Judge denies motion for mistrial after Stormy Daniels testimony
Prosecutor Susan Hoffinger pushed back on the defense's request for a mistrial, arguing Daniels' testimony was consistent and permissible.
"This story -- her account -- is highly probative of the defendant's intent," she said. "This is not new. This is not a new account."
"They opened the door to this," she said. Her testimony was necessary for prosecutors "to rehabilitate credibility where they attacked it" in their opening statement.
Hoffinger defended her direct examination, telling Merchan she dialed back the testimony at his request.
"We were extremely mindful of not eliciting too much testimony about the actual act," Hoffinger said.
Blanche fired back, telling Merchan that the testimony from Daniels was a harmful distraction.
"I don't think anybody can listen to what that witness said and think it had anything to do with the charged conduct," he said. "You run a very high risk of the jury not being able to focus on the evidence that really does matter."
"I don't believe we are at the point where a mistrial is warranted," Merchan said.