ReportWire

Tag: hope hicks

  • Here are all the bad things witnesses have said about Michael Cohen, Trump’s former fixer who is set to testify Monday

    Here are all the bad things witnesses have said about Michael Cohen, Trump’s former fixer who is set to testify Monday

    (CNN) — Nobody has anything nice to say about Michael Cohen.

    Donald Trump’s former fixer and lawyer is expected to take the stand Monday as the key witness in the Manhattan district attorney’s case against the former president, prepared to give testimony connecting to Trump the $130,000 hush money payment Cohen made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election.

    Through three weeks of testimony, jurors have already heard plenty about Cohen through numerous witnesses, who have painted an unflattering portrait of an aggressive, impulsive and unlikeable attorney.

    Jeremy Herb, Kara Scannell, Lauren del Valle and CNN

    Source link

  • Trump fined $1,000 for gag order violation in hush money case as ex-employee recounts reimbursements

    Trump fined $1,000 for gag order violation in hush money case as ex-employee recounts reimbursements

    NEW YORK – The judge in Donald Trump’s hush money trial fined him $1,000 on Monday and, in his sternest warning yet, told the former president that future gag order violations could send him to jail. The reprimand opened a revelatory day of testimony, as jurors for the first time heard the details of the financial transactions at the center of the case and saw payment checks bearing Trump’s signature.

    The testimony from former Trump Organization controller Jeffrey McConney provided a mechanical but vital recitation of how the company reimbursed payments that were allegedly meant to suppress embarrassing stories from surfacing during Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and then logged them as legal expenses in a manner that Manhattan prosecutors say broke the law.

    McConney’s appearance on the witness stand came as the first criminal trial of a former U.S. president entered its third week of testimony. His account lacked the human drama offered Friday by longtime Trump aide Hope Hicks, but it nonetheless yielded an important building block for prosecutors trying to pull back the curtain on what they say was a corporate records cover-up of transactions designed to protect Trump’s presidential bid during a pivotal stretch of the race.

    At the center of the testimony, and the case itself, is a $130,000 payment Trump’s then-lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen made to porn actor Stormy Daniels in October 2016 to stifle her claims of an extramarital sexual encounter with Trump a decade earlier.

    The 34 felony counts of falsifying business records accuse Trump of labeling the money paid to Cohen in his company’s records as legal fees. Prosecutors contend that by paying him income and giving him extra to account for taxes in monthly installments for a year, the Trump executives were able to conceal the reimbursement.

    McConney and another witness testified that all but two of the monthly checks were drawn from Trump’s personal account. Yet even as jurors saw the checks and other documentary evidence, prosecutors did not elicit testimony Monday showing that Trump himself dictated that the payments would be logged as legal expenses — a designation that prosecutors contend was intentionally deceptive.

    McConney acknowledged during cross-examination that Trump never asked him to log the reimbursements as legal expenses and never discussed the matter with him at all. Another witness, Deborah Tarasoff, a Trump Organization accounts payable supervisor, said under questioning that she did not get permission to cut the checks in question from Trump himself.

    “You never had any reason to believe that President Trump was hiding anything or anything like that?” Trump attorney Todd Blanche asked.

    ”Correct,” Tarasoff replied.

    The testimony followed Judge Juan M. Merchan’s sober warning to Trump that additional violations of a gag order barring inflammatory out-of-court comments about witnesses, jurors and others closely connected to the case could land the former president behind bars.

    The $1,000 fine imposed Monday marks the second time since the trial began last month that Trump has been sanctioned for violating the gag order. He was fined $9,000 last week — $1,000 for each of nine violations.

    “It appears that the $1,000 fines are not serving as a deterrent. Therefore going forward, this court will have to consider a jail sanction,” Merchan said before jurors were brought into the courtroom. Trump’s statements, the judge added, “threaten to interfere with the fair administration of justice and constitute a direct attack on the rule of law. I cannot allow that to continue.”

    Trump sat forward in his seat, glowering at the judge as he handed down the ruling. When the judge finished speaking, Trump shook his head twice and crossed his arms.

    Yet even as Merchan warned of jail time in his most pointed and direct admonition, he also made clear his reservations about a step that he described as a “last resort” and said he would only do so if prosecutors recommended it.

