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Donald Trump has returned to Manhattan for the third week of the hush money trial.
The 77-year-old presumptive Republican nominee for president was also held in contempt of court and fined $9,000 for repeatedly violating the gag order.
Follow DailyMail.com's coverage from our reporters in the courtroom.
Donald Trump made brief remarks before exiting the Manhattan criminal court for the day.
'This gag order is not only unique, it's total unconstitutional,' Trump said.
He noted he is the Republican candidate for President of the United States.
'I'm sitting in a courthouse all day long listening to this stuff,' Trump said shaking his head.
The ex-president blasted the judge as 'totally conflicted.'
He also complained he's 'supposed to be' in Georgia, New Hampshire and Ohio.
He called it a 'Biden trial.'
'There's no crime. There's no anything here,' Trump said.
The ex-president claimed they don't want him on the campaign trail and criticized the situation a 'real disgrace.'
Trump called it a corrupt system and claimed the people 'are understanding it' pointing to the polls before walking away from the camera.
On Wednesday, Trump will be traveling to Wisconsin and Michigan to campaign.
Court will resume Thursday morning.
Stormy Daniels' attorney said Michael Cohen missed the first deadline for the $130,000 payment because he didn't get approval from Trump.
Cohen came up with a ‘barrage of excuses’ which he called ‘circular arguments' or 'contradictions,' Davidson testified.
Davidson said: ‘He stated that the computer systems were ‘all f***ed up.'
He stated you can’t believe what we’re going through, the Secret Service is here, there’s so many firewalls, I can’t get shit.'
Eventually, Davidson said he called Cohen saying his client was 'very upset' and the delay was making him 'look bad.'
Cohen replied, saying 'God dammit what do you expect me to do my guy’s (Trump) in five different states today. There’s nothing I can do. I’m doing everything I can.'
It was clear to Davidson that Cohen didn’t have the authority to spend money despite missing the funding deadline.
Davidson said that the level of frustration from Daniels was ‘quite high.'
Cohen supposedly replied: ‘God dammit, I’ll just do it myself.’
The prosecutor asked where the money would be coming from. Davidson said: ‘Donald Trump.'
Davidson emailed Cohen on the 17th of October, three days after the deadline, saying that as far as Daniels was concerned, the contract was void.
As he walked out of the courtroom, a frustrated Trump muttered under his breath: 'Fake trial'.
The judge and jury had already left and Trump was speaking to a woman sitting in the front row of the public gallery next to his son, Eric.
Keith Davidson detailed the convoluted plot that led to Stormy Daniels’ hush money deal eventually being paid for by Michael Cohen.
He told the court that National Enquirer editor Dylan Howard and Gina Rodriguez, Daniels’ PR, negotiated a deal for $120,000.
But then Howard backed out and refused to close.
The jury heard that Howard asked Rodriguez to call Cohen to get him to pay, but she refused to speak to him.
Davidson told the jury that Rodriguez then asked him to call Cohen and close the deal.
According to Davidson, Rodriguez told him: ‘It’s going to be the easiest deal you’ve ever done in your entire life. All you need to do is pay for it and talk to that a**hole Cohen’.
The deal had initially been for $120,000.
But after Davidson got involved, he asked for another $10,000 to pay for his time.
Davidson said that he used fake names for the deal, or what he called ‘code words’ which were to ensure ‘further confidentiality in case the contract was lost or stolen’
Daniels was referred to as ‘Peggy Peterson’ while Trump was ‘David Dennison’.
The names were because Daniels was the plaintiff and Trump was the defendant, Davidson said.
He got David Dennison from somebody who was on his high school hockey team.
The real life Dennison was ‘very upset’ with me, Davidson admitted in yet another sheepish moment.
Stormy Daniels' lawyer Keith Davidson told the court he first dealt with the porn star in 2011 when a blog post mentioned her 'fling' with Trump.
Davidson said that he called Michael Cohen and before he could get a word out ‘I was met with a hostile barrage of insults, allegations, insinuations that went on for quite a while’.
‘He was just screaming,’ Davidson said.
