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Get Caught Up: Trump’s Alleged Affair With Adult Film Star Stormy Daniels

January 20, 2018 by  
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Stormy Daniels appears at the Wicked Pictures booth at the 2017 AVN Adult Entertainment Expo at the Hard Rock Hotel Casino on January 18, 2017, in Las Vegas, Nev.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images


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Stormy Daniels appears at the Wicked Pictures booth at the 2017 AVN Adult Entertainment Expo at the Hard Rock Hotel Casino on January 18, 2017, in Las Vegas, Nev.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

It’s been quite a news week, even by recent standards.

The U.S. is potentially hours away from a partial government shutdown. The debate rages on over the president’s reported comments about not wanting to accept immigrants from “s**thole countries.” “Girtherism” has erupted over the president’s latest height and weight measurements. Officials are scrambling to figure out how to avoid another false ballistic missile alarm, like the one residents of Hawaii suffered last weekend.

Also, the Wall Street Journal reported that Donald Trump’s personal lawyer at one point paid off a pornographic actress to keep quiet about her alleged affair with Trump.

The affair between Trump and actress Stormy Daniels is reported to have taken place in 2006. At that time, Trump had been married for a year and a half to Melania Trump, now the first lady, and their son Barron was four months old. In statements to the Wall Street Journal, both Trump and Daniels denied an affair.

Startlingly, we are in such a news cycle that it’s possible to have ignored a story about the president of the United States’ alleged affair with an adult film star. If you missed it, here’s a rundown of who reported what, what allegedly happened and how people are responding to the whole thing.

The basics

The story that Daniels and Trump had an affair was in fact already public before the 2016 election. In a November 4, 2016, piece, the Wall Street Journal wrote that the National Enquirer (whose parent company is headed by Trump friend David Pecker) paid $150,000 to former Playboy model Karen McDougal for her story about an affair with Trump…then killed the story, keeping it quiet.

That story also reported that Daniels had been considering going on ABC’s Good Morning America to talk about her alleged affair, and that the Trump campaign also denied the affair. But the Stormy Daniels story gained new life on January 12 of this year, when the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump had arranged to pay Daniels $130,000 to keep quiet about a 2006 sexual encounter between them.

In that story, both the president and Daniels denied that the encounter took place.

“President Trump once again vehemently denies any such occurrence as has Ms. Daniels,” Trump lawyer Michael Cohen told the Journal.

And in a statement also supplied to the Journal by Cohen, Daniels denied both the affair and receiving any payment.

“Rumors that I have received hush money from Donald Trump are completely false,” she told the Journal via Cohen.

However, celebrity magazine In Touch soon threw those denials into question, publishing a nearly-5,200-word, never-before-published 2011 interview with Daniels describing several occasions on which she met or spoke by phone with Trump, including a sexual encounter.

On January 18, the Journal followed up with a story about how the Trump team hid the payments, setting up Essential Consultants, LLC in Delaware on October 17, 2016, to make the payments.

Since the Journal first ran with the story about the $130,000 payment, multiple other outlets, including Slate, Fox News and the Daily Beast have revealed that they had started reporting on the story before the 2016 election.

However, each outlet had a reason why the story did not run — Slate’s Jacob Weisberg wrote this week that Daniels had stopped responding to him “about a week before the election,” and that he couldn’t confirm that she had been paid for her silence. The Daily Beast likewise wrote that Daniels backed out of a potential interview five days before the election. And Ken LaCorte, who had headed up Fox News’ digital operation at the time, wrote this week that he thought his organization’s story didn’t have enough evidence to be publishable.

“In the end, it was an easy decision, and no legitimate news organization would have published what we had,” he wrote at LaCorte News.

Who is Stormy Daniels?

Daniels, whose given name is Stephanie Clifford, has acted in 152 films and directed 78 according to IMDB . In addition to appearing in adult movies, she has had bit parts in some mainstream films, including The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up.

She had a brush with politics when — fueled by a “Draft Stormy” movement — she considered a 2010 challenge against then-Sen. David Vitter, R-La. She ended her campaign in April of 2010, expressing her frustration with the political system, as well as her treatment by the political establishment and press.

“Simply because I did not fit in their mold of what an independent working woman should be, the media and political elite have sought to relegate my sense of civic responsibility to mere sideshow antics,” she said in a statement.

Vitter himself had had his own sex scandal in 2007, when it was revealed that he was a client of the “DC Madam.”

What’s in the In Touch interview

At more than 5,000 words, there’s a lot of detail. The majority of it isn’t about the sexual encounter itself. Daniels lays out years of interactions with Trump. She explained that she met Trump at a 2006 charity golf tournament, where he asked her to dinner. She said they ate dinner in his hotel room and conversed for hours before having sex.

Trump continued to call her regularly after that — “about every 10 days,” Daniels said.

He always called me “honeybunch.” He’s like, “How’s it going, honeybunch?” He always started the conversation off, I think it was always his excuse to call, “I just read about you in such and such or there’s a quote about you in magazine, I turned on my channel in my hotel room and guess whose face popped up?”

