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Michael Cohen is back on the stand for a third day of questioning in Donald Trump's bombshell criminal trial as the defense is trying to pin the ex-fixer on his many 'lies.'
Cohen defended his previous comments stating 'I really f***ing hope this man ends up in prison' about Trump and described how the former president was 'dangling' a pardon in front of him, which he considered taking to 'end the nightmare' of the Stormy Daniel hush money fallout.
Follow DailyMail.com’s live coverage and our reports from the courtroom.
Angry texts to teen could be smoking gun
If Michael Cohen is done in by the receipts surfaced by defense lawyers in court, it would be a cruel twist if it happened with text messages where he sent intimidating texts to a teenager.
It’s the kind of ‘bullying’ that Cohen testified for years he did on behalf of his client, Donald Trump. But on Thursday, he was forced to confront his own texts threatening to sic the Secret Service on someone who was placing repeated harassing phone calls. Here are some key takeaways:
Cohen's lies are piling up
Michael Cohen has lied. A lot. And lawyer Todd Blanche has been getting him to admit it himself. He lied to Robert Mueller. He lied to a congressional committee about a Moscow tower he was exploring while working for Trump. He even lied to a judge when he was guilty to a trio of crimes that sent him to prison. The prosecution has tried to get ahead with some of these during direct testimony, but jurors keeping score may be shocked by the numbers.
Texts with daughter point to trail of resentment
Anyone who has travelled in New York and D.C. political circles knows what it’s like to score a top invite – or to be left on the curb feeling like a has-been. Cohen's texts with his daughter revealed complaints about having trouble getting tickets to the Trump inauguration, after helping guide two campaigns.
Judge Merchan is looking for the exits
Judge Merchan told lawyers to be ready for summary arguments as soon as Tuesday. That comes despite Todd Blanche refusing to rule out testimony by former President Trump himself. He's also gaming out how to avoid long breaks in the rythm of the trial, a sign he may have eyes on completion before Memorial day.
Trump's entourage might help him outside the courtroom, but not inside
Trump's expanding entourage might be wearing thin. Prosecutors raised complaints about disruptions with their security details, and Merchan seemed sympathetic. The way GOP members have given Trump talking points could catch the judge's notice as a way to get around his gag order.
Donald Trump's defense lawyer accused star witness Michael Cohen of lying about a crucial phone that tied the former president to a cover-up around hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels in a dramatic exchange Thursday.
Defense lawyer Todd Blanche delivered his blow just before the lunch break, offering evidence that the key conversation was actually about a prank caller and not, as Cohen claimed three days earlier, about a $130,000 payment for Daniels' silence.
It created an 'aha' moment just as the case barrels towards its conclusion; the sort of pin-drop shock common to courtroom TV dramas but rare in real life.
And it undermined Cohen's testimony that he personally talked to Trump about plans to hide the hush money, a claim that is central to the case.
Having reminded the 12 members of the jury that Cohen had a history of lying to courts and laying the foundations of the idea that he was an unreliable witness, Trump's lawyer Todd Blanche took the court in an unexpected direction.
He brought up text messages and call logs to show that Cohen had been plagued by nuisance calls in October 2016.
Donald Trump has said he would gladly testify in the hush money case.
But his attorneys revealed Thursday that they have not yet come to a decision on whether Trump will take the stand under oath.
It would set up a historic moment where Trump would be quizzed on his relationship to Stormy Daniels under threat of perjury.
Todd Blanche managed to tie Michael Cohen in a bit of a knot.
Cohen was asked about a statement he put out in February 2018 when his lawyers wrote to the Federal Election Commission admitting he paid Daniels the $130,000.
The statement said that ‘neither the Trump Organization nor the Trump campaign was a party to the transaction with (Daniels)’, comments Cohen has testified were ‘deceptive’ to create some distance from Trump.
Blanche asked if Cohen recorded himself telling a journalist that the statement was true and ‘they had to believe you, you’re a really bad liar’.
‘You said that?’ Blanche asked.