He said: ‘He was upset that the story on the dirty had been published and believed Stormy was the source
‘Finally, after he finished I explained I was calling because my client, Stormy Daniels, did not want the story published and I wanted to see if he had done anything to get that story taken down’
There was little interest in Daniels’ story for the next five years but that all changed in 2016 during Trump’s presidential campaign after the Access Hollywood tape came out.
After that ‘interest reached a crescendo’, Davidson said.
On October 8th, after the Access Hollywood tape came out, Davidson texted Howard: ‘Trump is f***ed.'
In court, an uncomfortable Davidson said ‘effed’ rather than the f-word.
Howard texted back: ‘Wave the white flag, it’s over people!’
The following day, Davidson texted back that the story was already out there.
Howard replied, saying that Daniels giving an interview would be the ‘final nail in the coffin’, adding: ‘He’s f***ed already.'
Davidson responded via text: ‘He really is.'
Trump showed no obvious reaction as the messages were read out.
McDougal's attorney Davidson testified that American Media Inc. - the publisher of National Enquirer - had no intention of publishing her story even though they bought it for $150,000.
He said that the reason was because of an ‘unspoken understanding of the close affiliation between David Pecker and Donald Trump.'
Pecker was the editor of the National Enquirer at the time.
He said: ‘AMI would not run this story or any story related to Karen and Donald Trump because it would tend to hurt Donald Trump’.
Prosecutor Josh Steinglass if this meant hurting the Trump campaign.
Yes, said Davidson.
Davidson was asked if McDougal really was offered a place on Dance With the Stars by ABC.
He said: ‘It was discussed a lot. There was an inference (that) best efforts would be made to make that happen. It was never guaranteed, never part of a deal. Best efforts were discussed.'
Eric Trump joined his father for the first time at his New York criminal trial on Tuesday morning and offered a withering assessment of what he saw.
'There are hundreds of law enforcement officers, the streets are closed down for blocks around the courthouse and the entire district attorneys office is in attendance — their top prosecutors, all for $130,000 payment by a lawyer in 2016?' he told DailyMail.com.
Eric Trump sat in the front row just behind his father for proceedings on the 15th floor of Manhattan's aging criminal court.
He heard his father be held in contempt and fined $9,000 for repeatedly violating a gag order before listening to the testimony of prosecution witnesses Gary Farro, a banker, and Keith Davidson, a lawyer who represented
Trump has denied 34 counts of business fraud.
During the lunch break, Donald Trump took to Truth Social where he slammed the judge in the hush money case.
'This Judge has taken away my Constitutional Right to FREE SPEECH,' Trump wrote in a post. 'I am the only Presidential Candidate in History to be GAGGED.'
He claimed the whole trial is 'RIGGED' and that the judge is 'RIGGING THE PRESIDENTIAL OF 2024 ELECTION.'
The ex-president took down seven posts Tuesday afternoon that were found to have violated the hush money trial gag order. He has been fined $9,000 for the violations.
The judge's order took into account that Trump is running for president.
'It is critically important that Defendant's legitimate free speech rights not be curtailed, that he be able to fully campaign for the office which he seeks,' it read.
Former President Donald Trump returned to the Manhattan criminal courtroom from his lunch break.
He did not speak to reporters but raised a fist as he walked by cameras.
The ex-president was accompanied by his son Eric, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and campaign aides Susie Wiles and Jason Miller as well as his lawyers.
Donald Trump has taken down the seven social media posts violating the hush money trial gag order that landed him a $9,000 fine.
Judge Juan Merchan gave Trump and his legal team a deadline of 2:15 p.m. to take them down and pay the fine by Friday May 3.
By around 1:45 p.m. on Tuesday, links to the offending posts displayed either ‘Not found’ or a ‘404 error page’.
Trump faces another hearing Thursday on at least three additional comments and posts that prosecutors say violate the order.
Lawyer Keith Davidson testifies that he set up a meeting between Karen McDougal and then-National Enquirer editor Dylan Howard.
That's where she told her story about her relationship with Trump to the tabloid.
American Media Inc. first declined to buy the story because she lacked evidence.
Davidson texted Howard on June 27, 2016 'It's a story (t)hat should be told...'