    “The last thing I want to do is put you in jail,” Merchan said. “You are the former president of the United States and possibly the next president, as well. There are many reasons why incarceration is truly a last resort for me. To take that step would be disruptive to these proceedings, which I imagine you want to end as quickly as possible.”

    The latest violation stems from an April 22 interview with television channel Real America’s Voice in which Trump criticized the speed at which the jury was picked and claimed, without evidence, that it was stacked with Democrats.

    Once testimony resumed, McConney recounted conversations with longtime Trump Organization finance chief Allen Weisselberg in January 2017 about reimbursing Cohen for a $130,000 payment intended to buy Daniels’ silence over her account of a sexual encounter at a 2006 celebrity golf outing in Lake Tahoe, California.

    Weisselberg “said we had to get some money to Michael, we had to reimburse Michael. He tossed a pad toward me, and I started taking notes on what he said,” McConney testified. “That’s how I found out about it.”

    “He kind of threw the pad at me and said, ‘Take this down,’” said McConney, who worked for Trump’s company for about 36 years, retiring last year after he was granted immunity to testify for the prosecution at the Trump Organization’s New York criminal tax fraud trial.

    A bank statement displayed in court showed Cohen paying $130,000 to Keith Davidson, Daniels’ lawyer, on Oct. 27, 2016, out of an account for an entity Cohen created for the purpose.

    Weisselberg’s handwritten notes spell out a plan to pay Cohen $420,000, which included a base reimbursement that was then doubled to reflect anticipated taxes as well as a $60,000 bonus and an expense that prosecutors have described as a technology contract.

    McConney’s own notes, taken on the notepad he said Weisselberg threw at him, were also shown in court. After calculations that laid out that Cohen would get $35,000 a month for 12 months, McConney wrote: “wire monthly from DJT.”

    Asked what that meant, McConney said: “That was out of the president’s personal bank account.”

    McConney testified that he had instructed Tarasoff to record the reimbursements to Cohen as a legal expense, reasoning that “we were paying a lawyer so I said to post it to legal expenses in the general ledger.”

    McConney suggested it was his idea alone to log the payments that way, acknowledging under cross-examination that Trump never directed him to log Cohen’s payments as legal expenses, nor did Weisselberg relay to him that Trump wanted them logged that way.

    “Allen never told me that,” McConney testified. In fact, McConney said he never spoke to Trump about the reimbursement issue at all. Regardless, Trump lawyer Emil Bove suggested, the “legal expense” label made sense — and was not duplicitous — because Cohen was a lawyer at the time.

    “OK,” McConney responded, prompting laughter throughout the courtroom. “Sure. Yes.”

    After paying the first two checks to Cohen through a trust, the remainder of the checks, beginning in April 2017, were paid from Trump’s personal account, McConney testified.

    With Trump, the only signatory to that account, now in the White House, the change in funding source necessitated “a whole new process for us,” McConney added.

    Tarasoff, the other witness who testified Monday, said that once Trump became president, checks written from his personal account had to first be delivered, via FedEx, “to the White House for him to sign.”

    The checks would then return with Trump’s Sharpie signature. “I’d pull them apart, mail out the check and file the backup,” she said, meaning putting the invoice into the Trump Organization’s filing system.

    Prosecutors are continuing to build toward their star witness, Cohen, who pleaded guilty to federal charges related to the hush money payments, went to prison and has been disbarred. He is expected to undergo a bruising cross-examination from defense lawyers seeking to undermine his credibility with jurors.

    ___

    Tucker reported from Washington.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Michael R. Sisak, Jennifer Peltz, Eric Tucker And Jake Offenhartz, Associated Press

    Source link

  • Testimony set to resume as Trump trial enters its fourth week

    Testimony set to resume as Trump trial enters its fourth week

    Testimony set to resume as Trump trial enters its fourth week – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Prosecutors have not said who their next witness is in Donald Trump’s New York criminal trial after his former aide Hope Hicks took the stand last week.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • 5/3: CBS Evening News

    5/3: CBS Evening News

    5/3: CBS Evening News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Former Trump aide Hope Hicks delivers riveting testimony in “hush money” trial; The infectious spirit of a beloved Tennessee crossing guard

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • Hope Hicks Had a Little Chat With Prosecutors About Trump’s Hush Money Payment

    Hope Hicks Had a Little Chat With Prosecutors About Trump’s Hush Money Payment

    Over the weekend, Donald Trump told reporters at the Conservative Political Action Conference that he would “absolutely” not drop out of the 2024 presidential race if he were hit with criminal charges from one of the many investigations into his conduct. “I wouldn’t even think about leaving,” he said on Saturday, adding that an indictment (or two, or three) would “probably…enhance my numbers.” However, he did not claim that he would be okay if one of his longtime aides and a person he appears to have once thought of as something of a surrogate daughter were to help prosecutors make their case against him. And unfortunately for the ex-president, that may not be up to him!

