NEW YORK -- With Donald Trump's fixer-turned-foe Michael Cohen    expected to take the witness stand Monday, the judge in the    former president's hush money case issued prosecutors a stern    warning: Get Cohen to stop his taunting posts and jabs at    Trump.  
    Judge Juan M. Merchan's comments came as a dramatic and    consequential week in the first criminal trial of a former    American president drew to a close Friday. The prosecution    could rest its case by the end of next week, prosecutor Joshua    Steinglass said.  
    Prosecutors have been building up their case ahead of important    testimony from Cohen, who arranged the $130,000 payout to porn    actor Stormy Daniels to keep her from going public ahead of the    2016 election about an alleged sexual encounter with Trump a    decade earlier. Trump denies ever having sex with Daniels.  
    The judge's warning underscores how Cohen is not only the    prosecutors' most crucial witness, but their most complicated.    Once a Trump loyalist, he has become one of his fiercest    critics since pleading guilty to federal charges, routinely    bashing and mocking the former president on social media.  
    Defense attorneys will argue that the now-disbarred lawyer who    served prison time is out to get Trump and cannot be believed.  
    Two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press    that Cohen is expected to take the stand Monday. The people    could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke to AP on    condition of anonymity.  
    Trump's lawyers complained after Cohen in a social media video    this week wore a shirt featuring a figure resembling the former    president behind bars. The defense has argued it's unfair that    Trump is under a gag order that prevents him from speaking    publicly about witnesses while Cohen is free to speak badly    about Trump.  
    "It's becoming a problem every single day that President Trump    is not allowed to respond to this witness, but this witness is    allowed to continue to talk," defense attorney Todd Blanche    said.  
    Merchan told prosecutors they should inform Cohen "that the    judge is asking him to refrain from making any more statements"    about the case or about Trump. Prosecutors told the judge they    already requested that Cohen and other witnesses not talk about    the case, but they have no direct means of controlling    witnesses' behavior.  
    Cohen did not immediately respond to a request for comment    Friday from The Associated Press.  
    As the third week of testimony wrapped up, the case that    ultimately hinges on record-keeping returned to deeply    technical testimony -- a sharp contrast from Daniels' dramatic    account of the alleged sexual encounter with Trump that riveted    jurors earlier this week.  
    Witnesses in the case have seesawed between bookkeepers and    bankers with testimony about records and finances to Daniels    and others with unflattering stories about Trump and the    tabloid world machinations meant to keep them secret. Despite    all the drama, in the end, the trial is about money changing    hands -- business transactions -- and whether those payments    were made to illegally influence the 2016 election.  
    Friday's testimony appeared to test jurors' patience at times.    One juror stifled a yawn while another stretched out his arms.    Others shifted their gaze around the room or stared up at the    ceiling.  
    Trump, who was visibly angry during much of Daniels' testimony,    chatted frequently with his lawyers and read through a stack of    papers on the table in front of him as jurors heard from    witnesses such as AT&T and Verizon workers, who    authenticated phone records.  
    Leaving the courthouse, Trump addressed the allegation at the    heart of the case: that he falsified his company's records to    conceal the nature of hush money reimbursements to Cohen.    Trump's lawyers have portrayed the ledger entries at issue in    the case as pro forma actions performed by a Trump Organization    employee.  
    "A very good bookkeeper marked a legal expense as a legal    expense," Trump said. "He was a lawyer, not a fixer," he added,    referring to Cohen.  
    Back on the witness stand Friday morning was Madeleine    Westerhout, a former Trump White House aide. Prosecutors used    Westerhout's testimony to detail the process by which Trump got    personal mail -- including checks to sign -- while in the White    House. It's relevant because that's how he received and signed    the checks that reimbursed Cohen for the payment to Daniels,    prosecutors say.  
    While questioning Westerhout, Trump's attorney elicited    testimony aimed at supporting the defense's argument that    Daniels was paid to stay silent in order to protect Trump's    family, not his campaign.  
    Westerhout told jurors that Trump was "very upset" when The    Wall Street Journal published a 2018 story about the hush money    deal with Daniels.  
    "My understanding was that he knew it would be hurtful to his    family," Westerhout said, though she acknowledged she didn't    recall him saying so specifically.  
    Jurors also saw social media posts showing that Trump initially    praised Cohen after the then-lawyer came under federal    investigation. Trump started bashing him after Cohen pleaded    guilty to campaign-finance violations, along with other crimes,    and claimed Trump directed him to arrange the payment for    Daniels. Trump was never charged with any crime related to that    federal investigation.  
    Daniels' story of an alleged sexual encounter with Trump was a    crucial building block for prosecutors, who are seeking to show    that the Republican and his allies buried unflattering stories    in the waning weeks of the 2016 presidential election in an    effort to illegally influence the race.  
    Over more than 7 hours of testimony, Daniels relayed in    graphic detail what she says happened after the two met at a    2006 celebrity golf outing at Lake Tahoe where sponsors    included the adult film studio where she worked. Daniels    explained how she felt surprise, fear and discomfort, even as    she consented to sex with Trump.  
    During combative cross-examination, Trump's lawyers sought to    paint Daniels as a liar and extortionist who's trying to take    down the former president after drawing money and fame from her    claims.  
    After Daniels left the witness stand Thursday, Trump's    attorneys pushed for a mistrial over the level of tawdry    details she provided, but the judge denied the request.  
    This criminal case could be the only one of four against the    presumptive Republican presidential nominee to go to trial    before voters decide in November whether to send him back to    the White House. Trump has pleaded innocent and casts himself    as the victim of a politically tainted justice system working    to deny him another term.  
    Information for this article was contributed by Eric Tucker,    Ruth Brown and Adriana Gomez Licon of The Associated Press.  
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Cohen due as N.Y. wrapping up its case | Arkansas Democrat Gazette - Arkansas Online