Howard responded: 'I agree'
Davidson also confirms he was in talks with ABC News about McDougal's story.
He says he went to ABC News because he was 'trying to play two entities off of each other,' Davidson says.
Davidson admits McDougal 'did not want to tell her story' which would be required in the ABC News deal.
During Davidson's testimony, the jury is shown a series of text exchanges between lawyer Keith Davidson and former National Enquirer editor Dylan Howard.
The texts are about former Playboy playmate Karen McDougal's story of an affair with Donald Trump as the ex-president looks on in court.
One text from Davidson reads 'I have a blockbuster Trump story.'
'Talk 1s thing. I will get you more than ANYONE for it. You know why...' Howard responds.
During this portion of testimony, Trump shook his head in apparent disgust.
Davidson tells the court his text was meant as an ‘entree or a teaser’ for Howard to get his attention.
‘I knew Dylan’s boss David Pecker and Mr. Trump were longtime friends and M. Pecker published Trump magazine and AMI had announced explicitly they had endorsed Mr Trump’s candidacy,' Davidson testifies.
Trump is also forced to listen as Davidson read out another text from Howard: ‘Did he (Trump) cheat on Melania?'
Trump did not appear to react to the text.
Another from Howard reads 'Do you know if the affair was during his marriage to Melania?’
Davidson told the court that he demurred from replying as he didn’t want to say at that stage.
Earlier, Davidson said he first met McDougal 25 years ago when she was dating his friend.
The jury was shown a recording of a video of Trump speaking at a Greensboro, North Carolina, rally in 2016.
The former president watched himself intently on a TV in front of him as he said: ‘I have no idea who these women are, I have no idea…when you looked at that horrible woman last night you thought I don’t think so’.
Trump said in the video that the ‘stories are 100 percent made up’ and were ‘lies being pushed by the Clinton campaign to try and keep their grip on our country’
A female juror flitted her eyes between the monitor in front of her and Trump sitting at his defense table.
Another clip from 2017 was of a news conference where Trump praised Cohen as a good lawyer - before he turned on him.
The panel was also shown excerpts of a video deposition Trump gave in October 2022 at his Florida estate during a defamation case brought by journalist E Jean Carroll.
They were also shown parts of the transcript.
A jury found Trump liable for sexually assaulting Carroll and he was fined more than $90 million.
The clips included Trump being asked what Truth Social, his own social network, was and him confirming that his current wife is Melania Trump.
The court also saw a transcript of Trump being played the Access Hollywood tape.
Keith Davidson was Daniels' attorney when the hush-money transaction was made.
Prosecutor Joshua Steinglass will question him first.
He is expected to be the second major witness in the case, after former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker next week.
Prosecutors are calling their fourth witness, Dr. Robert Browning.
Browning is the executive director of the C-SPAN archives. His testimony will be used to get records of Donald Trump into evidence.
C-SPAN was subpoenaed to turn over recordings from its archives of the ex-president.
Judge Merchan arrived back in the courtroom before Donald Trump and his lawyers returned.
The judge criticized lawyer Todd Blanche and told him to ‘try to keep the breaks short.'
‘I don’t like to keep the jury waiting. Let’s do better,' Merchan said.
The judge agreed with the prosecution request that Trump’s lawyers had opened the door to evidence about his comments regarding witnesses that prosecutors claimed were intended to intimidate.
Prosecutors could elicit testimony about how they were ‘not making as much money’ as Trump claimed, but they couldn’t address Trump’s ‘consciousness of guilt,' the judge said.
Prosecutor Matthew Colangelo requested a hearing to allow them to cross-examine Trump on Judge Merchan's contempt finding.
Colangelo also said he wanted to raise the issue of whether they could address Trump’s attempt to ‘dissuade witnesses’ through a ‘pressure campaign’ about ‘retaliation.'
Trump shook his head in response to indicate he disagreed.
Colangelo said that the defense ‘opened the door’ with its opening statements, so this should be allowed in.
They were ‘precisely the kind of arguments that would open the door for the people to elicit efforts to keep (witnesses) in the fold followed by subsequent harassment online,' Colangelo said.
