It’s been more than a week since Donald Trump told the world that he expected to be arrested in New York in the Stormy Daniels hush money case. And it’s been nearly three weeks since the public learned that the former president was asked by the Manhattan district attorney’s office to provide his own, voluntary testimony, a step usually taken at the tail end of an investigation.
And yet, as far as the public knows, there has been no vote on an indictment.
So what gives? One possibility is that Michael Cohen’s increasing vulnerability not just as a grand jury witness but especially at trial has become a larger problem than the DA’s office wants to admit. After all, as former federal prosecutor Ankush Khardori explained this week, with each and every TV appearance Cohen raises the possibility of inconsistencies with his prior testimony and even potentially with his sworn, federal guilty plea. And that, coupled with would-be Cohen lawyer Bob Costello’s own grand jury testimony, might have forced the DA to rehabilitate its case with witnesses beyond Cohen.
Enter David Pecker, former publisher of the National Enquirer. He likely has no firsthand knowledge of any false business records. But according to The New York Times, Pecker communicated with Trump directly at least twice about the “catch and kill” scheme that those records allegedly were designed to cover up. (Some of these communications are detailed in court filings from the federal case against Cohen and in the Justice Department’s nonprosecution agreement with American Media, the Enquirer’s former parent company.)
Per the Times:
As Mr. Obama prepared to leave office in 2015, Mr. Trump decided to run for president once more. That August, he sat in his office at Trump Tower with Mr. Cohen and David Pecker, the publisher of American Media Inc. and its flagship tabloid, The National Enquirer.
Mr. Pecker, a longtime friend of Mr. Trump’s, had used The Enquirer to boost Mr. Trump’s…
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