A former tabloid publisher said he agreed to spend tens of thousands of dollars to buy politically compromising stories about Donald Trump with the assurance that “the boss will take care of it.”
That promise, allegedly from Mr Trump’s then-personal attorney Michael Cohen, gave former American Media Inc chief David Pecker the greenlight to pay a former Playboy model $150,000 to buy the rights to her story of an alleged affair, Mr Pecker testified on Thursday.
“Don’t worry about it. I’m your friend. The boss will take care of it,” Cohen told him, according to Mr Pecker.
The former publisher of tabloid giant the National Enquirer returned to the witness stand on Thursday for a third day of testimony in a Manhattan criminal courtroom, where Mr Trump stands accused of orchestrating a scheme to cover up payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels for the purposes of influencing the outcome of the 2016 presidential election.
But the agreement with former Playboy model Karen McDougal continued to haunt Mr Trump’s campaign and the early months of his administration, when he allegedly called Mr Pecker to the White House to ask about her while his chief aides set up calls about extending a nondisclosure agreement with her.
Even one year into his administration, after her interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Mr Trump was fuming, according to Mr Pecker.
“I thought you had, and we had, an agreement with Karen McDougal that she can’t give any interviews or be on any television shows,” he told Mr Pecker, according to his testimony on Thursday.
“I said yes, we had an agreement, but I amended it to allow her to speak to the press,” he added. “Karen has a two-year agreement. She was flooded with requests from the press. … And I amended her agreement at the time. … He was very upset. Couldn’t understand why I did it.”
She was ultimately released from the contract with Mr Pecker’s American Media Inc.
But when it came to the allegations from Ms Daniels just weeks before Election Day, Mr Pecker wanted nothing to do with them, he said.
“Michael Cohen asked me to purchase the story,” Mr Pecker testified on Thursday. “I said I am not going to purchase the story. I am not going to be involved with the story. … I am not going to be a bank. We’re not paying out any more monies.”
Mr Pecker said he feared that getting involved with an adult film star would compromise his distribution in major retailers like Walmart.
“Cohen was upset, he said the boss would be furious with me, and that I should go forward in purchasing it myself,” Mr Pecker said.
‘Karen is a nice girl. What do you think I should do?’
The former tabloid mogul came up with a “catch and kill” plan during an August 2015 meeting at Trump Tower with Cohen and Mr Trump shortly after he launched his campaign, he testified earlier this week.
In June 2016, Mr Pecker joined a three-way call with Cohen and American Media Inc’s then-chief content officer Dylan Howard, who had interviewed former Playboy model Karen McDougal about her alleged one-year affair with Mr Trump.
Ms McDougal turned down an initial offer of $10,000 to buy the rights to her story, according to Mr Pecker.
“She said she didn’t want to be the next Monica Lewinsky,” Mr Pecker said. “He felt that she had been more interested in having American Media buy the story than anyone else.”
Mr Trump himself then called Mr Pecker, he said.
“‘I spoke to Michael,” Mr Pecker recalled Mr Trump as saying at the time. “Karen is a nice girl. … What do you think I should do?”
“I said, ‘You should buy the story and take it off the market,’” Mr Pecker said. “I believed the story was true. I think it would have been very embarrassing for himself and for his campaign.”
Cohen then called Mr Pecker to negotiate a deal, according to Mr Pecker.
“Who’s going to pay for it?” he asked Cohen. “He said, ‘Don’t worry, I’m your friend, the boss will take care of it.’”
A contract with Ms McDougal granted her a monthly column on aging and fitness for Star magazine, another one for Ok magazine, four posts a month on Radar Online, and an agreement that Mr Pecker’s American Media Inc would provide her with ghost writers, according to an agreement shown in court on Thursday.
But it granted the company “limited life story rights” that are limited to “any romantic, personal and/or physical relationship McDougal has ever had with any then-married man.”
“I wanted to substantiate the $150,000 payment,” Mr Pecker testified. “With respect to campaign, uh, laws, I wanted to have the contract be a record that stipulates that – for the services that she was going to perform for American Media – has a basis for it.”
Asked whether the principle purpose of the arrangement was “to suppress her story as to prevent her from influencing the election,”
“Yes, it was,” Mr Pecker said.
‘I wanted to protect Donald Trump’
Mr Trump’s trial has offered a sobering glimpse of the inner workings of a fake news tabloid, and the former president’s role in shaping his public image.
But Mr Pecker’s testimony has revealed that he also made it his business to be the “eyes and ears” of Mr Trump’s campaign, going beyond what he called “checkbook journalism” to give Mr Trump a direct line for propaganda designed to influence the outcome of the 2016 election.
In the wake of Cohen’s plea deal with federal prosecutors for campaign finance and tax violations in 2018, American Media entered an agreement that states that the government “will not criminally prosecute” him or the company for any crimes alleged from that Trump Tower meeting up until the 2016 election for actions that could be considered unlawful campaign contributions and expenditures.
He also entered an agreement with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in 2019 to testify about those dealings in exchange for immunity from prosecution.
When the Wall Street Journalpublished an article just days before Election Day in 2016 revealing Ms McDougal’s story, Mr Trump called Mr Pecker.
“He was very upset, saying, ‘How could this happen? I thought you had this under control,’” Mr Pecker said.
Mr Pecker authorised public statements from his company about the true nature of American Media’s contract with Ms McDougal.
“I wanted to protect my company, I wanted to protect myself, and I wanted also to protect Donald Trump,” he said.
Earlier on Thursday, Mr Pecker stressed that he worked with Cohen to buy the rights to Ms McDougal’s story “so it wouldn’t be published by any other organisation
“We didn’t want the story to embarrass Mr Trump or embarrass or hurt the campaign,” he added.
When Mr Trump requested that American Media transfer the rights to Ms McDougal’s story in September 2016, Cohen established a shell company that sent an invoice for the “agreed upon ‘flat fee’ for advisory services.”
Mr Pecker admitted that the transaction was not for that at all.
“It was for the lifetime rights to the Karen McDougal story,” he said.
Mr Pecker told Cohen that the deal was off after his conversations with counsel about the transaction, according to Mr Pecker.
“He was very, very angry, very upset, screaming basically at me,” Mr Pecker said.
“Michael Cohen said ‘the boss will be very angry with you.’ I said, ‘I’m sorry, I’m not going forward, the deal is off,’” he added. “He said, ‘I can’t believe it. I’m the lawyer, I’m your friend.”
American Media has never been reimbursed for the payment, according to Mr Pecker.
Asked whether he has any “bad” feelings agbout Mr Trump all these years later, Mr Pecker said “on the contrary.”
“I felt that Donald Trump was my mentor. He helped me throughout my career,” he said. “I have no ill will at all. Even though we haven’t spoken, I still consider him a friend.”
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