This evidence would ‘offset the claim these witnesses are somehow benefiting from their willingness to testify,' the jury was told.
They were also ‘evidence of the defendant's consciousness of guilt,' Colangelo said.
Colangelo pointed to the change in Trump’s public comments as a sign of his ‘consciousness of guilt.'
He cited comments about Cohen in early 2018 after the FBI raid on his homes, saying things like ‘Some people may flip if they’re put under pressure but Michael Cohe s not that kind of person’
Yet after Cohen pleaded guilty to campaign finance laws and other crimes, Trump said in a post online that ‘if anyone is looking for a good lawyer’ then they shouldn’t ring Cohen.
At this, Trump laughed at his own joke and nodded in approval.
Witness Gary Farro is off the stand as court takes a short break.
During cross-examination, Farro said he never spoke with Donald Trump and confirmed nothing in the way Michael Cohen's account was set up raised red flags at the time.
Just before recess, cross-examination wrapped up, and prosecutor Rebecca Mangold stepped back up for redirect.
The prosecutor showed a wire transfer authorization form that former Trump fixer Michael Cohen filled out the morning after making a transfer into the new account.
The transfer amount was for $130,000 from the Essential Consultants to a trust account of lawyer Keith Davidson.
Davidson previously represented Stormy Daniels.
Farro notes that the opening of the account, funding of the account and transfer to Davidson all took less than 24 hours.
Prosecutor Rebecca Mangold is showing emails to and from former Trump fixer Michael Cohen confirming a bank transfer of $131,000 for his home equity line of credit into a checking account.
The transfer was made 23 minutes after Cohen opened the new Essential Consultants LLC account.
The emails shown to the jury about the transfer are labeled 'high' importance.
Farro is testifying about the paper trail in the hush money case. He says it was a second mortgage in this scenario.
He testified that bank paperwork would not indicate the account was used to pay someone in the adult film industry.
That would have required additional scrutiny.
Donald Trump has been found in contempt of court for violating the hush money trial gag order and fined $9,000.
Judge Juan Merchan also warned the former president he could face jail if he does it again in a stern warning to start the third week of the case.
There was some good news for the 77-year-old, as Judge Merchan ruled he could attend Barron's high school graduation next month.
Trump was fined $1,000 each for a serious of social media posts that targeted witness Michael Cohen and questioned the bias of the jury.
Merchan has also ordered Trump remove the seven 'offending posts' from Truth Social and the two 'offending posts' from his campaign website by 2:15pm Tuesday.
The order also stated the court 'will not tolerate continued willful violations of its lawful orders' and warned of possible jail time stating 'if necessary and appropraite under the circumstances, it will impose an incarceratory punishment.'
The order took into account Trump is a candidate for office.
'At the same time, this Court is keenly aware of, and protective of, Defendant's First Amendment rights, particularly given his candidacy for the office of the President of the United States,' it reads.
'It is critically important that Defendant's legitimate free speech rights not be curtailed, that he be able to fully campaign for the office which he seeks,' it continues.
Trump did not react to the contempt order while sitting in court.
Donald Trump slammed all the cases against him as hoaxes after entering the Manhattan criminal court and blasted the judge in the hush money case as conflicted.
'This is a case that should never have been brought,' Trump said with his lawyer beside him. The ex-president called it a 'disgrace to the New York City court system.'
Trump also addressed the protests taking place on college campuses. He claimed the protests are all caused by President Biden.
'Charlottesville is peanuts compared to what you're looking at now,' Trump said referencing the march by White supremacists. 'This whole country is up in arms.'
He called protesters taking over a building a 'big deal' and questioned whether there will be anything 'comparable to what happened to J6.'
The ex-president questioned whether those protesters will get the 'same kind of treatment as J6.'
Before he walked inside the court, he blasted the temperature by comparing it to an 'ice box' and thanked Time magazine for their 'very nice' cover story.
Trump walked into court wearing a navy suit and a bright red tie.
His son Eric Trump was with him and sat in the front row of the public gallery.
Trump waved to somebody in the public gallery and pursed his lips together.
Trump talked with Eric and waved to a woman sat next him.
After a week away from the trial, Donald Trump’s loyal communications aide has returned to the Manhattan court.
