Les Wexner and John Zeiger have denied Dershowitz's claims of an extortion plot, in what attorneys for the professor's accuser call a "devastating" blow to his case.
Monday's hearing will focus in part on whether Dershowitz can depose Wexner to test those denials
Though Dershowitz claims that Zeiger asserted his client was being "shaken down," the line in the transcript supporting that is murky--for two lawyers talking.
All of the times David Pecker quoted Michael Cohen or someone else referring to Trump as "The Boss," during the morning session of Thursday's trial proceedings alone.
A thread. 🧵
"Don't worry. I'm your friend. The Boss will take care of it."
— Pecker quotes Cohen on reimbursement for Karen McDougal payoff
Asked who "The Boss" meant, Pecker replied: "Donald Trump."
On Day 1 on the stand, David Pecker described how he turned his tabloid empire into the Trump campaign's "eyes and ears": promoting him, attacking his rivals, and silencing "women selling stories."
The ex-AMI chief's testimony resumes today. 🧵
Context for this testimony:
In 2018, the day of Michael Cohen's sentencing, SDNY revealed AMI entered into a non-prosecution deal resolving a campaign finance probe.
AMI admitted the purpose of the Karen McDougal hush money—and agreed to beef up campaign finance compliance.
The agreement also obligated AMI's officers and representatives to truthfully cooperate with law enforcement investigations, with penalties for false, incomplete or misleading testimony.
Some of the National Enquirer headlines that ex-AMI chief David Pecker testified were part of the behind-the-scenes scheme to prop up Trump and discredit his political rivals have been released by the court.
They were entered into evidence on Tuesday.
Behind-the-scenes:
David Pecker testified that Michael Cohen gave story ideas for negative headlines during phone calls, targeting rivals like Ted Cruz, Ben Carson, or Marco Rubio.
"That was the basis of our story, and then we would embellish it from there," Pecker said.
Inside catch-and-kill:
The $30,000 deal between the Enquirer's corp parent AMI and Dino Sajudin came into evidence, showing the doorman's payoff for "information regarding Donald Trump's illegitimate child."
Pecker said they paid to quash the story, even knowing it was bogus.
Before jurors hear a word of witness testimony this morning, the court has an unfinished order of business: Trump's contempt hearing over the gag order.