Cohen replied: ‘I believe so’.
Blanche asked: ‘But you were lying when you told them that?’
Cohen replied: ‘Yes sir.’
Todd Blanche tells the court he has 'not a lot' left and will finish with Cohen's cross examination 'Monday before the morning break' most likely.
The matter of an expert witness is still up in the air pending the judge's ruling on instructions and the scope of what their witness, former FEC chair Bradley Smith will speak to.
Blanche says with the exception of the expert, his team would be able to be on and off Monday. He still isn't revealing whether Trump will testify.
Judge Merchan took it all in and said 'please be prepared to begin sumnations on Tuesday.'
He stressed that it isn't ideal to break up closing arguments or have the jury face long gaps, in a possible reference to the upcoming Memorial Day holiday. He's trying to avoid 'big breaks.'
Although he'll consider the issue of how much lattitude to give the expert, Merchan tipped his hand that he isn't initially persuaded by Trump's team. He doesn't want an expert witness to speak as a 'fact witness' in the case.
'Until you hear differently from me my ruling has not changed,' he said.
'In fairness to you I will consider your arguments,' Merchan said.
Once again today, Trump's Republican allies trooped in during proceedings after giving a press conference outside. And once again Judge Juan Merchan looked up, clearly distracted and irritated. It happened on Tuesday too during a key part of the cross-examination of Michael Cohen
Now it seems that the prosecution has asked for the interruptions to stop.
In an early transcript of proceedings, obtained by the Associated Press, Susan Hoffinger says: 'Some of the defense guests filed in the middle of direct examination with their security detail,' and asked that those who came Thursday not be allowed to do so during cross-examination.
The sidebar discussion was held out of earshot of press and jury, but the words are transcribed and later published. 'It's — with their security detail for the jury and the witnesses to see,' Hoffinger said, according to the transcript. Merchan agreed that it was inadvisable but Trump's attorney Todd Blanche disagreed.
I have less than zero control over what is happening on anything or anyone that's behind me when I am crossing a witness,' he said.
Lawyers on both sides are facing off about whether the defense and the government would call expert witnesse to discuss complex campaign finance law issues.
Trump lawyer Emil Bove says there is a 'little bit of tension right now' between potential jury instruction proposals and the expert testimony. He said he wants an expert to run through various definitions in campaign finance law. He says 'basic fairness' requires the jury understand the concepts.
'You have three people telling the jury what the law is when it should be only one,' the prosecution countered, saying the judge is the appropriate authority to explain the law.
Cohen is testifying about a letter to the FEC from the law firm of law firm McDermott Will & Emery in response to a complaint by CREW.
‘Mr. Cohen used his own personal funds to facilitate a payment of $130,000 to Ms. Stephanie Clifford,’ it said.
Blance calls it a ‘true statement,’ and goes through Cohen’s testimony about Trump reimbursing him from personal funds.
Then Cohen speaks about his own statement that he wrote, adding that he would not be answering any more questions about the matter.
He feared further inquiries from the press.
‘They would be asking me the question … My concern was that they would expand upon it and they would ask me about Mr. Trump personally or some other account.
‘Make no mistake this was a completely legal binding contract, correct?’ says Blanche.
‘It’s a very long contract, correct. It’s signed by you. And Mr. Davidson. And Ms. Daniels,’ Blanche says. ‘But Donald J. Trump never signed anything with this agreement.
‘A nondisclosure agreement, an NDA, a settlement between two parties, happens all the time,’ says Blanche, and Cohen agrees.
Cohen says he believes Keith Davidson came up with the name ‘David Dennison’ as the stand-in for Trump. He says he doesn’t know who came up with ‘Peggy Peterson’, which is the fake name for Daniels.
CNN’s Anderson Cooper, attending the trial, said Coen's testimony over his phone call to Trump would give him doubts if he was a juror.
Cooper said:
Absolutely. Absolutely. I think it’s devastating for Michael Cohen’s credibility on this one particular topic,” he said.
