Trump lawyer calls out Michael Cohen TikTok insults in hush money trial cross-examination

Trump lawyer calls out Michael Cohen TikTok insults in hush money trial cross-examination

A defense lawyer for Donald Trump began cross-examining Michael Cohen on Tuesday afternoon by asking about expletive-laden insults that Cohen had lobbed at both that attorney and the former president.

“You went on TikTok and called me a ‘crying little s—?’ ” asked defense attorney Todd Blanche at the Trump’s criminal hush money trial.

Latest Trump trial update: Verdict watch in hush money case

“Sounds like something I would say,” Cohen replied from the witness stand in Manhattan Supreme Court.

When Blanche asked if the trial was “important to you, Mr. Cohen,” Cohen replied, “Personally, yes.”

“You referred to Trump as a dictator douche-bag,” Blanche asked.

Cohen, who for years served Trump as his personal lawyer and fixer, again answered, “Sounds like something I would say.”

Blanche then asked Cohen if he had said that Trump should go back to “where he belongs, in a f—ing cage, like a f—ing animal.” Recall saying that?”

Cohen replied, “I recall saying that.”

Blanche soon after that exchange introduced a trial exhibit, a photo of a t-shirt that Cohen sells depicting Trump behind bars.

Blanche’s cross-examination began after a morning session during which Cohen testified that Trump told him, “Don’t worry, I’m the president of the United States” after FBI agents raided Cohen’s home and office in New York.

Cohen told jurors that he was “concerned, despondent, angry” after the April 2018 raid, which was conducted as part of a federal criminal investigation of Cohen.

That probe later led to Cohen pleading guilty to campaign finance violations that are related to the hush money allegations against Trump in the current criminal case.

“Were you frightened?” assistant district attorney Susan Hoffinger asked Cohen.

Cohen replied, “Yes, ma’am.”

Cohen then testified that he left a message for Trump asking him “to call me to let him know what was taking place.”

When Trump responded, “He said to me ‘don’t worry. I’m the president of the United States. There’s nothing here. Everything’s going to be okay. Stay tough. You’re going to be okay,’ “Cohen recalled on the witness stand.

Hoffinger then asked: “Have you spoken directly with Mr Trump since that time?”

Cohen answered, “No, ma’am.”

Cohen said his call to Trump was important for him because “I wanted some reassurance that Mr. Trump had my back. Especially as this dealt with issues that related to him.”

“I felt reassured because I had the president of the United States protecting me,” Cohen said. “It’s his Justice Department, should go nowhere.” 

Cohen said he initially maintained his ties to Trump after the raid through other people which he thought was “extremely” important to do.

Trump listened closely to Cohen’s testimony about that point.

Hoffinger then showed jurors a Trump tweet sent out after the raid, which accused New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman of trying to “destroy Michael Cohen and his relationship with me in the hope that he will ‘flip’ ” which refers to cooperating with prosecutors.

Trump in the tweet called Cohen “a fine person with a wonderful family” whom Trump had “always liked and respected.”

Hoffinger asked Cohen what Trump’s statements meant to him at the time.

“Reinforced my loyalty, and my intention to stay in the fold,” said Cohen, whose legal fees at that time were being paid for by the Trump Organization.

Asked about his understanding of Trump’s reference to cooperating with law enforcement, Cohen said, “That Mr. Trump did not want me to cooperate with the government, or certainly not provide information or flip.”

But within months, Cohen pleaded guilty in the federal case to the campaign finance charges and other crimes and agreed to cooperate with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in its criminal investigation of Trump.

Cohen on Monday delivered a damning account of the former president’s involvement in hush money payments to a porn star and a Playboy model during his 2016 presidential campaign.

Cohen told jurors Monday that Trump had complained, “This is a disaster!” when he learned that adult film actress Stormy Daniels wanted to go public shortly before Election Day 2016 with her account of having sex with Trump one night in 2006.

Eight years later, the same account might once again be a disaster for Trump.

A prosecutor used Cohen’s testimony Monday to give jurors extensive direct evidence for the first time of Trump’s alleged awareness that his reimbursement to Cohen for paying Daniels $130,000 was not a payment for “legal services.” Instead, it was to pay Cohen back for having neutralized a threat to Trump’s 2016 electoral chances, Cohen testified.

Cohen testified that Trump told him, “Just do it,” to keep Daniels quiet.

As Cohen spoke, the former president sat just a few feet away from him at the defense table.

“Meet up with Allen Weisselberg, and figure out this whole thing,” Trump said, according to Cohen.

Weisselberg was the longtime chief financial officer of the Trump Organization, the real estate company that is the foundation of Trump’s empire.

Cohen also testified that he kept Trump apprised of efforts by the publisher of The National Enquirer, a supermarket tabloid, to buy the silence of Playboy model Karen McDougal about her alleged affair with Trump.

“Fantastic,” Trump said after being told that effort had succeeded, keeping another woman quiet about claims that could harm his 2016 campaign, Cohen testified.

Trump is accused of nearly three dozen felony counts of falsifying Trump Organization business records, which claimed that his and the company’s reimbursements to Cohen for the Daniels payment were for legal expenses.

While legal commentators were impressed Monday that the often excitable and talkative Cohen kept a cool composure under direct examination from Hoffinger, Trump’s defense lawyer Todd Blanche is certain to try to get under Cohen’s skin during cross-examination, which could begin later Tuesday.

Cohen has a track record of lying, and a federal criminal record that relates in part to his involvement in the payouts to Daniels and McDougal.

Trump, who denies having sex with Daniels or McDougal or committing any crime, railed against the case Monday afternoon after jurors were dismissed for the day, with Cohen still in the middle of direct examination by Hoffinger.

“There’s no crime here,” Trump told reporters. “This is four weeks of keeping me from campaigning.”

The former president called the trial’s judge, Juan Merchan, “corrupt,” saying Merchan “ought to let us go out and campaign and get rid of this scam.”

Trump has fumed for weeks that Merchan has forced him to be in court every day during the trial, which normally takes a break only on Wednesdays. He says that Merchan, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and others are trying to harm his chances against President Joe Biden in November’s election.

Trump was joined at his criminal trial Tuesday by House Speaker Mike Johnson and several other Republican politicians.

The Louisiana lawmaker is the latest in a string of GOP members of Congress who have traveled to the courthouse in lower Manhattan to show solidarity with the party’s 2024 presumptive presidential nominee.

In addition to Johnson, other Republicans attending Tuesday’s trial session to support Trump are North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Reps. Byron Donalds and Cory Mills, both of Florida, and Vivek Ramaswamy, who ran in the GOP presidential primaries.

This is developing news. Check back for updates.

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