    The New York Times reports that Hope Hicks—a former senior counselor to Trump whom he’s affectionately referred to as “Hopey” and “Hopester”—met with the Manhattan district attorney’s office this week, making her “the latest in a string of witnesses to be questioned by prosecutors as they investigate the former president’s involvement in paying hush money” to porn star Stormy Daniels. According to the outlet, Hicks is “at least the seventh witness” to meet with prosecutors since DA Alvin Bragg convened a grand jury earlier this year to hear evidence in the case. Others have reportedly included former adviser Kellyanne Conway; two Trump Organization employees; and David Pecker, the former head of the publisher of The National Enquirer. Pecker’s testimony was presumably of interest because he’d struck a 2015 agreement, in his capacity as CEO of American Media Inc., to watch out for potentially damaging stories about Trump and ensure they never saw the light of day—but after paying paying $150,000 to keep Playboy model Karen McDougal quiet, he refused to shell out the money for Daniels’s story, and told Team Trump they’d have to deal with her directly.

    As for Hicks, while we obviously don’t know the details of her conversation—or whether she testified before the grand jury or simply met with prosecutors—she too may have had some notable tidbits to share. Per the Times:

    As the spokeswoman for Mr. Trump’s 2016 campaign, Ms. Hicks was responsible for damage control on a number of issues, a role that has attracted the interest of various investigators over the years. In court records from [former Trump attorney Michael] Cohen’s federal case, the F.B.I. noted that she participated in a phone call with Mr. Trump and Mr. Cohen on the same day they learned that Ms. Daniels wanted money for her story. Ms. Hicks also spoke with Mr. Cohen the day after he wired the $130,000 to Ms. Daniels’s lawyer.

    Prosecutors are likely to want to know whether she was privy to any conversations or other information about Mr. Cohen’s dealings with Ms. Daniels’s representatives or how the hush money payment was arranged.

    If you’ll recall, Trump reimbursed Cohen the $130,000 after he took office. And Cohen—who went to prison for, among other things, the hush money deal—has said he arranged the payments at Trump’s direction. (Cohen has also said he expects to testify before the grand jury “very soon.”) Robert Trout, a lawyer for Hicks, did not respond to the Times’s request for comment.

    Should Hicks actually be of use to prosecutors in making the case against Trump, it wouldn’t be the first time in recent memory the “Hopester” offered unflattering insight into her former boss. In a deposition shown to the January 6 committee, which the panel aired during its final public hearing, Hicks said she urged Trump to tell his followers that anyone coming to Washington to protest the election should not engage in violence—a recommendation that was, of course, rejected. “It was my view that it was important that the president put out some kind of message in advance of the event,” she said, adding that another senior adviser had given the same advice but was also rebuffed.

    Twitter content

    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    Bess Levin

    Source link

  • Hope Hicks Watched the Capitol Being Attacked and Thought, Oh No! My Job Prospects!

    Hope Hicks Watched the Capitol Being Attacked and Thought, Oh No! My Job Prospects!

    Since wrapping up its year-and-a-half-long investigation of Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election and the insurrection that followed, the January 6 committee has released several batches of witness transcripts as a sort of companion piece to its 845-page report. Not surprisingly, few people come out of these transcripts looking good. Take, for example, former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, who, according to the claim of former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson, spent the last weeks of the Trump administration literally burning documents, which is something you just never want to do. Also not looking great, or at least at all sympathetic? Longtime Trump adviser Hope Hicks, who apparently watched the violent attack on the Capitol unfold and thought, Oh no! This is going to affect all those cushy private sector jobs I had lined up!