If I was a juror in this case watching that, I would think, this guy’s making this up as he’s going along or he’s making this particular story up.
Cohen is going through the meeting he secretly recorded that included Trump and ex-AMI exec David Pecker.
Blanche is pressing on Trump's use of the word 'cash,' and whether it means without financing.
'Now when he says cash, he’s not talking about Benjamins and green dollar bills, right?' said Blanche.
'He very often would purchase things with cash, correct.'
Cohen says Trump meant the word literally when asked if Trump meant 'green' money.
'Which is why I used the word. No, no, no: check. We need to do it by check,' Cohen said.
Blanche asked if during the 10 years Cohen worked for Trump he really never spoke to a reporter without speaking to Trump.
Cohen said: ‘It was my routine to always advise Mr Trump because if the story is not the way I was going to put out was not the way he wanted he would blow up and it would probably be the end of my job.'
Cohen was asked if he had a ‘very strong relationship’ with journalists like Chris Cuomo, Katie Tur and Maggie Haberman.
He said that was accurate.
Cohen admitted he recorded his phone calls with reporters and estimated he had done so 40 times over the years, but he stopped after the 2016 election.
Blanche is pressing Cohen on how he can possibly remember the substance of a call with Trump about former playboy model Karen McDougal, which he says he had after ringing Keith Schiller.
‘You don’t have a specific recollection to a telephone call that you had in June of 2016, do you?’ Blanche asks. ‘No sir,’ Cohen says.
He gets Cohen to say he took hundreds of calls a day, then uses a ‘conservative’ estimate of 50 to get to 14,000 a year.
'Let’s say you’re getting 50 a day, 350 a week, 1,400 a month. We’re talking 14,000 a year from 2016 - 2017. Same would be true in 2018 until you went to prison’.
Cohen replied: ‘Yes sir’.
‘When you testified on Monday and Tuesday about specific conversations that you had with different folks … you were not testifying from a specific recollection of that phone call, were you?’ he pressed.
‘I was,’ Cohen answered.
‘Because these phone calls are things that I’ve been talking about for the last six years. They are and they were extremely important. And they were all-consuming.’
Trump's ex-fixer said that he has '95 secret recordings' on his phone, including of Trump.
'I recorded [former CNN President] Jeff Zucker on one event. Mr. Trump in another event. A series of other reporters,' he said.
'You understand it’s not ethical for a lawyer to record a conversation with their client?' Trump's attorney asked Cohen.
He responded: 'That's correct.'
Blanche gets Cohen to say his secret recording of his former client Trump was unethical.
‘You understand that it’s not ethical for a lawyer to record a conversation with their client, correct?’ he asked.
‘That’s correct.’
‘You’re not – except of course crime fraud exception,’ Cohen says.
That got an immediate rise out of Blanche, who reminded him he testified that he recorded Trump in order to help David Pecker get paid for $150,000 in hush money.
Cohen is testifying to Blanche about providing ‘tips’ and ‘scoops’ to reporters.
Blanche mentions TV journalists Chris Cuomo and Katie Tur, and Maggie Haberman of the Times.
‘You asked her to write positive stories about you, correct?’ Blanche asks.
‘Yes sir,’ he said.
He said he has made about 40 recordings of reporters over a decade, but said ‘I wouldn’t characterize it as a lot.
Blanche called it transactional. ‘In exchange for that you would give tips to Miss Haberman, correct,’ he said.
‘Not in exchange. I would use Miss Haberman if the story was something that believed the NY times would run.’
Trump, who has frequently spoken to and tweeted about Haberman, is paying attention.
Blanche displayed some of Cohen’s text exchanges with the teen who kept dialing him, which related to Blanche’s earlier attack on the credibility of his story.
‘You will need to explain this to secret service,’ wrote Cohen, quickly getting the 14 year old’s attention.
The he suggested putting him touch with ‘your parent or guardian.’
‘I DIDN’T DO IT,’ insisted the teen.
‘Please have your parent or guardian contact me before secret service reaches out to them,’ Cohen wrote later in the exchange.