During that first encounter, Daniels added, Trump had talked about getting her a spot on The Apprentice, and in these phone calls, he continued to say he wanted her on the show, though she expressed skepticism.

In addition to phone calls, Daniels said she and Trump encountered each other at parties and that she at one point went to meet him in Beverly Hills, where she spent several hours watching Shark Week with the future president (among the many details Daniels recounted was that Trump “is obsessed with sharks. Terrified of sharks.”).

As of 2011, when the In Touch interview was conducted, Daniels said her last interaction with Trump had been a year and a half earlier. She also expressed anger that he had “promised” she would be on his reality TV show.

“I didn’t have any unrealistic expectations of actually being on the show; I figured my chances were 50-50,” she told In Touch. “I did believe that he was shy. So now I wonder if the whole thing was just a f***ing lie.”

In Touch added that the story of Daniels’ alleged affair with Trump is backed up by two others: “The account of her affair was corroborated by one of her good friends and supported by her ex-husband.” The magazine also said that Daniels, her friend and her ex-husband all passed polygraph tests.

How are people reacting?

Any political sex scandal is going to get attention. When the president is involved, that magnifies it a hundredfold. And on top of that, when one participant is a porn star (as opposed to, say, a nurse or an architect or a housekeeper) it ups the salaciousness factor exponentially.

Still, the sex as recounted by Daniels was consensual, and it doesn’t look like anything otherwise illegal took place. As Trump and Daniels now both deny the encounter, there is the overarching question of who might be lying and about what.

But some argue that this story matters for other reasons.

At the Washington Post, Molly Roberts argued that the alleged sex wasn’t the problem here so much as the alleged cover-up, as it could compromise the president:

If a foreign country acquires damning information about the United States’ leader, it could, either by threatening to expose past indiscretions or by laying a sexual trap, twist international policy to its benefit. A domestic group could also hold dirty little secrets over the man in charge to draw special favors.

That — not some vague concept of the president as perfect role model — is what makes it newsworthy that a president or presidential contender may have paid a bunch of people not to say they had adulterous sex with him.

In addition, as some of Trump’s supporters are conservative Christians, there’s the possibility that Trump’s alleged actions could alienate them. On Wednesday, the National Review’s Jonah Goldberg called on social conservatives to denounce the president’s actions:

[W]hile voters are perfectly free to make their own decisions about what factors they want to take into account in their estimation of politicians, I am at a loss as to how various social- and religious-conservative leaders can, with clear conscience, or even a straight face, shrug off this kind of thing, never mind defend it. … At the very least, Jerry Falwell Co. should be condemning Trump’s behavior.

However, some commentators — like MSNBC’s Joy Reid — believe that the list of women accusing the president of sexual assault and other misconduct should get more attention than this alleged affair.

What the White House and other Republicans are saying

Very little. In a Thursday press gaggle, deputy press secretary Raj Shah quickly shut down questions about Daniels.

Q: This is an issue that hasn’t really gotten much attention amidst everything else, but nonetheless, this woman named Stephanie Clifford, goes by the name “Stormy Daniels,” she says that she had an affair with the President. She spoke on record about it to a magazine. They say that she took a polygraph test. What is the President’s response to her allegations?

MR. SHAH: This allegation was asked and answered during the campaign, and I’ll point you to those comments.

Q: Was there some kind of settlement, some kind of hush money that was paid?

MR. SHAH: Like I said, this matter was asked and answered during the campaign, and anything else could be directed to Michael Cohen.

Meanwhile, there hasn’t been much reaction from top Republicans on Capitol Hill. Trump supporter Steve King, a Republican representative from Iowa, told Buzzfeed News that the Daniels story “didn’t catch my attention.”

“When I’m going through and reading the news, I need to read the things that I can change,” he added. “So I filter things out and get down to, ‘What can I have an effect on?’”

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Family of malnourished siblings lived in trailer behind Texas home for years, current owner says

January 20, 2018 by  
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The man who purchased the home where David and Louise Turpin once lived with their several children in Rio Vista, Texas said the previous family ended up moving into a trailer behind the home years after “trashing” it.

Billy Baldwin and his mother bought the home in Rio Vista — about 40 miles south of Fort Worth — in April 2011 after a neighbor who worked with his father informed them that it was for sale, he told ABC News on Friday.

When Baldwin called a realtor to look into buying the property, which included 36 acres of land, it was in such bad shape that he was informed he’d have to sign a waiver before entering the structure that said he wouldn’t sue them if he was injured inside, he said.

PHOTO: It took about three months and up to $35,000 to restore the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived before moving to California. ABC News
It took about three months and up to $35,000 to restore the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived before moving to California.

The Turpins moved to Rio Vista after their home in Fort Worth was foreclosed on, records show. The home in Rio Vista sits on land that has mineral rights, so the family was receiving “nice royalties” off of the gas well on the property while they lived there for more than 10 years, Baldwin said.

