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Also see:
Stormy Daniels; Karen McDougal; Michael Cohen; Dylan
Howard; Barry Levine;
Jump to: 2018; 2019;
Undated:
David Jay Pecker[3]
(born September 24, 1951) is the
chairman
and
CEO of
American Media. He is the
publisher of
National Enquirer,
Star,
Sun,
Weekly World News,
Globe,
Men's Fitness,
Muscle and Fitness,
Flex,
Fit
Pregnancy, and
Shape.
In 2018, Pecker became embroiled in controversy regarding his involvement in a
catch and kill operation to buy exclusive rights to stories that might
embarrass his friend Donald Trump, to prevent the stories from becoming public
during the 2016 presidential campaign. In 2019, former Trump lawyer Michael
Cohen stated that he assisted Pecker in this operation.[4]
Beginning in March 1998,
Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S., of which Pecker was then CEO, began
producing Trump Style, which was distributed to guests at Donald Trump's
properties.[14][15]
Pecker has described himself as a close friend of Trump. Pecker supported
Trump's initial run for president as part of the
Reform Party in 2000.[7]
In an August 2014 meeting at
Trump
Tower, Pecker offered to Trump that he would use the National Enquirer
to catch and kill any allegations of sexual affairs against him.[16]
Trump's lawyer
Michael Cohen requested that Pecker's AMI buy the rights to
Stormy Daniel's story, though Pecker refused to do so.[17]
By 2018, Pecker and AMI found themselves under investigation for using catch and
kill payments, in which AMI purchased the exclusive rights to stories that might
have been damaging to
Trump's 2016 campaign for President and then refused to publish them. Such a
tactic may have represented illegal and/or undeclared "in-kind" campaign
donations under
Federal Election Commission rules.[7]
In March 2018,
Karen McDougal filed a lawsuit against American Media in Los Angeles
Superior Court, aiming to invalidate the non-disclosure agreement preventing her
from speaking about an alleged affair with Trump. Pecker had directed AMI to
purchase the exclusive rights to the story for $150,000 in 2016, allegedly to
keep it from the public.[18]
In April 2018 the lawsuit was settled and McDougal was released from the
agreement. AMI also agreed to feature her on the cover of another AMI magazine,
Men's Journal, in September 2018.[19][20]
In late 2015, AMI paid $30,000 to Dino Sajudin, a doorman at Trump Tower, to
obtain the rights to his story in which he alleged Trump had an affair in the
1980s that resulted in the birth of a child. Sajudin in April 2018 identified
the woman as Trump's former housekeeper.[22]
AMI reporters were given the names of the woman and the alleged child, while
Sajudin passed a lie detector test when testifying that he had heard the story
from others. Shortly after the payment was made, Pecker ordered the reporters to
drop the story.[23]
In April 2018, AMI chief content officer
Dylan
Howard denied the story was “spiked” in a catch and kill operation,
insisting that AMI did not run the story because Sajudin‘s story lacked
credibility.[24]
CNN obtained a copy of the contract between AMI and Sajudin in August 2018,
after AMI had released Sajudin from the contract. CNN published excerpts of the
contract, which instructed Sajudin to provide "information regarding Donald
Trump's illegitimate child", but did not contain further specifics of Sajudin's
story.[25]
In January 2019, Pecker's National Enquirer published what it called
“sleazy text messages and gushing love notes” between
Amazon CEO
Jeff Bezos
and a romantic partner. Bezos began investigating how his personal
communications reached the paper. The next month, Bezos accused the National
Enquirer of
extortion
and blackmail by threatening to release Bezos' intimate pictures,[28]
criminal accusations Pecker denied through an attorney. Bezos wrote[29]
that AMI proposed in writing that Bezos state publically that he and his
security consultant “have no knowledge or basis for suggesting that AMI’s
coverage was politically motivated or influenced by political forces.” In
return, AMI would withhold publication of the pictures.[30]
Both AMI and the
Manhattan prosecutor launched reviews of the accusations.[31]
Any violation of law by AMI would constitute a breach of the immunity agreement
the company reached with prosecutors in 2018 after the paper agreed to "catch
and kill" a story on behalf of then-candidate Donald Trump.[32]
Ronan
Farrow, a journalist, said he and another journalist received similar
demands from AMI.[33]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Pecker
-- 2018 --
November 23: ‘National Enquirer’ Editor May
Spill Trump Secrets in New Book
Ultimate insider Barry Levine may reveal details about Trump's relationship with
‘Enquirer’ editor David Pecker, who has been moving away from his old ally in
recent months.
The Enquirer has been accused of using its financial
muscle to buy up the stories of women who claimed to have had affairs with Trump
and then burying them.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/national-enquirer-editor-may-spill-trump-secrets-in-new-book
December 14:
Trump and the National
Enquirer: David Pecker could be very bad news for Trump
David Pecker, publisher of the National Enquirer, is coming clean at last. Trump
knows that could spell doom
https://www.salon.com/2018/12/14/trump-and-the-national-enquirer-david-pecker-could-be-very-bad-news-for-trump/
-- 2019 --
March 2: Trump's
friend David Pecker, ... CEO of American Media Inc., which publishes the
National Enquirer, would have AMI "catch and kill" stories that might be
embarrassing for Trump by paying people involved for the exclusive rights to
them — but never publishing them.
That's what happened with former Playboy model Karen McDougal before
Election Day in 2016 ...
But there was evidently a great deal more to the relationship between Trump and
Pecker/AMI than the McDougal case, Cohen said. Pecker's company worked many
times to buy embarrassing stories about Trump, even ones that weren't true,
which enabled AMI to compile a "treasure trove" of potentially damaging
material.
Cohen was so interested in what AMI had accumulated that when Pecker was
negotiating to potentially take another important publishing job, Cohen wanted
to buy the Trump archive on behalf of his client to ensure it was kept safe.
Who else would know about the "treasure trove" and these practices? Former
National Enquirer editor Barry Levine would, Cohen said, as well as a vice
president of AMI, Dylan Howard.
https://www.npr.org/2019/03/02/699309857/who-from-trump-world-do-house-democrats-likely-want-to-talk-to-next
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