Trump and his one-time confidant meet again, this time in a courtroom

Former U.S. President Donald Trump with attorneys Emil Bove, left, and Todd Blanche, right, attends his trial for allegedly covering up hush money payments at Manhattan Criminal Court on May 3, 2024, in New York City. (Curtis Means/Pool/Getty Images/TNS)

NEW YORK — Her voice low, her posture tense, the woman who spent years steering Donald Trump through strife and scandal stepped to the witness stand Friday carrying a different burden. She was there under the fluorescent lights of a dreary Manhattan courtroom, seated 15 feet from the former president she once fiercely defended, to testify at his criminal trial.

“I’m really nervous,” Hope Hicks, the onetime Trump spokesperson, messaging maestro and all-around adviser, acknowledged to the prosecutor questioning her, declaring what was already obvious to the riveted courtroom.

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Hicks’ unease came to a head hours later as Trump’s lawyer began to cross-examine her — and she began to cry. Trump locked his eyes on her.

The question that initially unnerved Hicks was about her time at the Trump Organization, the family’s business, where she had fond memories of working. Hicks left the stand, and the trial paused so that she could compose herself. She returned minutes later to continue her testimony, occasionally dabbing her eyes with a tissue.

The striking show of emotion reflected Hicks’ discomfort with testifying against a man who launched her career and entrusted her with his reputation. Each time the questioning conjured up another memory of working for Trump — at his company, on his campaign, and finally in his White House — Hicks appeared to fight back tears.

Hicks, who fell out of favor with Trump once it emerged that she had privately voiced anger at the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol by his supporters, said in her morning testimony that they had not spoken in nearly two years. And when she took the stand, Trump, who faces 34 felony charges of falsifying records to cover up a sex scandal involving a porn actor, was initially glued to her anxious testimony.

The prosecution summoned Hicks — against her will — to highlight Trump’s outsize role in the suppression of this scandal and others. But she could be remembered as a key witness for both sides.

She helped the Manhattan district attorney’s office reinforce its story about why Michael Cohen, Trump’s personal lawyer, was desperate to pay hush money to the porn actor, Stormy Daniels, in the final weeks of the 2016 campaign. And she provided the defense grist to argue that Trump was a family man, and that his motive for suppressing damning stories may not have been to win the election but to protect his relationship with his family and his wife.

Hicks delivered several hours of testimony to a jury of 12 transfixed New Yorkers before being excused in the late afternoon.

She transported the jurors back to the 2016 presidential campaign, guiding them through the 25th floor of Trump Tower, bringing them 30,000 feet in the air aboard the plane nicknamed Trump Force One and placing them inside the campaign car on the way to a rally. It was in these moments, which Hicks painted in vivid detail, that she and Trump managed one scandal after another.

The first crisis arose when The Washington Post contacted Hicks about a recording it obtained in which Trump had boasted on the set of a television show about grabbing women by the genitals. The tape, from the set of “Access Hollywood,” sent the campaign into a frenzy, as a cadre of advisers huddled inside Trump Tower.

Hicks said she was “a little stunned,” but had a “good sense that this was going to be a massive story and sort of dominate the news cycle for the next several days at least.”

Trump was upset as well, she said, but one of his early reactions was to tell her that his comments about assaulting women “didn’t sound like something he would say.”

The fallout from the tape soon spread, prompting Daniels to seize the opportunity to sell her story of a sexual encounter with Trump. Cohen raced to buy her silence, striking the $130,000 hush-money deal at the heart of the case against the former president. After he made the deal, that crisis, for the time being, was contained.

But in the campaign’s waning days, The Wall Street Journal contacted Hicks with more damaging news. The newspaper was prepared to report that The National Enquirer, a supermarket tabloid that had close ties to Trump, had bought and buried the story of a former Playboy model who said she had an affair with Trump years earlier.

Hicks first tried to work the campaign’s connections to Rupert Murdoch, the media mogul who owned the Journal, so she could “buy a little extra time to deal with this,” she said. When that failed, she called Cohen, who had a relationship with the tabloid’s publisher, David Pecker.

Trump, she testified, told her that the affair story was not true, but Hicks said she did not remember whether he “verbatim” stated that he had no knowledge of that hush-money deal.

The Journal also planned to write about Daniels, but Hicks again denied “unequivocally” to a reporter that Trump had a relationship with the porn actor.

Trump was elected, but the Journal was not done digging. In early 2018, it published a story exposing Cohen’s $130,000 payment to Daniels. When asked about that, Hicks became fuzzy, saying she could not recall the period. She grew considerably more tense, clenching her jaw and stumbling a bit in her speech.

Hicks said she did not have knowledge of the records Trump is accused of falsifying. Those records, prosecutors say, disguised Trump’s repayment of Cohen for the hush money.

Still, Hicks managed to make some memorable moments for the prosecution’s case, including when she recalled a potentially crucial conversation: “I believe I heard Mr. Trump speaking to Mr. Cohen shortly after the story was published,” she said, which prosecutors might use to argue that Trump was involved in the machinations.

And she delivered a memorable observation that bolstered the prosecution’s argument that Trump directed Cohen’s payment. She scoffed at a prosecution question prompting her to consider whether Cohen “would have made a $130,000 payment to Stormy Daniels out of the kindness of his heart.”

That sort of altruistic move, she said, “would be out of character for Michael.”

Her emotional testimony helped and harmed her old boss in the same breath. She remarked that the Trump Organization was big and successful but run “like a small family business,” and that because of that, “Everybody that works there, in some sense, reports to Mr. Trump.”

That plays into the prosecution’s portrait of Trump as a micromanager who must have known about the false records and the sex scandal they obscured.

“He knew what he wanted to say and how he wanted to say it, and we were all just following his lead,” Hicks said.

© 2024 The New York Times Company

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