AFTER MONTHS OF DENIAL, TRUMP STILL CAN’T TELL THE TRUTH
…Rudy Giuliani telling Trump’s
lies
Trump and company earn another
Four Pinocchio’s
The fact
checkers at the Washington Post are very careful at using the word “lie” when they are fact checking anyone,
including the president. Instead of saying it was an outright lie, they have previously used words such as, “untruth, fib, falsification, fabrication,
falsehood, invention, fiction, cock-and-bull story, flight
of fancy, half-truth, a story, tall tale, fairy tale, or
even: a whopper.”
As an example,
one of the few times The Post’s fact
checkers have used the word “lie” was
when they referred to the lie about performance drug-use by the cyclist, Lance
Armstrong.
But when it
comes to the president’s latest claim that he did not know about the hush-money
payments to silence women he had sex with until much later, the headline from The Post was:
Not just Misleading, Not merely false.
A LIE!
Then there is a picture showing their four assigned Pinocchio’s.
As of this
month, The Washington Post’s Fact Checkers
had documented 4,229 false or misleading claims from the president. That’s an average of nearly 7.6 a day.
Early into his
presidency, one aide, Kellyanne Conway, famously said he was operating with “alternative facts”. And on Aug. 19, Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani declared: “Truth isn’t truth.”
Many of the
president’s critics demand that his falsehoods must all be called “lies”. But the Post Fact Checkers have been
hesitant to go that far, as it is difficult to document whether the president actually knows he is not telling the truth.
On Aug. 22,
Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said during a White
House briefing that it was “a
ridiculous accusation” to say the president has lied to the American
people. Now we know, that’s a bald faced lie!
However, this
week’s guilty plea under oath by Trump’s lawyer, Michael Cohen, he offers
indisputable evidence that Trump and his allies have been deliberately
dishonest at every turn in their statements regarding payments to Daniels and
Playboy model Karen McDougal.
Here is the
definitive story of Trump's lies:
The initial
lie was basically: ‘no knowledge’
Nov. 4, 2016: The Wall Street Journal reports days
before the election that the National
Enquirer agreed to pay $150,000 to McDougal, a former Playboy centerfold
model, for an account of an alleged affair with Trump, but they did not publish
it. It was part of their “catch and kill” operation.
The publisher
of the National Enquirer, American Media Inc. (AMI),
issues a statement: “AMI has not paid
people to kill damaging stories about Mr. Trump.” Trump campaign
spokeswoman Hope Hicks said: “We have no
knowledge of any of this.”
What we know
now: In August 2015, Cohen; David Pecker, the chairman of AMI; and “one or more members of the campaign” forged an agreement under
which AMI would deal with negative
stories about Trump’s “relationships with
women” by purchasing the stories and then not publishing anything,
according to the criminal information filed by federal prosecutors in
the Cohen case. (In court,
Cohen said he took action “at the request of the candidate” and knew
it was illegal.) In August 2016, McDougal was paid $150,000 by AMI for the rights to her story, which
the National Enquirer never
published.
Jan. 12,
2018: The Wall Street Journal exposes the
$130,000 payment to Daniels. Cohen and the White
House sidestep questions about the payment but deny an affair between
Daniels and Trump ever took place. “This
is now the second time that you are raising outlandish allegations against my
client," Cohen tells the Journal. "You have attempted to perpetuate this false narrative for over a year;
a narrative that has been consistently denied by all parties since at least
2011.”
Jan. 18: White House spokesman Raj
Shah dodges questions about Daniels by telling reporters: “This matter was asked and answered during
the campaign, and anything else could be directed to Michael Cohen.”
Feb.
13: Cohen then tells the New York Times he used his own funds to
pay Daniels. “Neither the Trump
Organization nor the Trump campaign was a party to the transaction with Ms.
Clifford, and neither reimbursed me for the payment, either directly or
indirectly,” he says. “The payment to
Ms. Clifford was lawful, and was not a campaign contribution or a campaign
expenditure by anyone.”
What we know
now: Cohen, in pleading guilty under oath to two felony violations of
campaign finance law, said he was reimbursed by the Trump Organization. Court filings showed that the company “grossed up” the payments to cover
Cohen’s taxes and also added a bonus, for a total of $420,000 in payments,
according to the criminal information.
Trump’s
spokespeople keep saying he ‘was not
aware of any of it’
March 7: White House press secretary Sarah
Sanders asserts that the president told her he was unaware of the
payments. “I’ve had conversations with
the president about this,” she says. “There
was no knowledge of any payments from the president, and he’s denied all of
these allegations.” She adds: “Anything
beyond that, I would refer you to the president’s outside counsel.”
