The Guardian (USA)

Hope Hicks tells hush-money jury of Trump’s control over 2016 campaign

- Victoria Bekiempis, Hugo Lowell and Léonie Chao-Fong in New York

Hope Hicks, Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign press secretary, broke into tears on Friday while testifying in the expresiden­t’s New York criminal hushmoney trial, hours after she described his complete control over the campaign.

Hicks, who cut a skittish figure in Judge Juan Merchan’s courtroom, is a key prosecutio­n witness. She described Trump campaign staffers’ panic when a recording emerged in which Trump bragged about groping women. “This was a crisis” for his presidenti­al bid, she said, describing the sentiment among the campaign staff.

Hicks also placed Trump squarely at the center of his campaign media strategy, telling jurors “we were all just following his lead”. The testimony marks a turning point for prosecutor­s, as she is the first Trump staffer with intimate knowledge of Trump’s campaign to testify about his alleged misconduct.

Prosecutor­s allege that he tried to use payoffs to bury stories that could harm his candidacy. While her name has come up at various points during the trial, Hicks’s placement of Trump in the middle of this alleged media strategy is a stunning developmen­t.

“Who overall was responsibl­e for branding strategy?” prosecutor Matthew Colangelo asked.

“I would say that Mr Trump was responsibl­e,” Hicks said. “He deserves the credit for the different messages that the campaign focused on in terms of the agenda that he put forth.”

Hicks – who reportedly had a close relationsh­ip with Trump until her anger about the January 6 insurrecti­on surfaced – was clearly uncomforta­ble. When Hicks walked to the witness stand on Friday in the ex-president’s New York criminal hush-money trial, he traced her with his eyes as she passed him. Hicks, a willowy figure who crossed into the well with small steps, had a quavering voice as she introduced herself to jurors.

“My name is Hope Charlotte Hicks, and my last name is spelled H-I-C-K-S,” she said. Unsure the mic was picking up her voice, she said: “I’m really nervous.”

Hicks, who was repeatedly interviewe­d by Robert Mueller due to her longtime proximity to Trump, also served in the White House as his communicat­ions director.

When Hicks was questioned about the Access Hollywood tape that leaked in early October 2016 – in which Trump notoriousl­y boasted that when a man is famous, he can “grab [women] by the pussy” – jurors were shown a transcript of the tape.

Asked what her first reaction was to receiving an email from a Washington Post reporter about the tape, Hicks said she was “very concerned” about the contents of the email, and the lack of time to respond.

She says she forwarded the email with the subject line: “URGENT Wash-Post query” to others in the campaign. “It was a damaging developmen­t,” Hicks said. “[The] consensus among us that

this was damaging – this was a crisis.”

Former tabloid honcho David Pecker – whom prosecutor­s said colluded with Trump and Michael Cohen to bury stories that could hurt his campaign – said Hicks was present at the trio’s summer 2015 Trump Tower meeting.

Pecker also testified that Hicks was present on a call in which Trump railed angrily about one of his alleged paramours doing TV interviews. Manhattan prosecutor­s contend that Cohen bought Daniels’s silence about a claimed sexual liaison with Trump for $130,000.

They say that he coordinate­d the National Enquirer parent company AMI’s payoff to Karen McDougal, a Playboy model who also alleged a sexual relationsh­ip with Trump. They allege that Cohen did so to prevent damaging informatio­n from thwarting Trump’s presidenti­al bid.

Trump faces counts for allegedly falsifying business records, by describing repayments to Cohen as legal expenses on his company’s documents. Prosecutor­s contended that Trump, Cohen and Pecker hatched their catch-and-kill scheme during that summer 2015 meeting at Trump Tower.

Hicks was also asked on Friday about a media inquiry from the Wall Street Journal, which was running a story in early November 2016 about AMI’s purchase of Daniels and McDougals’ stories – and failure to run them. Hicks said that she thought she had spoken with Trump after getting this inquiry.

“He wanted to know the context and he wanted to make sure there was a denial of any kind of relationsh­ip,” Hicks said, expressing confusion as to why he wanted to do that. “I felt the point of the story was that National Enquirer paid a woman for her story and never published it.”

Jurors were also shown text messages between Hicks and Cohen in which she repeatedly told him to “pray!” that the 4 November 2016 Wall Street Journal article on AMI’s purchase of Daniels’s and McDougal’s stories would not gain traction.

At this point of her testimony, Hicks seemed to appreciate the absurdity of this situation. When she read aloud Cohen’s text about the article, calling it “poorly written and I don’t see it getting much play”, Hicks chuckled. “A little irony there,” she remarked, and again laughed softly. “I said I agree with that.”

Even though the Journal story did not tank Trump’s campaign, or get all that much attention at the time, Hicks said that he was still worried – including about Melania Trump catching word of the coverage. “He wanted me to make sure that the newspapers were [not] delivered to their residence that morning,” Hicks told jurors.

Whatever humor might have emerged from recalling her exchange with Cohen dissipated shortly thereafter. Right when Trump attorney Emil Bove started his cross-examinatio­n of Hicks, as he gently asked about the commenceme­nt of her career with Trump, she choked up.

Merchan asked Hicks whether she needed to take a break.

“Uhm, yes, please,” she said.

As Hicks walked out of Merchan’s courtroom, a piece of balled up tissue could be seen in her hand.

 ?? Photograph: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters ?? Hope Hicks testifies in court in New York on 3 May 2024.
Photograph: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters Hope Hicks testifies in court in New York on 3 May 2024.

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