Blanche tries to clean up his earlier error. The judge has warned him he may do his own jury instruction if he doesn't go far enough.
‘Just make sure there’s no confusion …You don’t have any evidence that anybody at the district attorney’s office improperly leaked or even leaked at all.’
The judge calls lawyers to the bench, and Blanche goes even further.
You know that around March 30 or actually on March 30 the court unsealed the indictment.
To the extent that I asked you questions about what you learned or heard from Dt. Rosenberg .. by March 30th it was public and unsealed, correct.
Lawyers faced off once again on how to clean up the matter of an error in Blanche's question about the 'leak' of the Trump indictment.
'This is not something that should be cleaned up by the person who asked the questions … this should be cured by the court,' the prosecution said.
'I wasn’t trying to do anything other than elicit the fact .. a detective assigned to this case' told a witness it was 'done,' said Blanche. 'I’m happy to clean it up. But it shouldn’t be an instruction from the court.'
From Rob Crilly, Senior U.S. Political Reporter in courtroom 1530
That was a moment of pure lawyering, the sort of gotcha moment that you see in LA Law but all too rarely in an actual courtroom.
Defense lead Todd Blanche had spent the morning trying to undermine Michael Cohen's testimony, using his own words in text messages and on podcasts to portray the witness as a bitter ex-employee intent on revenge. It wasn't until 12:30 that he finally got to the meat of Cohen's testimony, that Trump was directly involved in the hush money and cover-up scheme.
He did so by having the jury look at text messages sent by Cohen on the evening of Oct 24, 2016, after Cohen had unmasked someone making nuisance phone calls. The culprit forgot to mask their number, and when Cohen challenged them, they admitted they were a 14-year-old.
So what, wondered the assembled ranks of press.
Blanche continued. At about 8:04 pm, Cohen messaged Keith Schiller (Trump's body man, who is always at his side) asking for help dealing with the matter. A phone call lasting barely 90 second follows.
Now Blanche goes in for the kill, reminding Cohen that on Monday he had claimed that call was designed to update Trump on the Stormy Daniels matter.
‘That was a lie!' Blanche exclaimed in the most dramatic moment of the case so far.
'Because you were actually talking to Mr. Schiller about you were getting harassing phone calls from a 14-year-old,’ he added.
Cohen says he had time to do both.
'I always ran everything by the boss immediately, and in this case it would have been saying, 'Everything been taken care of — it's been resolved,"' he said
But a seed of doubt has now been cast. Cohen is the key to the case. And a major question has been raised with Blanche turning everying on a dime.
See for yourself Monday's testimony below...
Dozens of pink penis balloons were released by a MAGA activist outside of the courthouse where Trump's trial is on a lunch break.
There have been several protestors pro and anti-Trump stationed outside the court throughout the day.
The balloons have faces printed on them of Judge Merchan and Special Counsel Jack Smith.
Blanche tears into Cohen over his recollections about an 8:02 pm phone call with Keith Schiller, Trump’s former security head.
It’s the same call where Cohen testified he told Trump the Stormy Daniels matter was taken care of.
But it was sandwiched between communications with Schiller, including one at 7:48 pm where Cohen texted about a prank caller. ‘The Dope forgot to block his call,’ Cohen wrote.
At 8:04 pm Cohen texted Schiller the number.
‘You finalized the deal with Stormy Daniels. You said we’re going to move forward and you said yes,’ Blanche said, his voice rising.
‘That was a lie. Because you were actually talking to Mr. Schiller about you were getting harassing phone calls from a 14-year-old,’ he intoned.
‘You had enough time in that 90 second phone call to update Mr. Schiller… and also update President Trump on the of the Stormy Daniels situation?’ Blanche asked.
Cohen said it could have been quick. ‘Always run everything by the boss immediately,’ he said.
'I believe I also spoke to Mr Trump about the Stormy Daniels matter and that it was going to be resolved,' Cohen said.
'I'm not asking for your belief,' shot back Blanche.
