The Sun (Lowell)

The hush-money probe of Donald Trump explained

- The Associated Press

NEW YORK >> In the final weeks of the 2016 presidenti­al election, Donald Trump’s lawyer tried to buy the silence of a porn actress who said she had a sexual encounter with the Republican during his days as a reality TV star.

More than six years later, New York prosecutor­s appear to be close to deciding whether Trump should face charges in connection with that payoff, in what could become the first criminal case ever brought against a former president.

Thursday’s news that the Manhattan district attorney invited Trump to testify before a grand jury next week suggested prosecutor­s were serious about bringing charges in a probe that looked like yesterday’s news just a few months ago.

Trump has denied wrongdoing and that he had any extramarit­al affairs, and he blasted the probe in a Truth Social post as a “political Witchhunt, trying to take down the leading candidate, by far, in the Republican Party”

Here’s a refresher on how things got to this point: WHAT IS THIS CASE ABOUT?

The investigat­ion centers on hush-money payments made in 2016 to two women who alleged that they had extramarit­al encounters with Trump, who has denied their accounts of his infidelity.

Specifical­ly, District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s team appears to be looking at whether Trump or anyone committed crimes in arranging the payments, or in the way they accounted for them internally at the Trump Organizati­on.

MADE? >> Trump’s former lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen, now a key prosecutio­n witness, paid porn actress Stormy Daniels $130,000 through a shell company Cohen set up. He was then reimbursed by Trump, whose company logged the reimbursem­ents as legal expenses.

Earlier in 2016, Cohen also arranged for former Playboy model Karen Mcdougal to be paid $150,000 by the publisher of the supermarke­t tabloid the National Enquirer, which squelched her story in a journalist­ically dubious practice known as “catchand-kill.”

Trump’s company, the Trump Organizati­on, “grossed up” Cohen’s reimbursem­ent for the Daniels payment for “tax purposes,” according to federal prosecutor­s who filed criminal charges against the lawyer in connection with the payments in 2018.

Cohen got $360,000 plus a $60,000 bonus, for a total of $420,000.

Cohen pleaded guilty to violating federal campaign finance law in connection with the payments. Federal prosecutor­s say the payments amounted to illegal, unreported assistance to Trump’s campaign. But they declined to file charges against Trump himself. WHAT IS TRUMP’S INVOLVEMEN­T?

Cohen says Trump directed him to arrange the Daniels payment.

Cohen also made recordings of a conversati­on in which he and Trump spoke about the arrangemen­t to pay Mcdougal through the National Enquirer.

At one point in the recording, Cohen told Trump, “I need to open up a company for the transfer of all of that info regarding our friend, David,” a reference to David Pecker, who ran the Enquirer’s parent company at the time.

Cohen said he had already spoken with the Trump Organizati­on’s longtime finance chief, Allen Weisselber­g, on “how to set the whole thing up.”

Trump then said: “What do we got to pay for this? One-fifty?”

Today, Trump characteri­zes the attempts to get him to pay money to the women to keep them quiet as “extortion.”

LOOKING AT? >> Legal experts say a case could be made that Trump falsified business records by logging Cohen’s reimbursem­ent for the Daniels payment as legal fees. But that’s only a misdemeano­r under New York law — unless prosecutor­s could prove he falsified records to conceal another crime.

Mark Pomerantz, who led the investigat­ion under then-district Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., wrote in his recent book “People vs. Donald Trump: An Inside Account” that in 2021, he looked into whether Trump could be charged with money laundering or if Trump had been somehow extorted.

David Shapiro, a fraud risk and financial crimes specialist and former FBI special agent, said a potential case against Trump could be “especially difficult” when it comes to proving his intent and knowledge of wrongdoing.

“He’s loud, he’s brash, so proving that he had specific intent to fraud, one is almost left with the idea that, ‘well, if he has that specific intent of fraud, he has it all of the time, because that’s his personalit­y,’” said Shapiro, a lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office has declined to comment on the investigat­ion.

HAVEN’T WE BEEN HERE BEFORE?

Yes. Several times. Federal prosecutor­s entered into a non-prosecutio­n agreement with the National Enquirer’s owner, which admitted paying Mcdougal to help Trump, but declined to seek a criminal charge against the then-sitting president.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office opened its own investigat­ion into the payments in 2019 and has revisited it several times since while expanding the probe into Trump’s business dealings and other topics.

So far, the only charges have been against Weisselber­g, who pleaded guilty, and the Trump Organizati­on, which was convicted in December of an unrelated offense: scheming to dodge taxes on companypai­d perks such as free apartments and cars for executives.

OF LIMITATION­S? >> The hush-money payments and Cohen’s reimbursem­ents happened more than six years ago. New York’s statute of limitation­s for most felonies is five years. For misdemeano­rs, it’s just two years.

Does that mean prosecutor­s have run out of time? Trump thinks so. In social media posts, he insists that the statute of limitation­s “long ago expired,” calling the matter “old news.”

But that’s not always how the law works. In New York, the clock can stop on the statute of limitation­s when a potential defendant is continuous­ly outside the state. Trump visited New York rarely over the four years of his presidency and now lives mostly in Florida and New Jersey.

Practicall­y speaking, though, the passage of time could affect the case in other ways. Memories fade, and evidence and records get lost or destroyed.

“The power of the case — the surprise factor, the shock value,” also fades, Shapiro said, meaning a jury might be less impressed by allegation­s that have been public for so long.

SPEAKING WITH? >> Members of Trump’s inner circle, including his former political adviser Kellyanne Conway and former spokespers­on Hope Hicks, have met with prosecutor­s in recent weeks. Cohen, now estranged from Trump, has made several visits to prepare for his expected grand jury testimony.

Among others: Pecker, the former National Enquirer publisher, was spotted going into the building where the grand jury is meeting, as well as Trump Organizati­on insiders including the company’s senior vice president and controller Jeffrey Mcconney.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Donald Trump pumps his fist after speaking at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, March 4, 2023, Oxon Hill, Md. The Manhattan district attorney’s office appears to be getting close to a decision on whether to charge Donald Trump over hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels during his 2016presid­ential campaign.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Donald Trump pumps his fist after speaking at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, March 4, 2023, Oxon Hill, Md. The Manhattan district attorney’s office appears to be getting close to a decision on whether to charge Donald Trump over hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels during his 2016presid­ential campaign.

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