She was spotted by DailyMail.com getting into the former president’s motorcade alongside his son Eric, fellow aide Natalie Harp and senior advisor Dan Shapiro.
They then loaded into the SUVs to make the downtown trip from Trump Tower.
A friend of adult film star Stormy Daniels told CNN Daniels is ready for her appearance in the hush money trial and look Trump dead in the face and call him out.
'Stormy is an incredible woman. She's been steadfast through this entire process,' said adult actress Alana Evans.
'She's been very solid, so honestly, I would imaging that she's ready for this. We have all been waiting for some sort of justice to come out of this situation,' she added.
Evans told CNN's Abby Phillips that Daniels has been honest since day one as soon as she was allowed to speak out and will be a strong witness on the stand.
'I think what's going to be going through Stormy's mind is this is the moment that she has to look him dead in the face and call it out for what it is and finally be able to put her voice to the truth in a way that we've all been waiting for.'
Sports stars, news channel anchors from MSNBC and Fox News, media moguls and casino owners.
A Trump Organization contacts list of phone numbers introduced in court last week offers an unparalleled insight into how Donald Trump moves through the world, rubbing shoulders with the rich, the glamorous and the merely useful.
There is the smooth-skinned football quarterback Tom Brady and the gruff coach who took him to Super Bowl glory Bill Belichick.
And the Fox News anchors like Brett Baier and Sean Hannity whose evening shows are where the former president likes to make news by telephoning in live.
Their boss, Rupert Murdoch, is in there too, alongside sporting icons such as tennis champion Serena Williams and golfing great Jack Nicklaus.
There are also more surprising reminders of Trump's past as a New York liberal.
Gary Farro says he was assigned to work with Michael Cohen based on his 'ability to handle individuals that may be a little challenging.'
He says he didn't find him that difficult, but when he did call, it was always something 'urgent.'
Farro says he worked with Cohen from 2015 through 2018 or 2019, and Cohen held personal accounts and entities with First Republic Bank.
Farro testifies that Cohen 'was very excited' to be working for Trump and spoke about it frequently.
Farro says he didn't open any accounts for the Trump Organization.
Gary Farro was a senior managing director at First Republic Bank in 2016.
Michael Cohen allegedly wired hush money payments to Stormy Daniels, aka Stephanie Clifford, using the bank.
Someone at the bank reported the wire transaction as suspicious to the Treasury Department.
On October 26, 2016, an employee of the bank whose name is publicly redacted confirmed to Cohen his wire to Daniels' lawyer was successful.
First Republic Bank was seized and sold by regulators last year.
President Joe Biden used his speech to a crowd of 2,600 at the Washington Hilton on Saturday to jab his rival.
The 81-year-old has been out campaigning while Trump has sat in a courtroom in Manhattan.
The president had a laugh at the case where his likely 2024 opponent is accused of paying hush money to porn star Stormy Daniels to cover up an alleged affair.
Biden said: 'I've had a great stretch since the State of the Union. Donald has had a tough few days lately — you might call it stormy weather.'
Donald Trump's longtime assistant told his hush money on Friday trial she recalled seeing porn star Stormy Daniels in the lobby on the 26th floor of Trump Tower before the 2016 election.
Rhona Graff, 64, who worked for Trump for 34 years until 2021, said she assumed Daniels was there to discuss being a contestant on The Apprentice.
Graff also confirmed she had entered contact details in the Trump Organization system for Daniels and Karen McDougal.
Daniels and McDougal, a former Playboy model, have both claimed they had affairs with Trump, which he has denied.
Trump has pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records to cover up a $130,000 payment to buy the silence of Daniels.
Donald Trump returns to Manhattan for the third week of the hush money trial.
The former president will be sat in the courtroom while prosecutors carry on questioning Michael Cohen's former banker Gary Farro.
He testified on Friday that he helped Trump's disgraced former fixer open accounts, including the one used to pay porn star Stormy Daniels $130,000.
Trump is also facing a fine of up to $10,000 for contempt of court for violating the gag order in the case.
Judge Juan Merchan has scolded his social media activity and could rule as soon as Tuesday.