The news of Stormy Daniels talking to Manhattan prosecutors Wednesday caught the public by surprise. After all, we were focused on key witness Michael Cohen’s second and perhaps final day of testimony in the hush money investigation.
So, you might be wondering: What’s the relevance of the porn star’s Zoom meeting with District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s prosecutors? Don’t they have to put her before the grand jury? Aren’t they already about to indict Donald Trump anyway? What does it all mean?
Good questions.
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Strange as it is to say, even though we call it the Stormy Daniels hush money case, her testimony may not be needed to secure an indictment. Remember, whether she actually had sex with Trump (which he denies) is not a legal element of the crime of falsifying business records, a charge reportedly being considered by Bragg’s office against the former president.
"Nothing about [Stormy Daniels'] testimony or the fact of the affair actually matters here, it's just the payout. Even if for some reason they… didn't have an affair, the crime would be the same" – @harrylitman w/ @NicolleDWallace pic.twitter.com/1gfnmvbUvl
— Deadline White House (@DeadlineWH) March 15, 2023
That is, it’s not about the alleged affair exactly, or even paying hush money, which isn’t itself illegal. Rather, the question is whether any laws were broken in any cover-up. (Federal prosecutors down the street from the Manhattan DA at the Southern District of New York thought so, but only charged Cohen, not Trump, even though Cohen directly implicated Trump.)
Thank you to my amazing attorney (who also always spells my name correctly 🤣) for helping me in our continuing fight for truth and justice. https://t.co/rvie0qBHVs
— Stormy Daniels (@StormyDaniels) March 15, 2023
Nonetheless, even if Manhattan prosecutors don’t call Daniels to testify before the grand jury, they’d still want to know what she’d say at trial if called to the stand there. For that reason, it would be a little odd for prosecutors not to have already known before this week what she would say, given the apparently mature stage of their investigation. If they weren’t already planning on speaking to her, perhaps questions arose during Cohen’s testimony that led them to reach out.
At any rate, we don’t know what prosecutors asked Daniels, or what she told them. But if Trump is indicted, take it as a sign that the meeting gave Bragg the confidence to proceed — or at least didn’t deter him.








