Stormy Daniels Offers to Return Payment to End Deal for Her Silence
The pornographic film actress who says she had an affair with President Trump offered on Monday to return $130,000 she received from Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer in 2016 for agreeing not to discuss the alleged relationship.
In exchange, the actress, Stephanie Clifford, seeks an end to her deal to keep quiet about what she says was an affair with Mr. Trump that started in 2006 and lasted for several months.
In the letter, which was sent to Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, early Monday, Ms. Clifford’s lawyer, Michael Avenatti, wrote that Ms. Clifford would wire the money into an account of Mr. Trump’s choosing by Friday.
Mr. Avenatti set a deadline of noon Tuesday for Mr. Cohen to answer the offer from Ms. Clifford, known professionally as Stormy Daniels.
Under the terms of the deal detailed in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times, the contract ensuring Ms. Clifford’s silence would be “deemed null and void’’ once she returned the sum called for in her original contract.
Under Mr. Avenatti’s offer, Ms. Clifford would then be allowed to “(a) speak openly and freely about her prior relationship with the President and the attempts to silence her and (b) use and publish any text messages, photos and/or videos relating to the President that she may have in her possession, all without fear of retribution and/or legal liability for damages.”
The letter also seeks an agreement that neither Mr. Trump nor the shell company that Mr. Cohen used to pay Ms. Clifford, which he represents as a party to their October 2016 deal, would move to block the broadcast of an interview that Ms. Clifford taped with “60 Minutes” last week. The letter was also addressed to a lawyer working on the case with Mr. Cohen, Lawrence S. Rosen.
Mr. Cohen and Mr. Rosen did not immediately respond to calls seeking comment.
“As we have always said, this is about a search for the truth and the ability of Ms. Clifford to tell the American people what really happened so they can make their own determination,’’ Mr. Avenatti said in a statement. “Our offer proves this out.”
The offer puts the president and Mr. Cohen — who deny that Mr. Trump had an affair with Ms. Clifford — in a challenging position.
If they agree to Mr. Avenatti’s terms, Ms. Clifford can speak openly about not only the sexual relationship she claims to have had with Mr. Trump shortly after his wife, Melania, gave birth to the couple’s son, Barron, but also about what she describes as an effort to silence her with “hush money.’’
The money, which Mr. Cohen has said came from his own personal funds, is the subject of complaints lodged by the group Common Cause with the Federal Election Commission and Justice Department. Common Cause argues that the payment violated campaign finance laws.
New York State’s professional standards for lawyers require that they take settlement offers directly to their clients. That means Mr. Cohen is under a legal obligation to share the proposed deal with Mr. Trump, who has kept his distance from the matter since news of the contract broke in January.
If they reject the offer, they could be seen as effectively acknowledging the existence of a continuing effort to keep Ms. Clifford silent about an affair that Mr. Cohen and the president say did not happen.
The original deal that Ms. Clifford signed required all parties involved to take any disputes into a private arbitration process. Last month, Mr. Cohen won a temporary restraining order against Ms. Clifford through an arbitrator.
But last week, Mr. Avenatti filed a lawsuit claiming that the initial agreement — and thus, the arbitration requirement — was invalid because Mr. Trump did not personally sign the contract.
Mr. Avenatti’s new offer requires the signatures of “all parties,’’ including that of the president.
Well played! Your move Cohen (Trump).
Daniels is looking to cash in. Too bad she was stupid and signed the agreement in the first place. Oh well, perhaps Trump will piss off the North Koreans and she'll get "hacked" and photos will get "leaked" anyway.
If this ultimately ends up being what brings down Donald Trump, she will be immortalized in every school history book. That is the ultimate statement about where our country is at the moment.
Good luck with that. I dislike the prick as much as you do, but realistically his base is so far up his ass they are high off the methane and believe everything is a conspiracy against him. What I can't figure out is why the Speaker keeps putting up with his shit.
It's actually been a common sentiment expressed on certain news outlets, that this was a violation of campaign finance laws and could bring him down. That's perfectly fair in my view. If he banged a porn star while his wife was nursing his newborn is irrelevant, but using campaign money to hush that kind of story has been done in the past with bad results. So far we are being told to believe that Donald Trump had no knowledge of this whole event when it happened, and his faithful attorney paid the lying porn queen with $130k out of his own pocket and that he never expected to be repaid. There is no lie too outlandish or thoroughly implausible for this administration.
BTW, apparently she did reveal a lot about their relationship-- some time ago. Before she signed the agreement:
Porn Star Stormy Daniels Gave 'In Touch' Magazine A Detailed Account Of Her Affair With Donald Trump. (LINK)
This will just drag on and on and on. If the lawyer did pay it, I don't see how they can get him for breaking campaign finance laws, even if Clownshoes did know about it. If it did get paid out of campaign funds it should be pretty easy to prove with a campaign audit along with an audit of the lawyer. This wouldn't take an admission from Daniels either. Mueller could do it under his edict to go where ever his investigation takes him.
And Clownshoes still got elected...