Springfield News-Sun

Tabloid publisher says he pledged to be Trump’s ‘eyes and ears’ for 2016

- By Michael R. Sisak and Eric Tucker

NEW YORK — A veteran tabloid publisher testified Tuesday that he pledged to be Donald Trump’s “eyes and ears” during his 2016 presidenti­al campaign, recounting how he promised the then-candidate that he would help suppress harmful stories and even arranged to purchase a doorman’s silence.

The testimony from David Pecker was designed to bolster prosecutor­s’ assertions of a decades-long friendship between Trump and the former publisher of the National Enquirer that culminated in an agreement to give the candidate’s lawyer a heads-up on negative tips and stories so they could be quashed.

Pecker is the first witness in Trump’s history-making hush money trial in Manhattan, where he faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in connection with payments meant to prevent harmful stories from surfacing during the final days of the 2016 campaign.

The effort to suppress unflatteri­ng informatio­n was designed to illegally influence the election, prosecutor­s have alleged in seeking to elevate the gravity of the first trial of a former American president and the first of four criminal cases against Trump to reach a jury.

With Trump sitting just feet away in the courtroom, Pecker detailed his intimate, behind-the-scenes involvemen­t in Trump’s rise from political novice to the Republican nomination and then the White House. He explained how he and the National Enquirer parlayed rumor-mongering into splashy tabloid stories that smeared Trump’s opponents and, just as crucially, leveraged his connection­s to suppress seamy stories about Trump, including a porn actor’s claim of an extramarit­al sexual encounter a decade earlier.

Pecker traced the origins of their relationsh­ip to a 1980s meeting at Trump’s Mar-a-lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, and said the friendship bloomed alongside

the success of the real estate developer’s TV show “The Apprentice” and the program’s subsequent celebrity version.

Their ties were solidified during a pivotal August 2015 meeting at Trump Tower involving Trump, his lawyer and personal fixer Michael Cohen, and another aide, Hope Hicks, in which Pecker was asked what he and the magazines he led could do for the campaign.

Pecker said he volunteere­d to publish positive stories about Trump and negative stories about his opponents. But that wasn’t all, he said, telling jurors how he told Trump: “I will be your eyes and ears.”

“I said that anything I hear in the marketplac­e, if I hear anything negative about yourself, or if I hear about women selling stories, I would notify Michael Cohen,” so that the rights could be purchased and the stories could be killed.

“So they would not get published?” asked prosecutor Joshua Steinglass asked.

“So they would not get published,” Pecker replied.

To illustrate their point, prosecutor­s displayed for the court a screenshot of various flattering headlines the National Enquirer published about Trump, including: “Donald Dominates!’ and “World Exclusive: The Donald Trump Nobody Knows.” The jury was also shown disparagin­g and outlandish stories about Trump’s opponents in the race, including the surgeon Ben Carson and Republican Sen. Marco Rubio.

Pecker painted Cohen as a shadow editor of the National Enquirer’s pro-trump coverage, directing the tabloid to go after whichever Republican candidates was gaining in momentum.

 ?? JABIN BOTSFORD/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? The effort to suppress unflatteri­ng informatio­n was designed to illegally influence the election, prosecutor­s have alleged in seeking to elevate the gravity of the first trial of a former American president and the first of four criminal cases against former President Donald Trump to reach a jury.
JABIN BOTSFORD/THE WASHINGTON POST The effort to suppress unflatteri­ng informatio­n was designed to illegally influence the election, prosecutor­s have alleged in seeking to elevate the gravity of the first trial of a former American president and the first of four criminal cases against former President Donald Trump to reach a jury.

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