    Yes, text messages released by the committee show Hicks whining to Julie Radford, former chief of staff to Ivanka Trump, that “in one day,” the insurrection-inciting president “ended every future opportunity that doesn’t include speaking engagements at the local proud boys chapter.” She added, putting a fine point on it: “And all of us that didn’t have jobs lined up will be perpetually unemployed. I’m so mad and upset. We all look like domestic terrorists now.” In another missive, Hicks wrote, “Not being dramatic, but we are all fucked,” noting that Alyssa Farah Griffin, who resigned as White House communications director a few weeks after Trump lost the election, looked “like a genius” for quitting.

    Of course, Hicks had a chance to (at least attempt to) put some daylight between herself and the worst president in modern history, whose actions led to a violent attack on democracy and the deaths of multiple people—but chose not to. When she let it leak that she would be leaving the administration, she (1) did not do so immediately but rather with just a few days to go until Joe Biden’s inauguration, and (2) made it clear that she was absolutely not taking a moral stand against the shocking violence that had unfolded in her boss’s name. According to reports at the time, Hicks told people she was not leaving Team Trump over the riots that left five people dead and literal shit all over the floors of the Capitol building; instead, it was “part of planned departure and normal drift away at the end of an administration.”

    As for her employability, as Jezebel notes, Hicks probably won’t be joining the breadline anytime soon:

    When Hicks left the White House in 2018 for a two-year stint as the chief communications officer and executive vice president of Fox News, she took home a whopping $1.9 million. (She returned to the White House in March 2020.) She also hails from one of Greenwich’s most prominent families: Her father was once the regional CEO of Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide and executive vice president of communications for the NFL. He’s currently the managing director of the Glover Park Group, a DC communications consulting firm. Methinks moving back in with mom and dad wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world.

    In other revelations around the January 6 transcript dumps, we learned this week that longtime Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway urged Melania Trump to get her husband to stop the insurrection, arguing that though he might listen to people who work for him, he “reserves fear for one person, Melania Trump.” (Unfortunately, the then first lady was uninterested in doing anything about the attack, as she was reportedly busy helping with rug photography at the time.) We also learned that the 45th president called Senator Josh Hawley half a dozen times the day before the riot and then again the day of. (Given Hawley’s fist-pumping solidarity with the mob of election deniers gathered at the Capitol, whom he later fled from, you can understand why.)

    And then, of course, there’s the deeply disturbing news that Stefan Passantino, a former White House ethics lawyer from the Trump administration, allegedly tried to get Cassidy Hutchinson to give false testimony before the January 6 committee, effectively acting like an employee of a Mob boss.

    Per CBS News:

    Hutchinson struggled to find an attorney and sought help from people she knew from her work at the White House, including former White House attorney Eric Herschmann. Eventually, she received a call from Stefan Passantino, a former Trump White House ethics lawyer who represented Hutchinson for her first two interviews with the committee, and did not tell her who was paying for his services. In a February meeting, Hutchinson testified that Passantino told her they would “downplay” her role at the White House and on Jan. 6 when she was interviewed by the select committee.

    Hutchinson said she was uncomfortable with the arrangement but felt she had no other choice, telling the committee that she said to her mother, “I am completely indebted to these people…they will ruin my life, Mom, if I do anything they don’t want me to.” Hutchinson said Passantino told her to keep her answers “short” and said that saying “I don’t recall” is an “entirely acceptable” response because “they don’t know that you recall some of these things.” She told the committee that testifying with him as her lawyer “felt like (she) had Trump looking over (her) shoulder.”

    “I knew in some fashion it would get back to him if I said anything that he would find disloyal. And the prospect of that genuinely scared me. You know, I’d seen this world ruin people’s lives or try to ruin people’s careers. I’d seen how vicious they can be,” Hutchinson said. She also told the committee that Passantino also mentioned job opportunities and worked to connect her with other people on getting a job, saying, “We’re gonna get you taken care of. We want to keep you in the family.” 

    In a statement, Passantino insisted to CBS News that he represented Hutchinson “honorably, ethically, and fully consistent with her sole interests as she communicated them to me.” Hutchinson replaced Passantino before her public hearing with the January 6 committee, bringing on attorney Jody Hunt. During her public testimony, she shared incredibly damning information about Trump, including that he knew some of his supporters were armed before they went to the Capitol and that he told people Mike Pence deserved chants calling for his hanging.

