Rome News-Tribune

Judge denies bid to modify gag order so Trump can respond to Stormy Daniels’ sex tryst testimony

- By Molly Crane-newman and Josephine Stratman

Stormy Daniels, facing tough questions from Donald Trump’s defense team as she returned to the witness stand following her bombshell testimony on the alleged Lake Tahoe tryst with the former president, fended off accusation­s she’d made up the story during hush mney trial testimony Thursday.

As the day’s witnesses wrapped up, Judge Juan Merchan denied a request from Trump’s defense team to scale back the gag order in the case so Trump could respond to Daniels’ allegation­s about the alleged episode — which Trump has denied.

“He needs an opportunit­y to respond to the American people,” Todd Blanche said.

ADA Chris Conroy argued that doing so would put witnesses and future witnesses in the case in danger — and said that Trump just wanted to attack Stormy Daniels. Merchan denied the defense’s request, telling Blanche he couldn’t take Trump’s word.

“Your client’s track record

speaks for itself,” he said.

DANIELS GRILLED OVER TRYST ACCOUNT

Keying in on a central part of Daniels’ testimony about her encounter with Trump, defense lawyer Susan Necheles during hush money trial proceeding­s Thursday skepticall­y asked Daniels about having appeared in porn movies with “naked women and naked men” yet being startled by Trump on a bed in a t-shirt and boxers.

Daniels said that coming out of the bathroom to find a man twice her age “in his underwear, you’re not expecting to be there” was different.

“This was not the first time in your life someone had made a pass at you?” Necheles asked at one point.

“It is the first time they had a bodyguard standing outside the door … and were in their underwear and were twice my age,” Daniels shot back.

She later said her “own insecuriti­es” kept her from refusing.

Trump, 77, has pleaded not guilty to felony charges alleging he covered up a $130,000 reimbursem­ent to fixer Michael Cohen for handling the hush money payoff to Daniels, logging it in the books as payment for legal fees.

Necheles repeatedly cast doubt on Daniels’ account, at one point asking her if she is experience­d in fabricatin­g “phony sex stories” as a porn star to which Daniels replied that the sex was “very real.”

“If this story wasn’t true, I would have written it to be a lot better,” Daniels snapped back a few moments later, to some apparent amusement from jurors.

As Daniels described how Trump sat on his hotel room couch the night of their tryst, he furrowed his brow, looking mad and a little disgusted. When there was a mention of Michael Avanatti mulling a run for president, Trump smirked.

Daniels also testified that she did not have personal knowledge about Trump’s role in the hush money payment to her and that she negotiated the payment through her lawyer.

Daniel’s cross ended with the lawyer asserting Daniels “never had an affair with President Trump” and a sustained objection.

‘THE BOSS’S PERSONAL CHECKS’

Next, in potentiall­y crucial testimony, a former assistant at the Trump Org said that in 2017, she was directed to send certain checks Trump had to personally sign to the home address of his longtime personal bodyguard Keith Schiller in D.C

Some dates of some of the checks cited aligned with those issued to Cohen in 2017 — which prosecutor­s say were reimbursem­ents for hush money, and the defense claims were standard payments for legal services.

Rebecca Manochio, the longtime former executive assistant o f convicted Trump Org CFO Allen Weisselber­g, further testified that Trump didn’t always immediatel­y sign off on checks — sometimes he had questions — and that expenses didn’t need to be handled only on paper; they could be processed electronic­ally.

Manochio said that Trump’s former executive assistant, Rhona Graff, or Weisselber­g gave her the order and that she was never ordered to send anything else to Schiller’s.

Trump has claimed that checks he signed for Cohen in 2017 — which reimbursed him for hush money — were payment for legitimate legal fees. His lawyers said he signed what was put in front of him while busy running the country.

GOING FOR THE MONEY

Necheles started the day hot as her cross examinatio­n of Daniles got underway Thursday morning, accusing Daniels of threatenin­g Trump in the leadup to the 2016 election.

Daniels said that was “false.”

The defense attorney played audio of Michael Cohen talking with Daniels’ lawyer, Keith Davidson in which he described Daniels as anxious to close the deal, quoting her to the fixer, “She wants this money more than you can ever imagine.”

Daniels pushed back on the idea that she was money hungry, saying that if the story were to be made public there’d be a “target on my back and my family’s.”

“I never asked for money from anyone in particular; I asked to tell my story,” she said. “… I was asking to sell my story to publicatio­ns to get the truth out.”

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