Blanche is asking Cohen why he testified Tuesday about an October 24 phone call with Trump, but didn’t discuss it with prosecutors last year.
‘So it was the first time that you recall having a conversation with President Trump on Oct. 24 at 8:02 pm when you testified two days ago,’ Blanche asked him.
Cohen said it was to discuss Stormy Daniels and a resolution.
Cohen said he didn’t recall details and that phone logs ‘refreshed my memory.’
Cohen's daughter daughter Samantha said Trump new people 'were walking all over you, correct?' Blanche asks him.
'And you agreed with that didn’t you at the time.'
'At the time,' Cohen responds.
Cohen told his daughter he wasn't the 'right person' for chief of staff at the White House.
'You were not embarrassed that after all the work you had done' you got to be 'personal attorney and nothing role?' Blanched asked.
Cohen said it was the role he wanted.
You were having a 'hard time getting tickets to the inauguraiton,' Blanche asked about a text exchange with his daughter.
'I believe so,' said Cohen.
Then he gets asked about his conversations with pastor Darrell Scott.
Does the turn of phrase in this tweet sound familiar?
It was used by Trump during a 2020 election debate with Joe Biden, when he was pressed repeatedly to condemn white nationalism in general and then specifcally to denounce the Proud Boys and call for them to stand down.
Proud Boys, stand back and stand by. But I’ll tell you what ... somebody’s gotta do something about Antifa and the left because this is not a right-wing problem, this is a left-wing problem.
Blanche is getting grilled by Blanche about his texts with daughter Samantha Blake Cohen about landing a White House job.
One discussing being 'special counsel' to Trump.
Cohen testifies he meant a different 'hybrid' role, being 'personal attorney to the president.'
'There's a way that I could monetize that, which I did.'
Blanch says texts show his frustration about getting passed over.
'What you really said to your daughter ... is that you were very disappointed that Reince was being given the power to determine my position,' he said, after helping Trump choose Reince Priebus as his first White House chief of staff.
Blanche goes back to Cohen's testimony that he wanted to be 'considered' for White House chief of staff, even if for his 'ego.'
It is part of the defense's plan to establish a motive for Cohen as a jilted aide.
'The truth is, Mr. Cohen, you really wanted to work in the White House.'
'No sir,' he told Blanche.
'You really wanted to work in the White House, correct?'
'Again, no sir,' Cohen responded.
Now Blanche is bringing up contradictions to the statements.
Prosecutors come back from break and ask Judge Merchan to issue a 'curative' instruction about some of Blanche's questioning of Cohen.
He had been going after the witness over a TV appearance around the time news broke of the indictment and an apparent 'leak.'
'The questions were misleading,' the prosecution said. The question related to an appearance on March 31, which prosecutors said came after the indictment was unsealed the night before.
'That clearly left the impression with the jury that there was something improper,' according to the prosecution.
Blanche argued that no instruction from the bench was needed.
Merchan is allowing Blanche to 'clean it up' and is allowing prosecutors to draft an order he will consider reading to the jury.
Trump's allies posed for a photograph this morning before the hearing started. (From left) Reps. Luna, Gaetz, Good, Crane, Biggs, Boebert.
But court nerds will know that this is not courtroom 1530 where the Trump trial is taking place. The blinds, seen in the background, are slightly different and you cannot see any of the four TV screen specially installed for this high-profile case (one of which should be visible above the red, leather jury chairs.
The members of Congress are not in court as we resume after the recess. They are outside about to address the media in a small park across the street from the court.
Cohen testified that Trump was ‘dangling’ pardons in front of him.
He revealed he thought about it to end the ‘nightmare.'
That line contradicts what he previously told Congress, that there never was a pardon on the table.
Blanche hammered Cohen on his testimony in 2019 that he never asked for nor would he ask for a pardon.
He asked Cohen to try to square it with testimony that he spoke to lawyers about pursuing a potential pardon from Trump.
‘That’s a not true statement isn’t it?’ Blanche asked.