    Bess Levin

    Source link

  • Jan. 6 transcripts reveal new details

    Jan. 6 transcripts reveal new details

    The House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol released several batches of transcripts from interviews with key staffers and allies of former President Donald Trump. 

    The transcripts were released as the committee wound down its work at the end of the 117th Congress, before Republicans officially take control of the House on Tuesday. The interviews, conducted over the past year and a half, were part of the investigation into the Jan. 6 attack and Trump’s role in the day’s events. 

    In their last public hearing, held on Dec. 19, the committee voted to refer to the Justice Department possible criminal charges against Trump and attorney John Eastman

    Here are some key details from the transcripts that were released:

    John Eastman takes the 5th

    Eastman, who wrote the controversial memo that proposed that former Vice President Mike Pence had the authority to delay or even reject the certification of state electors, exercised his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination at almost every major question. 

    When Eastman was asked why he had written in the two-page memo that seven states had transmitted dual slates of electors despite indicating to The New York Times that there we no certifications of alternate electors, he took the Fifth. He also took the Fifth when asked if he disagreed with former Attorney General Bill Barr’s comment that Trump’s election claims were “bullsh**,” and when asked about comments he made on Jan. 6. 

    Eastman also pleaded the Fifth when asked if he had recommendations to prevent Jan. 6 from happening again.

    Hope Hicks says “we all look like domestic terrorists now”

    Text messages from Trump’s communications director Hope Hicks, one of his most loyal aides, were released by the select committee on Monday. 

    In one exchange with Julie Radford, Ivanka Trump’s chief of staff, Hicks wrote, “In one day he ended every future opportunity that doesn’t include speaking engagements at the local proud boys chapter. And all of us that didn’t have jobs lined up will be perpetually unemployed. I’m so mad and upset … We all look like domestic terrorists now.”

    Radford responded, “oh yes, I’ve been crying for an hour.” 

    Hicks then wrote, “She has no idea this made us all unemployable … Like untouchable … God I’m so f***** mad.”

    Ginni Thomas: “I regret the tone and content” of texts with Meadows

    Virginia Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, attended the rally at the Ellipse on Jan. 6, 2021 before the Capitol was breached. She also exchanged texts with Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows encouraging him to pursue every effort to overturn the election.

    Committee vice chair Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., asked her if she regretted sending the texts, or just that the texts became public.

    “I regret the tone and content of these texts,” Thomas said. “And other than that, it was an emotional time, and I was texting with a friend who I had known a long time.  So I really find my language imprudent and my choices of sending the context of these emails unfortunate.”

    Kellyanne Conway texted Melania Trump on Jan. 6 because Trump has a “fear” of her

    Trump 2016 campaign manager and former top adviser Kellyanne Conway resigned in the summer of 2020 but remained close to the Trump family. Conway told the committee that she was trying to get through to Trump on Jan. 6, contacting Hicks and Trump aide Nick Luna, among others. Conway said she also texted Melania Trump. 

    “I texted her, please — something to the effect of, you know, please talk to him, because I know he listens to her,” Conway said. “He reserves — he listens to many of us, but he reserves fear for one person, Melania Trump.”

    Conway said the first lady didn’t answer because she didn’t have her phone that day.

    Stephanie Grisham: Trump would never go to the Capitol because he is “afraid of people”

    Melania Trump’s former chief of staff Stephanie Grisham, who also served as a White House aide, told the committee that Melania Trump lost her “independent streak” in the final weeks of the administration.

    Grisham also said that Trump and chief of staff Mark Meadows tried to fire the usher at the White House after Election Day because he was preparing for the transition for then-President-elect Joe Biden to move in. 

    At another point, Grisham said that Trump would not have walked to the Capitol on Jan. 6 because he is “afraid of people.”

    Cassidy Hutchinson: “They will ruin my life” 

    Cassidy Hutchinson, an aide to Meadows, gave blockbuster public testimony at a House Jan. 6 committee hearing on June 28. In an interview with the committee in September, she said she couldn’t afford a lawyer and was worried about finding a pro bono attorney.

    “I wanted to be able to do this on my own, and I didn’t want to feel like I was using an attorney in Trump world where I’d potentially have to be responding to their interests as well,” Hutchinson said. 

