This is a pretty good breakdown of what to expect from closing today (and probably tomorrow): What to Expect in the Closings at the Trump Trial. I'll do my best to sum it up here:
While we don't have the jury instructions yet, Justice Merchan has stated he wants to hew as closely as possible to NY's standard jury instructions as possible. For the 34 counts Trump is charged with, the standard jury instructions require three elements to be proven:
On or about the date in question, Trump made or caused a false entry in the business records of an enterprise; and
Trump did so with an intent to defraud that
Included an intent to commit another crime or aid or conceal the commission thereof
Expected Defense Closing:
They will likely argue that all of the events from trial happened long ago, mostly from 2015-2017
Center their attack on Michael Cohen's credibility
Cohen's testimony included the best evidence the prosecution has as to Trump's intent. If the jury does not find the testimony credible, intent would be difficult to prove with just the circumstantial evidence
Attack Cohen's credibility of the October 24th, 2016 call, claiming he lied or said things he did not really know
Claim that Cohen was out for revenge against Trump
Claim that Cohen is a liar many times over and is shady
Point out that Cohen stole $60,000 from Trump that was supposedly meant for the vendor RedFinch
Point out that Cohen's record of seeking financial advantage by profiting off of Trump:
Millions of dollars from two books
Potential TV deal
200+ episodes of podcasts
Daily TikToks
Cohen admitting on the stand that he had a financial interest in the outcome of the case
Potentially able to bring in Cohen's prior testimony that he lied under oath in a previous proceeding
Undermine Stormy Daniels' credibility by pointing out the money she's made off of her encounter with Trump
Argue that the business records were not false, and alternatively, if they were false, it was not caused by Trump
Trump thought that the money he was paying Cohen was truly for legal services
Even if the records were false, Trump had nothing to do with the invoice, the checks, or the ledger entry
Criticize the prosecution for not calling Allen Weisselberg, the only person other than Trump and Cohen with firsthand knowledge of the alleged scheme.
The payments followed standard business practice, which they wouldn't do if they were committing crimes
Even if it was a scheme to bury the story, it does not meet the requirement of intent to aid, commit, or conceal another crime because:
Trump intended to protect his family
It was a legal NDA among friends and business associates
Even if Trump intended to benefit his own campaign, he did not do so with unlawful means:
There has to be something illegal about efforts by the co-conspirators to influence the election but the evidence only shows that they got together and agreed that they would talk about positive and negative stories
As for a conspiracy, one of the alleged co-conspirators (Daniels) didn't even want to participate
There was not a coordinated pressure campaign against Cohen to fall in line
As to other unlawful means (FECA and tax violations)
They will argue that the conspiracy would have to undertake a criminal violation of FECA, not civil.
Trump wouldn't have known that his conduct violated FECA
There were no unlawful means as NDAs are legal
Trump took these actions to protect himself and his family from embarrassment
If the jury doesn't believe Cohen, then the prosecution hasn't met the high burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Trump intended to benefit his campaign
There is no evidence that Trump was aware of the tax statute and planned to violate it
Cohen testified that he was not focused on the taxes and just wanted to be repaid
Expected Prosecution Closing:
The records in question (34 invoices, checks, and ledger entries) were false
Former Trump controller Jeffrey McConney and Cohen both testified how the $130k payment to Daniels became $420k owed to Cohen
Handwritten notes from Trump Org CFO Weisselberg and Cohen, and handwritten notes from McConney, calculating the payments to Cohen totaling $420k
Weisselberg's note on the bank statement for Essential Consultants (Cohen's shell LLLC) including a line item for $130k
McConney's testimony that he understood that the $130k was to reimburse Cohen for money already owed, not ongoing legal expenses
McConney: "Allen said we had to get some money to Michael, reimburse Michael... he had a complaint about his prior year bonus, so he wanted to get paid for that. And then there was some other money he was owed."
McConney's testimony on how he sent the invoices to Deborah Tarasoff, who handled checks payable, to cut the monthly checks
There was no retainer agreement and there was no ongoing legal work for which Cohen was actually being paid
Cohen testified that he did very little legal work for Trump in 2017 and he didn't bill for any
Email exchange between McConney and Cohen discussing the first payments shows that Cohen didn't even know the amount he was supposed to be paid. Were this a true invoice for legal work, Cohen would tell McConney the amount, not the other way around
Trump made statements on Twitter that the payments were a reimbursement (notably: not a retainer)
Trump admitted the same in court filings in civil litigation and in a federal government ethics filing
Trump is responsible for the false entries:
Cohen testified that in January 2017, he and Weisselberg went into Trump's office and agreed on the calculations and payments
Cohen testified that he visited Trump in the White House where Trump told him to work with Weisselberg and that a check would be coming
Photos of Cohen and Trump outside the Oval Office, Cohen's electronic calendar showing "Meeting with POTUS", and testimony from presidential executive assistant Madeleine Westerhouse, corroborate that a meeting between Trump and Cohen at the White House took place
The following week, there was an email exchange between Cohen and McConney discussing repayment and the first check was date the same day
Audio recording of a call between Cohen and Trump from September 2016 discussing Cohen needing to open up a shell company and that he talked to Wesisselberg. They discussed opening a company in connection with money being transferred for a transaction involving David Pxcker and that Trump took an active role in requesting more info about the financing for that payment
David Pxcker testified that Cohen asked him to try to convince Trump to pay Cohen back
Hope Hicks testified that it would not be consistent with Cohen's character to make the $130k payment without the expectation of being paid back
Trump micromanaged his expenses and thus would know the true nature of the payments
Tarasoff's testimony that Trump insisted on signing checks personally and would sometimes refuse to sign even when they were approved by Weisselberg
Westerhout's testimony about how Trump paid attention to details and how in the beginning of his presidency he was still doing a lot of work with the Trump Organization
Excerpts from Trump: Think Like a Billionaire where trump said "I received a check for fifty cents, and we at the Trump Organization deposited it. They may call that cheap; I call it watching the bottom line... As I said before, I always sign my checks, so I know where my money's going. In the same spirit, I also always try to read my bills to make sure I'm not being overcharged"
Trump's Intent was Fraudulent
The prosecution will likely argue that ignorance of the law is no excuse in New York; there is no requirement that Trump knew specifically what laws he was breaking or whether he was breaking laws. Prosecutors only need to show he consciously and purposefully undertook the actions that in turn violated that statute.