‘At that present moment, it was true. I wanted this nightmare to end. And so with it being dangled, seeing it on television, I asked them is this really something that they’re talking about.’
He says his other statement was meant in the ‘present sense,’ and also relies on the argument that he relied on others to pursue a pardon.
Blanche starts quizzing Cohen about a meeting with lawyer Bob Costello, who is linked to Rudy Giuliani, after the FBI raid on Cohen's home.
It comes hours after Costello appeared before a GOP-run House committee and claimed he himself asked Cohen if he had any useful information on Trump, and that Cohen told him he didn't.
'Do you remember telling him that you had nothing on President Trump and could not cooperate?'
'No sir,' Cohen responded.
Cohen acknowledges the bank loan was to ‘hide it form your wife,’ agreeing with Blanche’s question.
But prosecutors successfully object to conversations that might get at spousal communications. Blanche also asks him about deleting text messages from his wife.
Todd Blanche is asking Cohen about one of his appearances before a House committee.
'When Congressmen ask you questions they go on and on right?' he says, before apologizing for his own longwinded questions.
Rep. Matt Gaetz looks up as if in mock indignation before turning and sharin a smile with Rep. Lauren Boebert who is sitting beside him.
Now Blanche gets Cohen talking about whether he lied in Trump’s fraud trial and when getting a home improvement loan
Blanche keeps going through the record, this time asking him about his testimony in Trump’s civil fraud trial down the street last year.
‘You testified under oath at a different trial that you did not commit the crimes that you pled guilty to before Judge Pauley. Correct?’
‘Correct,’ Cohen said.
That brought yet another discussion about Cohen’s belief that he shouldn’t have been charged, but that he accepts the underlying facts of the case.
Then he asks about Cohen’s application for a HELOC, a type of loan, which he used to cover the Stormy Daniels statement. Cohen says he doesn’t think it was ‘material’ because he had had such a loan for years.
‘Were you lying at the time you made those statements?’ to the bank, Blanche asks.
‘Yes,’ Cohen says.
The defense has yet to get into Cohen's testimony in the trial, his payments to Stormy Daniels and the way he was reimburse. So far this morning it has been a tour of Cohen's convictions and his record of lying in other cases while under oath.
The defense strategy is clear: To demonstrate to the jury that this is not a witness to be trusted, reminiscent of an earlier witness claim that Cohen was a 'pants on fire' kind of guy.
For their part, the jurors seem engaged and attentive even as the questioning is repetitive and at times arcane (including discussions of the New York taxi medallion system).
Cohen is not fazed by any of it. He is giving measured, matter-of-fact responses, occasionally pausing to remember timelines and dates.
Trump is listening, brow furrowed, head tilted to one side.
Blanche gets Cohen to once again discuss how he beleives he was pressured into pleading guilty to the tax charge, which related to the taxi medallion business.
He says he feared if he didn't take the deal on just 48 hours notice, his wife would be indicted.
'You do feel like you were induced to plead guilty?' Blanche asks.
'I never denied the underlying facts. I just did not believe that I should have been criminally charged,' says Cohen.
Then he hits him with the standard language that Judge William H. Pauley III asked him to repeat in court when he furnished his guilty plea.
he was asked 'did anybody offer you any inducements or thereaten or force you to plead guilty.'
'And you said no?' Blanched asked him.
'I accepted responsibility.'
'That was a lie?'
'Correct,' he said.
Blanche takes Cohen to his taxi medallion business - a practice unrelated to his work with Trump that brought an investigation before he ended up jailed on a tax charge.
Cohen perks up explaining the ins and outs of the business, noting there are 13,284 taxi medallions in New York City.
He leased them to a man, Gene Freedman, who would later cooperate with prosecutors.
'He would lease my medallion or medallions .. and he would pay me a certain sum every month, whether he made money or didn’t,' Cohen says.
'The only way to have a taxi is you have to have a medallion affixed to the front,' he says.
Blanche is playing out Cohen's lies to the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence about a Trump Moscow tower project he pursued.
