'We were losing control,' Cohen says of Daniels' payment
Michael Cohen told jurors that he grew concerned in mid-October 2016 when Stormy Daniels' attorney Keith Davidson told him he was backing out of the nondisclosure deal over Cohen's failure to pay Daniels the agreed-upon $130,000.
"We were losing control over the settlement ... in order to prevent the story from coming out as a direct result of my failure to wire funds," Cohen told jurors.
"Were you concerned?" Hoffinger asked.
"Very much so," Cohen said.
Later that day, Cohen texted National Enquirer editor Dylan Howard to try to revive the deal, telling the jurors that the idea of the story going to an outlet like the Daily Mail was "incredibly stressful and incredibly important."
Cohen said he then tried to call Trump over a matter of "great importance." Cohen testified that "I didn't forward the funds, she's now declaring the agreement void," and he said he wanted to tell Trump "the story was now going to go to the Daily Mail."
The call lasted eight seconds. "I left a voicemail," Cohen said.