Trump faces his 1st criminal trial. Here are the witnesses the prosecution is likely to call
For the first time ever, a former U.S. president is facing a criminal trial, with jury selection set to begin Monday in The People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump.
The long and winding road to trial is an outgrowth of revelations first made pub‐ lic in January 2018 by the Wall Street Journal - namely, that Trump's lawyer at the time, Michael Cohen, arranged a $130,000 US pay‐ ment to buy the silence of a porn star.
WATCH l 'Sleazy' hush payments aren't the al‐ leged crime here, ex-prose‐ cutor says:
Since the criminal indict‐ ment was filed by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg just over a year ago, there has been a vigorous debate among legal experts about the merits of the case, and whether it should be consid‐ ered a hush money trial, an election interference trial or a fraud trial. Regardless, it will be history-making.
Officially, Trump faces 34 counts related to falsifying business records to hide hush money payments. He has characterized the prose‐ cution as politically moti‐ vated, although Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards once faced a similar prosecution.
Here are some of the wit‐ nesses the prosecution may call. (Two caveats: It is not guaranteed that each and every one will take the stand to testify; and given the case involves business records, there could be revelatory tes‐ timony from people not on this list who are little known to the public.)
Michael Cohen
While Trump's lawyer, Co‐ hen is said to have been in‐ tensely involved in a series of conversations and dealings concerning three people who claimed to have knowledge of extramarital affairs Trump engaged in while married to his current wife, Melania. Co‐ hen also dealt extensively with the National Enquirer, which was aware of those af‐ fair allegations.
Cohen is said to have used his own money to make one of the hush money pay‐ ments, the reimbursement of which is at the crux of this case.
WATCH l Cohen ex‐ pounds on hush money payments, other Trump matters (from 2019):
Former Manhattan assis‐ tant district attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo called Co‐ hen a "flawed witness" who "you have to 100 per cent corroborate, because he looks like he has a revenge motive," in conversation with CBC News last year.
Not only was Cohen im‐ prisoned for crimes related to some of the allegations re‐ lated to this Trump case, he also pleaded guilty to tax crimes related to his own en‐ terprises that had nothing to do with his former boss.
Those facts, combined with Cohen having written two books since his split from Trump, give the defence plenty of opportunities to probe for inconsistencies and contradictions. Given Cohen's passionate speaking style, there could be some antago‐ nistic exchanges when he's cross-examined, as seen in his previous congressional testimony.
Stephanie Clifford
More commonly known by her screen and stage name Stormy Daniels, Clif‐ ford could be referred to by her given name in proceed‐ ings. While she wasn't the first woman to receive a hush money payout (see below), her payment was of critically more importance.
That's because it was ne‐ gotiated in the frantic days after the release of an Access Hollywood tape late in the 2016 U.S. presidential cam‐ paign, a tape that threatened to sink Trump's hopes of vic‐ tory. In that recording, which can be described at trial but will not be played, Trump seems to brag about commit‐ ting sexual assault in general terms.
Clifford - who has alleged a single sexual encounter with Trump, in 2006 - has de‐ tailed being in fear for her life after her name was made public. But since then, she's provided a lot of on-therecord statements in the form of interviews, a book and a new documentary.
Read the statement of facts from the Manhattan prosecutors:
Karen McDougal
The trial has sometimes been referred to as Trump's "Stormy Daniels case," a curi‐ ous oversight in the post #MeToo era. A former Play‐ boy Playmate of the Year, Mc‐ Dougal alleges she had an ongoing dalliance with Trump, with dozens of inti‐ mate encounters.
According to prosecutors, McDougal received a $150,000 payout in exchange for a couple of favourable stories in the Enquirer, but also an agreement she wouldn't publicize her rela‐ tionship with Trump.
McDougal told CNN in 2018 that she was a "diehard
Republican."
"I did not want to damage him or hurt [Trump] in any way, shape or form, but I also didn't want to put out the story because I didn't want my reputation to be dam‐ aged."
Trump has denied affairs with both women and says he was trying to make untrue allegations go away. Prosecu‐ tors say in their statement of facts that he is heard on an audio recording they possess making clear his knowledge of the McDougal payout, at minimum.
David Pecker
Pecker was CEO of Ameri‐ can Media Inc., publishers of the National Enquirer, until 2020. His relationship with Trump extends decades; he once helped publish a 1990s glossy called Trump Style.
AMI has previously admit‐ ted, as part of a non-prosecu‐ tion agreement with federal investigators, that it made payments to "not publicize damaging allegations" con‐ cerning Trump during his first presidential campaign of 2015-2016. In the parlance of tabloid journalism, the publi‐ cation engaged in a "catchand-kill" scheme.
In contrast to the relative absence of negative Trump coverage in its pages during the contentious 2016 cam‐ paign, the Enquirer hinted that the father of Republican rival Ted Cruz was part of a JFK assassination conspiracy, and that Democratic oppo‐ nent Hillary Clinton had suf‐ fered two strokes and had only months left to live, among many negative cover stories regarding other candi‐ dates.
In 2021, the Enquirer's parent company agreed to pay nearly $200,000 in fines as part of a Federal Election Commission probe. The FEC said the payment to McDou‐ gal was "an-kind contribu‐ tion" to the Trump campaign. Dylan Howard
Howard, Enquirer editorin-chief at the time, was tasked with executing what Pecker approved regarding Trump coverage.
Previously released court documents seem to portray a frantic bid to beat the com‐ petition concerning Clifford after the Access Hollywood video dropped.
"I''m told they're going with Daily Mail," Howard wrote in a text to Cohen on Oct. 17, 2016, referring to the British tabloid. "Are you aware?" The pair then quickly got on the phone, according to an Associated Press report on those court documents.
In recent days, a former Enquirer writer detailed in the New York Times working for Howard during the first Trump campaign. In the firstperson account, journalist Lachlan Cartwright sheds more light on the third pay‐
out - a $30,000 sum to Trump Tower doorman Dino Sajudin, whose information ultimately proved unreliable. Hope Hicks
Hicks is one of the few people to work the entire du‐ ration of the Trump adminis‐ tration, in a variety of roles. Prior to that, she worked in communications on his first presidential campaign.
It would be far from her first rodeo having to recall details to questioners.
She spoke to special coun‐ sel Robert Mueller's team looking into Russian contacts with the Trump campaign during the 2016 campaign, and on similar topics with the Republican-led Senate inves‐ tigation that resulted. She al‐ so sat for the Democrat-led House committee examining the events up to and sur‐ rounding the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.
It was reported this past winter that Hicks and anoth‐ er Trump surrogate, Kellyanne Conway, had spoken to Bragg's team. Though Hicks once con‐ fessed to telling "white lies" to questioners, she may help bolster accounts of conversa‐ tions and activities involving the more problematic Cohen.