Blanche gets him to acknowledge he lied to agents and prosecutors, to Congress, and to the special counsel.
'You lied about the Moscow project, correct?' Blanche asks.
'Correct,' Cohen responds.
'When you stopped the project was a lie, correct?'
'Correct,' said Cohen.
Blanche continues to draw on Cohen's public statements to try to get at his motive.
In one podcast statement, Cohen says 'I truly f***ing hope that this man ends up in prison,' referring to Trump.
'Revenge is a dish best served cold and you better believe I want this man to go down and rot inside for what he did to me and my family,' he says in another.
And he gets another insult into the record, this time with Trump responding on X to a Donald Trump post attacking him.
'You called him dumbass Donald does that sound right?' Blanche asks.
'Sounds correct,' Cohen responds.
Cohen puts on headphones and gets played his own Mea Culpa podcast.
Prosecutors object to it being into evidence but it gets played aloud in court.
Cohen's radio voice is notably amped up from his witness stand demeanor, as he discusses meeting with DA Alvin Bragg and his desire for Trump to go through trouble.
'He’s about to get a taste of what I went through and I promise you, it’s not fun,' Cohen said, mentioning fingerprinting and a mug shot.
It 'fills me with delight and sadness all at the same time,' the jury hears him announce on tape.
There's been a tricky back and forth between defense lead Todd Blanche and Michael Cohen over messages he exchanged with a detective last year, around the time the New York Times reported that a grand jury had indicted Trump. Blanche is clearly trying to get at whether Cohen was given information before the indictment was unsealed, but the defense has successfully objected to multiple rounds of questioning.
Blanche asks Judge Juan Merchan for a sidebar to discuss the issue.
Blanche: 'May we approach?'
Merchan: 'No.'
There have already been discussions about what is allowed during this phase. And yhe brusque exchange is a blow to the defense which is struggling to land any blows and is now moving on to another line of questioning.
'If the prosecution rests its case based on the evidence they've put forward, then this judge should redeem himself for all the erroneous rulings he's made so far by directing a verdict of not guilty,' Cotton said on CNN this morning.
He went on to add that there has been no evidence of a crime whatsoever.
Trump's campaign has been highlighting clips and opinion pieces of his allies saying there's no case for the prosecution.
Cohen was asked about his texts with detective Jeremy Rosenberg, a supervising investigator in the Manhattan district attorney's office.
Questions are going to where and when Cohen learned Trump was being indicted.
Cohen says he learned it from the New York Times.
'He didn’t tell you before there was an unsealing indictment that it was done?' Blanche asks him.
Prosecutors objected to the use of the term 'leak' in Blanche's questions.
Lawyer Bob Costello appeared on Fox News just as Michael Cohen was set to retake the witness stand as a key witness in Donald Trump's hush money case.
Costello appeared before a House committee on Wednesday where he claimed Cohen lied on the stand.
Costello told Fox News on Thursday that he spoke with Cohen during his prior criminal trial. He claims he advised Cohen in 2018 to offer up information on Trump in order to cut a deal, but Cohen told him he has 'nothing' on the then-president.
Costello said he has not been subpoenaed to testify by the defense but said he would recommend that Trump's lawyers call on him.
Judge Merchan tells the jury it may be 'necessary' to work Wednesday - the day the Trump trial has usually been pausing.
He wants to know if any have conflicts or hardships, He also mentions various holidays and other factors. It could signal the trial is wrapping up.
Members of the House Republican Freedom caucus are seated behind Trump in the courtroom. Members spotted include Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Trump loyalist Matt Gaetz of Florida.
Reps. Tim Walz, Bob Good, and Andy Biggs are also part of Trump's entourage.
There was some shuffling in the courtroom to find space for everyone, and Gaetz got moved to the front next to Eric Trump.
Former President Donald Trump is seated in the courtroom. He chatted with lawyer Emil Bove at the defense table. Blanche stood as he prepared to resume cross-examination of Michael Cohen.
Photrgraphers are once again getting a close-up of the defendant.
