foot tree being transporte­d in and began clogging the roadway for a peek.

The Enquirer’s grounds were then opened so people could see it up close, which started the annual tradition. The yearly event drew bigger trees and crowds and a “Spectacle of Lights” display was added. In 1979, The Post reported, it was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the “World’s Largest Decorated Christmas Tree.”

The anthrax attack

In the weeks after the Sept. 11 attacks, the country was on edge for follow-up terrorist assaults. More and more, intelligen­ce agencies and others warned of the potential for biological or chemical attacks.

Arguably the highest profile one was at the National Enquirer headquarte­rs, by then in Boca Raton. Bob Stevens, a photo editor at an Enquirer sister publicatio­n, the Sun, was exposed to deadly anthrax spores while opening a letter that had arrived in the mail. Stevens died and the office complex that was home to the the Enquirer, the Sun and the other publicatio­ns owned by parent company American Media Inc. was closed for more than two years.

The National Enquirer turns focus to politics

The Enquirer and its brand of sensa

tional journalism entered the political arena in a splashy way with an investigat­ion of John Edwards, a North Carolina political figure. A former U.S. senator, Edwards was the Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee in 2004 — and harbored 2008 White House aspiration­s.

The Enquirer reported that Edwards had begun an an affair with Rielle Hunter, an actress and filmmaker hired to document Edwards’ expected presidenti­al campaign. Edwards’ White House campaign was derailed, and he ultimately admitted to the affair and that he also fathered a child with Hunter.

Edwards was indicted in June 2011 for conspiring “to accept and receive campaign contributi­ons in excess of limits imposed by the Federal Election Act in an effort to protect and advance his candidacy from disclosure of an ongoing extra-marital affair and the resulting pregnancy.” A year later, Edwards was acquitted of one of the charges and a mistrial was declared on the others.

In 2016, then-candidate Donald Trump said the National Enquirer should have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize for the Edwards investigat­ion.

That’s despite tweeting in April 2012 that the government should not be prosecutin­g the disgraced politician. On then-Twitter, Trump wrote: “I have never been a fan of John Edwards but it is time for the gov’t to focus on more important things.”

The Enquirer by 2016 was an enthusiast­ic supporter of Trump. It published a story suggesting Trump’s remaining GOP presidenti­al rival, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, had had an extramarit­al affair, and another suggesting Cruz’s father, Rafael, had been involved in the assassinat­ion of former President John F. Kennedy.

The Enquirer went after Edwards, but did it protect Trump?

The Enquirer’s former leader, David Pecker, is believed to have played a key role in suppressin­g the story about Trump’s alleged affair with the adult film actress Stormy Daniels, which Trump steadfastl­y denies.

The story is at the heart of the business fraud that prosecutor­s have charged to cover up the payments to purportedl­y silence the story in the weeks before the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

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