Michael Cohen’s character faced a day-long grilling in the witness box Thursday as a lawyer for Donald Trump sought to convince a jury not to give weight to the words of the former president’s nemesis.
Over about five hours, Todd Blanche struggled to get a rise out of the notoriously testy Cohen as he attempted to attack his credibility, laying bare details of his criminal conviction, disbarment, and history of lies.
After meandering lines of questioning throughout the morning, Blanche picked up the pace before lunch in a bid to disprove a phone call Cohen testified about earlier in the week.
On Monday, Cohen told prosecutor Susan Hoffinger that he reached out to Trump on Oct. 24, 2016, via Trump’s personal bodyguard Keith Schiller to let him know he’d handled a $130,000 hush money payoff to porn star Stormy Daniels.
Blanche confronted him with phone records showing he contacted Schiller the same evening about prank calls he received from a “dope” teenager, accusing him of lying about the topic of conversation “because you were actually talking to Mr. Schiller about getting harassing phone calls from a 14-year-old.”
Raising his voice until he was shrieking, Blanche pushed back on Cohen’s answer that he discussed both the prankster and the porn star in the short phone call.
“That was a lie,” Blanche said. “You can admit it.”
“No, sir. I can’t,” Cohen said. “I believe that I also spoke to Mr. Trump and told him everything regarding Stormy Daniels.”
Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan sustained multiple objections during the often hard-to-follow interrogation. It seemed to invigorate the presumed Republican presidential nominee, who looked perkier than usual as he sat at the defense table.
Trump arrived at court with an expanded entourage of his campaign surrogates, strolling into the courtroom around 9:20 a.m. with a parade of GOP lawmakers in tow including Reps. Lauren Boebert and Matt Gaetz, who sat in the front row stroking his chin as Blanche grilled Cohen.
The 77-year-old former president, facing four criminal cases as he vies for the presidency again, is charged with 34 felonies in his Manhattan case alleging he covered up reimbursement to Cohen for the payoff to Daniels — by classifying it as payment for legal fees — to disguise an underlying scheme to hide information from the voting public.
Cohen, 57, went to federal prison for the payment to Daniels after pleading guilty in 2018 to violating federal campaign finance laws by silencing her claims of an extramarital tryst with Trump to influence the election results, cementing his bitter feud with Trump. He also pleaded guilty to perjury for lying to Congress about Trump’s business dealings with Russia and tax evasion.
On his direct examination with Hoffinger, Cohen knitted together bank records, texts, calls, and emails displayed during testimony from more than a dozen other witnesses. The jury had already seen most of the evidence presented during his account, introduced from others’ perspectives. He said Trump was intimately involved in a conspiracy to hide lewd details about his past from the electorate and that he only answered to Trump from the day of his 2007 hiring until the feds closed in on him more than a decade later, bullying, threatening, and lying for Trump to make the boss happy.
When Trump won the White House, Cohen said he felt left out to dry, hoping to get a top job like chief of staff. He conceded that he was ego-driven and said he ended up with an empty role as personal attorney to the president — which included only 10 hours of work for all of 2017.
The $35,000 checks he received monthly in 2017, all signed by Trump, were reimbursement for paying off Daniels, Cohen testified, grossed up for taxes and additional compensation tacked on.
Cohen alleged the reimbursement was organized by Trump’s convicted former finance chief, Allen Weisselberg, now serving jail time for perjury, and got the green light from Trump at a January 2017 Trump Tower meeting. He said Trump promised he was getting paid back weeks later during a conversation inside the Oval Office.
Zeroing in on the non-disclosure agreement with Daniels, Blanche pressed Cohen on whether it was legal on its face. The defense, while denying Trump knew he’d reimbursed Cohen for the payoff, has contended that any efforts on his part to bury sex scandals were made to protect his family, not win him the White House.
“Make no mistake, this was a completely legally binding contract, right?” Blanche said, pulling up a copy of Daniels’ NDA.
“Yes,” Cohen said.
After jurors were sent home for the day around 4 p.m., Blanche said he expects to spend about an hour and a half cross-examining Cohen when the trial resumes Monday. He said the defense still hadn’t decided whether to put on a case or if they’ll put Trump on the witness stand.
State Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan told Trump’s lawyers and prosecutors at the Manhattan district attorney’s office to be prepared to deliver their closing arguments on Tuesday.
Trump gave the Daily News a thumbs up outside the courtroom when asked about his defense attorney’s performance. On his way home, he lamented the case in an 11-minute diatribe, accusing Merchan of conspiring to railroad him to a conviction before the election.
“I’m spending a lot of time and I’m spending a lot of money which is what they want,” Trump said. “They want me to spend my time and my money.”