    Former White House attorney Eric Herschmann connected Hutchinson with Alex Cannon, she said. Cannon told Hutchinson that “they” had a lawyer for her, but did not disclose who would be paying for it. Hutchinson met with Stefan Passantino, who represented her for her first two interviews with the committee. In a February meeting, Hutchinson testified that Passantino told her they would “downplay” her role at the White House and on Jan. 6.

    Hutchinson said she was uncomfortable with the arrangement but felt she had no other choice, telling the committee that she said to her mother, “I am completely indebted to these people … they will ruin my life, Mom, if I do anything they don’t want me to.” 

    Hutchinson said Passantino told her to keep her answers “short” and said that saying “I don’t recall” is an “entirely acceptable” response because “they don’t know that you recall some of these things.” She told the committee that testifying with him as her lawyer was “felt like (she) had Trump looking over (her) shoulder.” 

    “I knew in some fashion it would get back to him if I said anything that he would find disloyal. And the prospect of that genuinely scared me. You know, I’d seen this world ruin people’s lives or try to ruin people’s careers. I’d seen how vicious they can be,” Hutchinson said. 

    She also told the committee that Passantino also mentioned job opportunities and worked to connect her with other people on getting a job, saying, “We’re gonna get you taken care of. We want to keep you in the family.”

    [Need to add that Passantino has said that he told her to tell the truth, etc., which I believe was his statement.]

    Source link

  • Trump Aide Hope Hicks’ Angry Jan. 6 Texts: ‘We All Look Like Domestic Terrorists’

    Trump Aide Hope Hicks’ Angry Jan. 6 Texts: ‘We All Look Like Domestic Terrorists’

    Hope Hicks, a former senior adviser to Donald Trump, fumed to a fellow White House aide during the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection that “we all look like domestic terrorists now” and wouldn’t be able to find new jobs as a result.

    Text messages released by the House select committee investigating the attack show Hicks texting Julie Radford, former chief of staff to Ivanka Trump, as Trump supporters were laying siege to the U.S. Capitol.

    Hicks complained that the insurrection had ruined their employability.

    “In one day he ended every future opportunity that doesn’t include speaking engagements at the local proud boys chapter,” Hicks said, apparently referring to the then-president and the Proud Boys right-wing extremist group.

    “Yup,” Radford replied.

    “And all of us that didn’t have jobs lined up will be perpetually unemployed,” Hicks added. “I’m so mad and upset.”

    “We all look like domestic terrorists now,” she added.

    Radford replied: “Oh yes I’ve been crying for an hour.”

    “Not being dramatic, but we are all fucked,” Hicks said in another message, adding that “Alyssa looks like a genius” for leaving, referring to Alyssa Farah Griffin, who resigned her post as White House communications director a few weeks after Trump lost the 2020 election.

    Hope Hicks and then-President Donald Trump at a rally in Dubuque, Iowa, on Nov. 1, 2020.

    BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI via Getty Images

    Later in the day, Hicks texted Radford: “Attacking the VP? Wtf is wrong with him?”

    During the riot at the Capitol, Trump tweeted that his vice president, Mike Pence, “didn’t have the courage” to help him overturn the election. Pence was inside the Capitol to participate in the certification of the Electoral College results; he was forced to flee as Trump supporters, some of whom were calling for him to be hanged, forced their way into the building.

    Hicks was interviewed by the Jan. 6 committee in testimony that aired in its final public hearing last month. She said there was no evidence of widespread fraud in the 2020 election, and she was concerned that Trump was damaging his legacy by spreading disinformation about the results.

    When she expressed those concerns to Trump, she said, Trump said something along the lines of, “‘You know, nobody will care about my legacy if I lose, so that won’t matter. The only thing that matters is winning.’”

    Following her departure from the Trump administration, Hicks worked on the U.S. Senate campaign of Pennsylvania hedge fund executive David McCormick, who lost to Trump-endorsed candidate Mehmet Oz in the Republican primary.