After Baldwin bought the home, one of the neighbors told him that the family “up and disappeared” after one of their daughters was seen walking up the street. She allegedly talked to neighbors, asking for a ride and inquiring on how to obtain a driver’s license, Baldwin said.

“You don’t just walk away from a place after you’ve been paying on it 10 or 12 years,” Baldwin said, acknowledging the strange behavior.

PHOTO: It took about three months and up to $35,000 to restore the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived before moving to California. ABC News
It took about three months and up to $35,000 to restore the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived before moving to California.

While the Turpins were living in the home, one of the Baldwin family’s cows got onto their property, and the Turpins “didn’t even answer the door” when Baldwin’s mother went to inform them, he said.

Baldwin had never met the family and had “no idea” what had happened in the home after he bought it, he said. he didn’t notice anything strange inside, besides the filth, but he later found a Polaroid photo of one of the bedrooms, which shows a rope tied to the end of a bed rail, he said.

PHOTO: Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, found a Polaroid photo that appeared to show a rope tied to the end of a bed after he bought the home. Jimmy Baldwin
Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, found a Polaroid photo that appeared to show a rope tied to the end of a bed after he bought the home.

One photo that Baldwin took after he bought the property shows a drawing on one of the bedroom walls.

PHOTO: Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, shared photos of the interior of the home after he bought it. Jimmy Baldwin
Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, shared photos of the interior of the home after he bought it.

Even though Baldwin, who owns several rental properties, said he is “used to working on houses,” he described the condition of the home as “bad.” The mortgage company had even spent two months cleaning it up to get it “halfway presentable” before they put it on the market, he said.

“It was just nasty,” Baldwin said. There was “all kinds of stuff” all over the walls and carpet, the bathroom floor was “totally rotted out,” the roof was leaking, and there were holes in the walls and ceilings, he said.

PHOTO: Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, shared photos of the interior of the home after he bought it. Jimmy Baldwin
Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, shared photos of the interior of the home after he bought it.

PHOTO: Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, shared photos of the interior of the home after he bought it. Jimmy Baldwin
Jimmy Baldwin, the current homeowner of the Rio Vista, Texas, home where the Turpin family once lived, shared photos of the interior of the home after he bought it.

It took about three months and up to $35,000 to restore the home, which Baldwin uses as a rental property, he said.

The 2,300 square foot home with four bedrooms and two bathrooms was so trashed that the family bought a “brand new double-wide” and placed it several hundred yards behind the house in the backyard, Baldwin said. Although the trailer was gone by the time he purchased the property, an above-ground water line that led from the house to the trailer and an electrical meter were still visible, he said.

Hill County Sheriff Rodney Watson described Rio Vista as a tight-knit community where people “take care of each other” and know each other well.

“I never would have dreamed, you know, that somebody out in a lil’ country like this where everybody’s friendly would have something like that going on,” he said.

The Turpins appear to have left Texas for California after moving from their Rio Vista home, moving to Murrieta and then Perris, where they were living when their 17-year-old daughter escaped last weekend and called 911.

Incident reports from Hill County detail an incident in which stray livestock escaped the Turpins’ property in 2003 and another in which the Turpins’ black-and-white border collie bit their then 4-year-old daughter in the face in 2001.

PHOTO: Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.David Allen Turpin/Facebook
Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.

Emergency dispatchers were not called to the home until the day after the 4-year-old was bitten, according to the incident report. She was taken to the hospital to receive stitches on her face, and the dog was taken to a veterinarian to be put down, according to the report.

In the 2003 incident, a pig escaped the Turpins’ property and ate a 55-pound bag of a neighbor’s dog food, Watson said. David Turpin retrieved the pig and replaced the dog food, Watson said.

If the responding officers in both incidents had any indication that something was wrong with the children, they would have alerted child protective services, Watson said, adding that he knows several people in Hill County who homeschool their children and “do an excellent job at it.”

PHOTO: Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.David Allen Turpin/ Facebook
Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.

The Turpin children — who are ages 2 to 29 — were subjected to repeated beatings, including strangulation, and were only allowed to shower once a year, Riverside County District Attorney Mike Hestrin said a press conference on Thursday. The abuse allegedly intensified when they moved from Texas to California, with the siblings telling authorities that their parents started tying them up many years ago, first with ropes and eventually with chains and padlocks, Hestrin said.

All of the siblings, except for the 2-year-old, are severely malnourished, Hestrin said. They are all being treated at local hospitals.

PHOTO: David Turpin and Louise Turpin appear in court for their arraignment in Riverside, California, Jan. 18, 2018.Gina Ferazzi/Reuters/Pool
David Turpin and Louise Turpin appear in court for their arraignment in Riverside, California, Jan. 18, 2018.

David and Louise Turpin were arrested on charges of torture and child endangerment. During their arraignment on Thursday, they both pleaded not guilty and are being held on $12 million bonds each.

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