Former President Donald Trump spoke to reporters before entering the courtroom.
Trump blasted the case against him as a 'scam' and claimed the security outside the Manhattan criminal court is like 'Fort Knox.' While there is enhanced security at the court, members of the public is allowed to attend his trial.
The ex-president said the one good thing to come out of the hush money trial is his polling.
He did not answer a shouted question about whether he would testify.
Trump is flanked by a handful of his closest GOP allies at his trial.
Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good, Matt Gaetz, Lauren Boebert, Anna Paulina Luna, Michael Waltz and Andy Biggs are standing behind him as he addresses reporters outside the courtroom.
Reps. Tim Waltz, Diana Harshbarger, Eli Crane, Ralph Norman, Andy Ogles, Michael Cloud and Virginia State Sen. McGuire are also in court supporting Trump.
Judge Juan Merchan decided to end court for the day on Tuesday during lawyer Todd Blanche's cross-examination of Michael Cohen.
Blanche had asked Cohen if he was concerend that a new DA was circulating negative stories about him.
Cohen agreed that he dealt with the subject in his book.
Cohen had admitted calling himself a 'fixer' and said he made about $3.4 million on a pair of books that dealt extensively with Trump.
Blanche told the judge he would likely finish his cross-examamination Thursday.
'No rush, take your time,' Merchan told him.
Trump's legal team initiated a new appeal of his gag order on Wednesday evening.
He is not allowed to discuss witnesses, jurors and others in the twisted web of his hush money case.
Trump has already been fined $10,000 by Judge Merchan for violating the order.
He has also been threatened with jail if he violates it again.
Donald Trump could be in danger of another breach of the gag order imposed on him by the judge, according to some legal experts.
The suggestion came amid reports that Trump wrote notes to instruct allies what to say when they delivered speeches outside court earlier this week.
David R. Lurie, an attorney in New York, wrote on X:
Those notes are not privileged documents...the notes could evidence violations of the court's order.
The much awaited cross-examination of Michael Cohen began with a shock-and awe opening meant to shatter the composure of the witness, but ended with the usual courtroom tedium and Cohen correcting Donald Trump’s lawyer on real estate.
There were swear words, insults – 'Cheeto-dusted villain' is one – and questions about Cohen’s move from Trump loyalist to resistance crusader, and whether it was an awakening or self-serving scheme.
Many of Blanche’s early punches didn’t land, and had the effect of bringing Cohen’s wealth of character attacks on Trump, like calling him a con man he was ashamed to work for, into the record.
Emails introduced into evidence in the Donald Trump trial reveal a move to set up a 'back channel' to President Trump that would run through Rudy Giuliani at a time Michael Cohen was lawyering up after an FBI raid on his apartment and office.
It was designed 'sort of to be covert. It’s all back-channel. Sort of I Spyish,' is how Cohen put it during his second day of testimony in the Trump hush money trial Tuesday.
The relationship began after FBI agents appeared at Cohen's door in 2018 to seize his two cell phones and remove documents in a search that included his office and flooded residence. He said he was 'despondent' and 'angry.'
Lawyer Bob Costello tore into Michael Cohen during a House hearing Wednesday – hours after the former Trump fixer called him 'shifty' and accused him of trying to set up a 'back channel' to then-President Donald Trump.
'I read Michael Cohen’s testimony from yesterday’s trial in New York on the way down on the train, and virtually every statement he made about me is another lie,' Costello told a House committee on 'weaponization' of government.
The comments came along with a blistering statement Costello released, where he blasted 'lawfare' he said was being deployed against Trump, and wrote about meetings with prosecutors along with Cohen.
Cohen 'took a foolish step by lying that he had evidence that Rudy Giuliani and I had conspired to obstruct justice by dangling a pardon for him to keep his mouth shut about Donald Trump. That was totally false and utter nonsense,' Costello said.
And he went after Cohen's motive – in a possible teaser to what Trump's legal team has in store for him in a second day of cross-examination set for Thursday in Manhattan criminal court.