    Source link

  • Hope Hicks Shows Up to Twist the Knife as 1/6 Committee Implores the DOJ to Prosecute Trump

    Hope Hicks Shows Up to Twist the Knife as 1/6 Committee Implores the DOJ to Prosecute Trump

    Donald Trump’s extremely long list of legal problems got significantly worse on Monday, when the January 6 committee capped off its year-and-a-half-long investigation into the attempt to overturn the 2020 election results, and the violent riot that ensued, by recommending the Justice Department charge him with four major crimes. While the recommendation is not binding, and the DOJ could choose to ignore it, it is nevertheless a shocking indictment of a former president of the United States, who hopes to hold that position again come January 20, 2025. Probably making the whole thing sting even more? That one of his most loyal aides, and a person he would undoubtedly rank above several of his children, helped twist the knife.

    Continuing the tradition of airing taped testimony of various high-ranking individuals within Trumpworld, the committee used its final public hearing to show footage of a deposition with Hope Hicks, a former longtime senior counselor to the ex-president whom Trump has affectionately referred to as “Hopey” and “Hopester.” According to Hicks, who left the Trump administration in 2018 and returned in early 2020 to help get him reelected, in the days prior to the January 6 insurrection, she pressed for him to tell his followers that anyone coming to Washington to protest the election should not engage in violence—but the recommendation was refused. “It was my view that it was important that the president put out some kind of message in advance of the event,” she said, adding that another senior adviser, Eric Herschmann, made the same request but was also rebuffed.

    Twitter content

    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    In other words, the then president was warned—well in advance—that violence could unfold on the day the election was to be certified in Congress, and he did nothing to stop it.

    Twitter content

    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    In addition to recommending Trump be charged with inciting an insurrection, conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to make a false statement, and obstruction of an official proceeding of Congress, the committee also recommended an ethics inquiry into the actions of four top House Republicans: Kevin McCarthy, Jim Jordan, Scott Perry, and Andy Biggs.

    While it’s not clear if the DOJ—which is conducting its own investigation into Trump—will act on the panel’s referrals, committee chairman Bennie Thompson said Monday, “I’m convinced the Justice Department will charge former President Trump. No one, including a former president, is above the law.”

    Jared Kushner catches some football with his pals

    Twitter content

    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    Bess Levin

    Source link

  • Jared Kushner and Hope Hicks testified before grand jury investigating 2020 election interference, sources say | CNN Politics

    Jared Kushner and Hope Hicks testified before grand jury investigating 2020 election interference, sources say | CNN Politics



    CNN
     — 

    Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s son-in-law, testified before the grand jury investigating the aftermath of the 2020 election and the actions of the then-president and others, a source familiar with the testimony confirmed to CNN.

    Former Trump aide Hope Hicks also went before the grand jury, according to two sources familiar, testifying in early June.

    Some of the questions being asked in the grand jury were about whether Donald Trump was told he had lost the election, according to one of the sources familiar.

    Kushner’s and Hicks’ appearances before the grand jury are notable because both were members of the former president’s inner circle. Any indictment from the sprawling probe into the aftermath of the election, efforts to overturn the result or the January 6, 2021, attack at the US Capitol will likely rely, at least in part, on what individuals – from low-level aides to former Vice President Mike Pence – testified to under oath behind closed doors.

    A spokesman for Kushner, who served as a senior adviser to Trump during his presidency, declined to immediately comment. The New York Times first reported on his testimony.

    Several key Trump White House officials have also testified befoe the grand jury, including Pence, Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows and former White House counsel Pat Cipollone, among others.

    CNN also previously reported that Alyssa Farah Griffin, a former Trump White House communications director who is now a CNN political commentator, met with federal prosecutors, sitting for a formal, voluntary interview as part of the ongoing special counsel probe, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.

    Investigators from special counsel Jack Smith’s team have also met with several election officials from key battleground states who were targeted by Trump and his allies as part of their bid to upend Joe Biden’s legitimate victory in the 2020 presidential election.

    As CNN has reported, prosecutors met with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger late last month, and Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson and Arizona GOP official Rusty Bowers revealed to CNN that they have been interviewed by prosecutors in recent months.

    Benson told CNN on Wednesday that one of the areas investigators seemed focused on was “the impact of the misinformation on [election workers’] lives and the threats that emerged from that from various sources.”

    “Myself and the election officials who have – at request or simply because we have a story to tell – have been speaking to authorities, I think it’s really a reflection of our desire to ensure that the law is followed, and where there’s evidence of wrongdoing, there’s justice that is served,” Benson said.

    This headline and story have been updated with additional reporting.

    Source link