New York Post

'DON FLING' BECAME A PERFECT STORMY

When ‘Tiny’ met ‘Horseface’: Torrid timeline toward ‘raps’

- By JOSHUA RHETT MILLER and MICHAEL KAPLAN

Seventeen years ago, a silk-pajama-clad Donald Trump, then 60, allegedly had three minutes of sex with 27-year-old porn star Stormy Daniels at a Lake Tahoe, Nev., golf tournament.

Here is how a very brief encounter became a sprawling scandal which threatens to lead to the first-ever indictment of an ex-president — and created some very memorable nicknames along the way.

2006

Trump comes to Daniels’ booth at the tournament and looks through her DVDs, then poses for a picture — which she posts to MySpace.

According to Daniels’ version — which Trump denies — he invites her to his room, asks, “Have you seen my new magazine?” (which has his portrait on the cover) and she replies, “Someone should take that magazine and spank you with it.”

He jokingly drops his pants, she delivers a couple of taps, and he starts to charm her.

“Wow, you — you are special. You remind me of my daughter,” he allegedly says, showing Daniels a picture of his wife, Melania, and 4-month-old son Barron, and inviting her to stay for dinner.

After they eat, she uses the restroom and comes out to find him sitting on the edge of the bed. “Come here,” Trump says, and the two start kissing before moving to full sex without a condom.

Three minutes later, it is over, and Trump tells Daniels: “Oh, that was just great. I’m gonna call you, I’m gonna call you. I have to see you again. You’re amazing. We have to get you on ‘The Apprentice.’ ”

Trump has always denied having sex with Daniels. He also denies illegal campaign payments and calls the investigat­ion into him a “witch hunt.”

2011

Trump announces he is running for president. Daniels’ agent cuts a $15,000 deal with InTouch magazine to tell her story of sex with the politician-cum-“Apprentice” star.

She takes a lie-detector test which finds a more than 99% probabilit­y she was being truthful.

But when the magazine goes to the Trump Organizati­on for comment, Trump’s attorney Michael Cohen threatens to sue, and the magazine calls off the story.

Daniels gets nothing; Trump pulls out of the presidenti­al race.

Later that year, blog The Dirty publishes a claim of Daniels and Trump having an affair, but Daniels’ own attorney sends it a cease-and-desist letter.

No other publicatio­n follows it.

2016

With Trump running for president, Daniels’ agent tries to sell her story for $200,000 to the Nation Enquirer and others, but there are no takers.

In the summer, Playboy centerfold Karen McDougal takes her story of a lengthy affair with Trump to the National Enquirer.

But instead of publishing it, they make her an offer: Keep your story secret and get $150,000, the cover of sister magazine Men’s Journal and a regular column.

She takes the so-called “catch-and-kill” deal, brokered by David Pecker, American Media Inc.’s CEO and Trump’s friend, who works with Cohen to get the money back.

In October, Trump is hit by the Pussygate tape, and Daniels’ agent contacts the Enquirer once again.

This time, there is even more interest in doing a catch-and-kill deal, and magazine executives contact Cohen to ask for help containing it.

Cohen talks to Trump, Pecker’s editor-in-chief Dylan Howard and Daniels’ attorney, and pays $130,000 for Daniels’ silence.

The deal calls Trump “David Dennison,” and Stormy signs it while shooting porn in Calabasas, Calif.

But Cohen cannot get Trump to hand over the cash — and Daniels apparently starts shopping her story again.

Fearing Trump won’t pay up, Cohen uses his own home equity credit to get the money quickly, and sets up a shell company to send her it with less than two weeks until Election Day.

Cohen himself has to wait a year to be fully reimbursed: Trump writes the last check to him in the Oval Office in October 2017.

2018

Donald Trump’s payment to Stormy Daniels goes public in January.

That is thanks to a story in The Wall Street Journal, which makes clear that Daniels “appeared in about 150 adult films and was considered among the industry’s biggest stars when the then 27year-old met Mr. Trump.”

Never one to shy from shading the truth, in February, Cohen admits that he actually made the payment but maintains, “Neither the Trump Organizati­on nor the Trump campaign was a party to the transactio­n with Ms. Clifford [née Daniels].”

He also insists that it was “not a campaign contributi­on.”

Daniels, now repped by the soon-to-be-disgraced attorney Michael Avenatti, sues to nullify the gag agreement.

She claims, in the March lawsuit, to have been the victim of Cohen’s “intimidati­on and coercive tactics.”

Trump says he never signed the agreement.

The president claims to know nothing about it — even though wires were arranged through Cohen’s Trump Organizati­on email — and steps into a defamation lawsuit from Daniels after he tweeted that a claim of hers qualified as a “total con job.”

Trump calls her “Horse Face,” and uses the insult repeatedly, while she nicknames him “Tiny.”

FBI agents raid Cohen’s home, office and hotel room in April. They find a trove of tax records and a paper trail related to the Daniels payments.

Going against the grain in May, Trump’s new attorney, Rudy Giuliani, maintains that his client paid back Cohen for the $130,000 doled out to Daniels.

On Twitter, Trump insists that funds “from the campaign, or campaign contributi­ons, played no roll [sic] in this transactio­n.”

His cover blown by a phone recording — played on CNN, in July, which features Trump and Cohen talking about an impending payment to McDougal — Cohen waits a month before pleading guilty to tax evasion and campaign finance violations as they pertained to the Daniels and McDougal bribes.

