Lisa Rubin Profile picture
May 3 9 tweets 2 min read Read on X
NEW: We just took a brief break because the most composed woman in Trump’s orbit — Hope Hicks — broke down on the stand right as cross examination started. Why would Hicks burst into tears—and why is she struggling to keep it together now? 1/
There are a couple of theories floating around among journalists watching with me. One is that being asked about the Trump family — who plucked her from a private PR firm & turned her into a star — overwhelmed her. Her affection for Trump the man is still evident.
The other is darker. Hicks isn’t out to hurt Trump, but today, she revealed that Trump shared with her that he spoke with Cohen in Feb. 2018, the morning after Cohen told @nytimes that he paid Stormy Daniels without Trump’s knowledge.
@nytimes Trump told Hicks that Cohen had made the payment to protect Trump from false allegations, never told anyone about it, and did it out of the goodness of his own heart.
@nytimes Asked whether that was consistent with the Cohen she knew, she said that it was not. “I did not know Michael to be an especially charitable or selfless person; he is a kind of person who seeks credit,” Hicks testified.
@nytimes In other words, without having to call Trump a liar, Hicks admitted the story Trump told her was a dubious one.
@nytimes Perhaps even worse, during that same conversation, Trump asked her how she thought the Times story was playing and wondered aloud whether it would have been better for the story to have come out during the campaign or when it had, concluding the real-life timing had been better.
@nytimes That’s where the prosecutors’ direct examination of Hicks ended and within a minute or two, her emotions bubbled over.
@nytimes None of us can say why Hope cried or what’s going through her head. But as mysterious as she is, I can’t imagine that as she criss-crossed America at Trump’s side, she ever imagined testifying in a criminal case against a man who saw her as a surrogate daughter.

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More from @lawofruby

May 16
NEW: When Michael Cohen testified in the New York attorney general’s civil fraud trial on 10/24 and 10/25/23, he testified that in pleading guilty to federal tax evasion charges, he had lied to spare his family. But asked about that episode Tuesday, Cohen was more nuanced. 1/
Specifically, Cohen acknowledged that in October, he testified he lied in federal court when he pleaded guilty to tax evasion and bank fraud. 2/ Image
Yet he tried to explain that testimony, noting he took responsibility because “the underlying fact he never disputed” and that he pleaded guilty to protect his wife. That doesn’t quite explain why he testified he lied in pleading to those counts—something he has said publicly too. 3/
Read 5 tweets
May 13
NEW: In August 2018, Michael Cohen pleaded guilty to causing American Media’s unlawful campaign contribution to Trump and to making an unlawful contribution of his own through the Karen McDougal and Stormy Daniels payments respectively. 1/ Image
And during his plea allocution — the process by which a pleading defendant takes responsibility for his crimes — Cohen said he acted not only “in coordination with” but “at the direction of” one Donald Trump. 2/
And that’s the crux of what the prosecution needs from Cohen (and can’t get from anyone else) as they wrap up their case as soon as this week: how, when, and why Trump expressly directed Cohen to ensure McDougal and Stormy’s stories stayed buried. 3/
Read 8 tweets
May 10
NEW: At the end of today's abbreviated court day, Team Trump and the DA's office squared off about the most glaringly absent witness: former Trump Org. CFO (and two-time convict) Allen Weisselberg. 1/
By charging Weisselberg with perjury in connection with his testimony in the New York AG's civil fraud case, the DA basically made Weisselberg's testimony in this case a non-starter, leaving Cohen unrebutted, even if still vulnerable on cross, with respect to critical events. 2/
But the DA now has a problem of a different order: Sure, Weisselberg won't be called as a defense witness, but he looms large in the repayment scheme & the related cover-up. And without some explanation, the jury could hold his absence against the prosecution. 3/
Read 11 tweets
May 8
I’ve heard a number of people refer to the Stormy Daniels testimony as “graphic,” and as a person who embarrasses easily, that’s not how I experienced it. 1/
Yes, there was a stray detail that I expect prosecutors and the defense alike wish she hadn’t said. But her description of the sexual encounter itself was brief and largely devoid of details. 2/
But even if it was not graphic, her testimony was vivid. The black and white tile on the floor of the foyer of Trump’s penthouse suite. Her hands shaking as she put her strappy gold heels back on. The Pert Plus, Old Spice, and gold tweezers she saw when snooping around the bathroom. 3/
Read 4 tweets
May 7
NEW: The ongoing Trump criminal trial is the fourth Trump trial in the last 12 months—and it’s my fourth too. And after watching dozens of witnesses, I’m afraid the more they change, the more things stay the same. 1/
I’ve watched a nearly 80-year-old E. Jean Carroll, who successfully accused Trump of sexual assault and defamation, fend off the implication that she was lying because she never called the police and didn’t tell her story for two decades plus. 2/
And now I’ve seen an adult film star more comfortable with her stage name than her given one similarly attacked for not calling the police or telling those closest to her after she was threatened in a parking lot 7 years before she went public with her whole story. 3/
Read 7 tweets
May 7
NEW: How do you prove a defendant caused others to make false business records where those with direct knowledge of his intent and involvement are limited to the defendant, a man now in jail for perjury, and Michael Cohen? 1/
You surround Michael Cohen’s expected testimony with a mountain of circumstantial evidence, an already substantial pile to which prosecutors just added excerpts from Trump’s books How to Get Rich and Think Like a Billionaire. 2/
Those excerpts reveal Trump as a micromanager who advised never taking one’s eyes off his checkbook, advertised he negotiated the price of everything “down to the paper clips,” trusted Weisselberg wholly, and boasted that he even loved signing checks. 3/
Read 4 tweets

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