March
9: Michael Avenatti, Stormy Daniels’s lawyer, discloses emails showing
that Cohen used his Trump Organization email address when he arranged the
$130,000 wire transfer. Cohen falsely tells ABC News that he used his own funds: “The funds were taken from my home equity line and transferred internally
to my LLC account in the same bank.” He said the use of the Trump
Organization email address meant nothing because “I basically used it for everything.”
March
26: After Daniels appears on CBS’s “60
Minutes” to describe the alleged affair, White House spokesman Raj Shah sidesteps a question about
whether the Trump campaign violated campaign finance laws, referring reporters
to Cohen. “The president strongly,
clearly and consistently denied the underlying claims,” he adds.
March
28: David Schwartz, an attorney for Cohen, tells CNN that Trump was completely unaware of the payment. “The president was not aware of the
agreement. At least Michael Cohen never told him about the agreement. I can
tell you that,” he says.
What we know
now: Cohen, in making his guilty plea under oath, said he worked “in coordination with and at the direction of
a candidate for federal office,” referring to Trump, to make payments to
thwart McDougal and Daniels from telling their stories.
March
29: Schwartz tells NBC
News that Trump “100 percent”
did not reimburse Cohen.
April
5: Trump flatly tells reporters he did not know about the
$130,000 payment.
Reporter: “Did you know about the $130,000 payment to
Stormy Daniels?”
Trump: “No, no.”
Reporter: “Then why did Michael Cohen make [the
payment], if there was no truth to her allegations?”
Trump: “You’ll have to ask Michael Cohen. Michael’s
my attorney, and you’ll have to ask Michael.”
Reporter: “Do you know where he got the money to make
that payment?”
Trump: “No. I don’t know.”
What we know
now: Every answer was false. Trump knew about the payment, he knew Cohen
made the payment as part of an effort to kill damaging stories, and he knew
Cohen was reimbursed.
April
26: The White House spin starts
to shift after Cohen’s office is raided by federal prosecutors on April 9.
Trump tells Fox News: “Michael
would represent me, and represent me on some things. He represents me — like
with this crazy Stormy Daniels deal, he represented me.”
May
2: Giuliani tells Fox
News that Trump paid Cohen back for the $130,000 payment, but it could
not be considered a campaign finance violation.
“They funneled it through the law firm, and
the president repaid it,” Giuliani says, adding that “is going to turn out to be perfectly legal. That money was not campaign
money. Sorry, I’m giving you a fact now that you don’t know. It’s not campaign
money, no campaign finance violation.”
Giuliani
suggests Trump was largely in the dark about what the money was used for.
"He didn’t know about the specifics
of it, as far as I know. But he did know about the general arrangement, that
Michael would take care of things like this,” he says.
May
3: Trump tweets about the supposed arrangement. “Mr. Cohen, an attorney, received a monthly
retainer, not from the campaign and having nothing to do with the campaign,
from which he entered into, through reimbursement, a private contract between
two parties, known as a non-disclosure agreement, or NDA,” he says, adding: “Money from the campaign, or campaign contributions,
played no roll in this transaction.”
What we know
now: This was a lie. Cohen did not get repaid through a monthly retainer.
He sought reimbursement for the payment, and the Trump Organization agreed to
pay $420,000, at a monthly rate of $35,000, according to court filings. The
company then falsely listed the payments in its books as a retainer for legal
work. “In truth and in fact, there was no
such retainer agreement, and the monthly invoices Cohen submitted were not in
connection for any legal services he had provided in 2017,” prosecutors
wrote.
May
4: Giuliani releases a statement in which he claims the payment
to Daniels was intended only to “protect
the president’s family” from painful publicity about an alleged affair and
that “it would have been done in any
event, whether he was a candidate or not.”
What we know
now: The deal with Daniels was part of an arrangement to shield Trump from
negative stories that was hatched by Cohen, AMI
and the Trump campaign shortly after he started running for president,
according to court filings.
July
24: Cohen attorney Lanny Davis releases a recording Cohen had
secretly made of a conversation with Trump two months before the election,
which the two discussed the arrangement with the National Enquirer to pay $150,000 to McDougal.
Aug. 21:
Cohen, in court, implicates Trump by admitting that the hush-money payments had
been intended to help the campaign. The payment to Daniels was deemed an
excessive campaign contribution by Cohen, and the McDougal payment from AMI violated a ban on corporate
donations to campaigns.
And the lie
continues:
Aug.
22: In a Fox News interview, Trump sought to reframe the issue. He
insisted that the payments had not been a “campaign
violation.” The payments “didn’t come
out of the campaign,” he said. “They
came from me.
After months
of denial and deception, Trump still can’t tell the truth.
Copyright
G.Ater 2018
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