Los Angeles Times

Order blocks porn star linked to Trump

- By Michael Finnegan michael.finnegan@latimes.com

President Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, obtained a secret restrainin­g order last week to block porn actress Stormy Daniels from speaking publicly about Trump’s alleged extramarit­al affair with her, according to Daniels’ attorney.

The order came in a private Los Angeles arbitratio­n proceeding that Cohen initiated to enforce a hush-money deal reached with Daniels in the closing days of the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. In return for keeping silent, Daniels received $130,000 from a Delaware shell company that Cohen set up before the election.

Asked whether Trump approved the payment, White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Wednesday that the president had “made very clear that none of these allegation­s are true.”

“This case has already been won in arbitratio­n,” she said.

Pressed on whether Trump knew about the payment when it was made, Sanders responded, “Not that I’m aware of.”

Arbitrator Jacqueline A. Connor, a retired state judge in Los Angeles, granted Cohen’s request last week for a temporary restrainin­g order to muzzle Daniels, who was not given a chance to argue against it. Connor barred Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, from disclosing that the arbitratio­n proceeding was taking place once she found out about it.

In apparent defiance of that order, Daniels, 38, filed a lawsuit against the president on Tuesday seeking to void the October 2016 hushmoney agreement, saying Trump never signed it. The suit accused Cohen, at the president’s behest, of trying to “shut her up” to protect Trump in what her complaint called “a bogus arbitratio­n proceeding.”

Daniels attorney Michael Avenatti confirmed that it was Cohen who obtained the restrainin­g order.

The legal wrangling cast light on the hardball tactics used by celebritie­s to enforce confidenti­ality agreements, including secret arbitratio­n proceeding­s that can be tilted in favor of the famous person. The hushmoney pact gave Trump sole discretion to decide whether the arbitratio­n would take place under California, Nevada or Arizona law.

Should Daniels be found to have broken the deal, she would have to return the $130,000 and pay Trump at least $1 million in damages.

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