In the August 2015 Trump Tower meeting between Pxcker, Cohen, and Trump, they conceived of the catch and kill scheme with the singular focus of helping Trump win the election
Pxcker testified that after the meeting, he told the Editor-in-Chief of the Enquirer, Dylan Howard, that "we were going to try to help the campaign, and to do that, I need to keep this as quiet as possible."
Pxcker also testified that:
He would hold off publishing the story from doorman Dino Sajudin until after the election
His principle purpose in entering an agreement with McDougal was to "suppress her story as to prevent it from influencing the election"
He suppressed stories that were "Enquirer gold" in favor to Trump's campaign
The prosecution will argue that this is an unreported donation
When asked if Trump ever said anything that made him think his concern was his family rather than the campaign, Pxcker said "I thought it was for the campaign... his family wasn't mentioned"
The prosecution will try to remind the jury of the federal non-prosecution agreement with AMI in which Pxcker admitted to federal election law violations
After the Access Hollywood story broke, Keith Davidson texted Dylan Howard that "Trump is f**ked" to which Howard responded "wave the white flag, it's over people!"
Davidson testified that the desire to suppress Daniels' story spiked after the scandal
Hope Hicks testified that the campaign was in crisis mode after the Access Hollywood tape came out
While the testified that Trump was also concerned about how his wife would react, the prosecution will argue that she made clear the primary concern was the impact to the campaign
She also testified that she did not believe Cohen would make the payment out of the goodness of his heart and that Trump explicitly linked the suppression of the Daniels story to the 2016 campaign
Hicks: "He wanted to know how it was playing, and just my thoughts and opinion about this story versus having the story - a different kind of story before the campaign had Michael not made that Payment. And I think Mr. Trump's onion was it was better to be dealing with it now, and that it would have been bad to have that story come out before the election."
Cohen ties together Trump's intent
Had multiple conversations with Trump about the Daniels payment
Discussed the need to buy the McDougal and Daniels stories
Trump ultimately approving the payment
With Trump's approval, Cohen and Davidson agreed to $130k payment on October 11th. Trump tried to drag out the process until after the election
The prosecution will argue that the evidence cumulatively shows Trump's fraudulent intent to commit election fraud by concealing payments for a campaign expense
The prosecution can point to a second intent to commit a crime with tax violations
Per Trump in his book, he is a penny pincher but he paid more than the $130k because he knew that in order to continue the cover-up, Cohen would have to falsely claim the reimbursement as income and pay tax.
Cohen would need to file false tax documents
Trump is a savvy businessman who certainly understands tax basics
The mere fact of grossing up Cohen's payment as income is a violation of the law
Trump knew that disguising Cohen's reimbursement as income was inaccurate and wrong
Defense will likely feel the need to address Cohen's credibility challenges
Cohen admitted and explained his mistakes, lies, and crimes
He owned up to what he did wrong and paid the price for it
Most of Cohen's misconduct revolved around the work he did for Trump, including his tax and campaign finance violations connected with the Daniels hush money payment and reimbursement
He was Trump's lieutenant and did Trump's dirty work until his legal problems (stemming from Trump) finally caught up with him
He has admitted his bias and been honest with the jury about his hatred toward Trump
Witness testimony corroborates Cohen's account
Pxcker, Davidson, Tarasoff, and Hicks confirmed key details of Cohen's testimony
Gary Farro (the banker who worked with Cohen to set up the shell accounts) also corroborated Cohen
Documentary evidence corroborates Cohen
Extensive paper trail of bank records, emails, text messages, phone logs, and business records that support Cohen's testimony
Audio recording of an important conversation between Cohen and Trump discussing the McDougal payment in detail
If Cohen was lying, he could have invented additional conversations or meetings with Trump
He could have testified that he and Trump specifically discussed campaign finance or tax violations or the broad illegality of their conduct
Instead of lying to make Trump look worse, he testified to what actually happened
His testimony has been consistent over several years since he first came clean and testified to Congress
Trump's attack on Cohen for stealing $60k only makes sense if the jury believes that the $420k of which it was a part was not legitimate legal fees
His only conviction for perjury came from a lie he told for Trump
Bottom line
This scheme was not a minor peccadillo but a serious conspiracy to corrupt the 2016 election
We will never know whether the efforts to cover up unfolding scandals after the release of the Access Hollywood tape changed the outcome of the election, but the fact that the question will forever hang over the contest speaks to the gravity of the wrongdoing
Keith Davidson sent a text message to Dylan Howard on election night when Trump was expected to win saying "What have he done?" to which Howard responded "Oh my god"
New York is the financial center of the world and we cannot have two sets of rules: one for ex-presidents and one for everybody else
Every business that operates in New York needs to know they must keep honest books and records
The Jury is entrusted with the responsibility to make sure there is accountability for all of that
Conclusion:
Expect a focus on three key issues:
Cohen's credibility
Whether or not the business records were falsified
Whether Trump intended those documents to ocver up predicate crimes