Cooperatin­g with the feds, Cohen throws in an allegation that he did it all at the instructio­n of Trump; the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office under Cyrus Vance Jr. launches an investigat­ion of the then-sitting president.

In October, Stormy Daniels authors “Full Disclosure.” Among the more memorable allegation­s: “I lay there annoyed that I was getting f--ked by a guy with yellow Yeti pubes and a d--k like the mushroom character in ‘Mario Kart.’ ”

Soon after, making an outrageous appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” Daniels demonstrat­es how she spanked Trump and views a selection of mushrooms.

Kimmel asks, “Which of these mushrooms, orange mushrooms, would most represent the commander in chief of the United States Military?”

She picks the toadstool.

Not only is Daniels’ defamation lawsuit tossed out of court in December, but she is also made to cover Trump’s legal expenses of $293,052. She appeals. That same month, Cohen is sentenced to three years in federal prison and AMI acknowledg­es that it killed McDougal’s story in service to Trump’s campaign.

No charges are filed against the publisher.

2019

In May, Cohen begins serving his sentence in an upstate New York prison.

He enters a Jewish-centric joint where the menu is said to feature matzo ball soup and gefilte fish.

Two months later, documents are uncovered that hint at Trump’s knowledge of the payments for silence.

Come August, the Trump Organizati­on is subpoenaed, by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., for records that could tie into the suspicious payments.

Trump’s tax returns are subpoenaed in September. Trump appeals to keep his records out of Vance’s hands.

Two courts turn him down, and, in November, he takes his case to the Supreme Court.

2020

Cohen gets early release thanks to COVID and is promptly spotted by The Post at Le Bilboquet for a late dinner, breaching his curfew.

He tweets he is writing a tell-all book, and is summoned to a meeting with a probation officer who says his release conditions now include a ban on publishing a book, tweeting and talking to the press.

When he balks, Cohen is thrown into solitary — released only when a federal judge overturns the ban, calling it retaliatio­n.

In October, Cohen details the Stormy payoff in No. 1 bestseller “Disloyal: A Memoir.” Trump tweets his review: Cohen is “a convicted lier . . . who may be going back to jail for an even longer time.”

Vance marks Trump leaving office by hiring consultant­s to help the Trump case.

Days later, the Supreme Court orders the Mazars firm to hand Trump’s tax returns to Vance, fueling belief that prosecutor­s are focused on other charges for him.

Inside the Manhattan DA’s office there is chaos.

One hired gun, Mark Pomerantz, theorizes about charging Trump with money-laundering while calling him the victim of extortion. Three career prosecutor­s leave, citing “gaps” in the evidence.

And Vance charges the Trump Organizati­on and Allen Weisselber­g, its CFO, with tax fraud in June — making it look like the Stormy probe is stalling.

But then the prosecutio­n gets a shot in the arm: Vance starts presenting evidence to a grand jury in November, and leaves office with his team taking over.

2021

Progressiv­e Alvin Bragg — who boasted of going after Trump’s charitable foundation in 2018 — takes over as Manhattan district attorney and immediatel­y convenes a meeting with the Trump-Daniels team.

When he questions their case’s strength, top prosecutor­s Carey Dunne — who ran it from the start — and Pomerantz both quit. Pomerantz’s leaked, blistering resignatio­n letter says Trump “committed multiple felonies.”

The grand jury ends with no charges, and the case appears to be effectivel­y over. Trump’s lawyer thanks Bragg for “an apolitical decision.”

Stormy Daniels’ litigation with Trump ends with her owing him $300,000 and vowing not to pay “Tiny” a penny.

2023

Bragg and Trump start the year united, both trying — and failing — to stop a tell-all book by Pomerantz which calls Bragg gun-shy and Trump a criminal.

But the unity is shattered when Bragg impanels a grand jury, with Pecker as the first known witness and other Trump fixtures, including his onetime senior counselor Kellyanne Conway, spotted outside the courthouse.

Furious, Trump steps up attacks on “racist” Bragg, highlighti­ng New York’s crime problem and botched bail reform.

And Trump slams “serial liar” Cohen, who is clearly the key witness, returning repeatedly after first testifying March 13. Between testifying, the convicted liar gives liberal networks like MSNBC a running commentary.

On March 18, Trump proclaims he will be “arrested” on Tuesday, March 21, and demands his supporters protest, dramatical­ly increasing pressure on the probe and putting the NYPD on high alert.

Stormy’s three minutes of fame gets another extension as Trump calls her “Horseface” again. She puts the attention to work, promoting her OnlyFans account and personal appearance­s and hawking signed merchandis­e while dissing “Tiny.”

And in Florida, Trump does much the same: His campaign rakes in $1.5 million between claiming he will be arrested on Tuesday and the day passing without indictment.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? FORE(PLAY)! Trump and Stormy Daniels met in 2006 at a golf event.
FORE(PLAY)! Trump and Stormy Daniels met in 2006 at a golf event.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? HUSH: Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal’s (above) tale of sleeping with Donald Trump spawned a “catch-and-kill” deal by the National Enquirer, via Michael Cohen (left).
HUSH: Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal’s (above) tale of sleeping with Donald Trump spawned a “catch-and-kill” deal by the National Enquirer, via Michael Cohen (left).
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States