The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘What I Saw Working at The National Enquirer During Donald Trump’s Rise’
Episode Date: April 14, 2024At the center of the criminal case against former President Donald Trump in Manhattan is the accusation that Trump took part in a scheme to turn The National Enquirer and its sister publications into ...an arm of his 2016 presidential campaign. The documents detailed three “hush money” payments made to a series of individuals to guarantee their silence about potentially damaging stories in the months before the election. Because this was done with the goal of helping his election chances, the case implied, these payments amounted to a form of illegal, undisclosed campaign spending. And because Trump created paperwork to make the payments seem like regular legal expenses, that amounted to a criminal effort at a coverup, argued Alvin Bragg, the district attorney of Manhattan. Trump has denied the charges against him.For Lachlan Cartwright, reading the indictment was like stepping through the looking glass, because it described a three-year period in his own professional life, one that he has come to deeply regret. Now, as a former president faces a criminal trial for the first time in American history, Cartwright is forced to grapple with what really happened at The Enquirer in those years — and whether and how he can ever set things right.
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My name is Lachlan Cartwright.
I'm a special correspondent for The Hollywood Reporter
and a contributor to The New York Times Magazine.
This week's Sunday Read is a deeply personal story to me.
But it also, strangely enough, centres around the New York criminal trial of former President Donald Trump.
In that case, the Manhattan District Attorney, Alvin Bragg, is prosecuting Trump on 34 counts of falsifying business records.
The indictments allege that he made hush money payments
to ensure the silence of individuals with damaging information on him,
just months before the 2016 election.
People like Dino Sajudin,
a former Trump World Tower doorman
who claimed that Trump had a love child with one
of the building's employees. And Karen McDougal, with whom Trump supposedly had an extramarital
affair. They received $30,000 and $150,000 respectively. But the key here is that the payments to these people were facilitated
by American Media, the tabloid news organization and parent company of the National Enquirer.
Because the Enquirer owned the rights to their stories, stories that would have been negative
press against Trump and chose not to publish them, but rather bury them, meant that they were essentially being purchased off the market on his behalf.
And so, the reason why this is personal for me is because I witnessed all of this.
At the time, I was the executive editor of The Enquirer. This story is my insider's
account of the behind the scenes at American media and how it turned itself into a criminal
enterprise to protect the rich and powerful. I witnessed how The Enquirer became part of the Trump campaign,
not only suppressing stories to help him,
but also running negative stories about Trump's rivals.
No one else has ever been able to tell this story before
because of stringent non-disclosure agreements.
Despite threats of litigation, this is the first time I'm sharing my story.
So, here's my article, read by David Linsky. Our audio producer is Jack DeSidoro.
The music you'll hear was written and performed by Aaron Esposito.
by Aaron Esposito.
On Tuesday, April 4, 2023,
I was outside Manhattan Criminal Court.
It was a sunny spring day,
and the Secret Service and the Police Department had blocked off the streets with barricades.
The sidewalks were clogged with news crews from around the world.
Supporters of Donald Trump roamed a pen that was set up to house them.
Eventually, the former president was rushed out of the courthouse after being charged by Alvin Bragg,
the district attorney of Manhattan, with 34 counts of falsifying business records.
His convoy departed to cheers from fans.
records. His convoy departed to cheers from fans. I pulled up the indictment and the statement of facts on my iPhone. At the centre of the case is the accusation that Trump took part in a scheme
to turn the National Enquirer and its sister publications into an arm of his 2016 presidential
campaign. The documents detailed three hush money payments made to a
series of individuals to guarantee their silence about potentially damaging stories in the months
before the election. Because this was done with the goal of helping his election chances,
the case implied these payments amounted to a form of illegal, undisclosed campaign spending.
And, Bragg argued, because Trump created paperwork
to make the payments seem like regular legal expenses, that amounted to a criminal effort
at a cover-up. Trump has denied the charges against him. The documents rattled off a number
of seedy stories that would have been right at home in a venerable supermarket tabloid had they actually been
published. The subjects were anonymized but recognizable to anyone who had followed the
story of Trump's entanglement with the Enquirer. His affair with the porn star Stormy Daniels,
of course, was the heart of it. There was also Karen McDougal, the Playboy Playmate of the Year
in 1998, whose affair with Trump was similarly made to disappear.
The payments for the rights to her story made to look like fees for writing a fitness column
and appearing on magazine covers. Trump has denied involvement with both women.
There were others that were lesser known too, like Dino Sajudin, a former Trump World Tower
doorman who claimed that Trump had a love child
with one of the building's employees. The story was never published, and Sajudin was paid $30,000
to keep quiet about it. For me, reading the indictment was like stepping through the
looking glass, because it described a three-year period in my own professional life, one that I've come to deeply regret. Dino the doorman, during my time
at American Media Inc, AMI, the enquirer's parent company, I was one of the editors pushing our
reporters to confirm that story. McDougall's fitness columns were published only after I
instructed a colleague to work with the model to put them together. These were all pretty normal things
to do during my time there, a life-changing detour in my career which happened to coincide
with a bizarre period at AMI when it was allegedly enlisted, in some ways that I saw and in others
that I didn't, into the service of helping Trump become president. Now, as a former president faces a criminal trial
for the first time in American history,
I'm forced to grapple with what really happened
at the Enquirer in those years
and whether and how I can ever set things right.
In a sense, it was Philip Seymour Hoffman who got me the job.
In February 2014, while I was working at the New York Daily News,
an editor there told me that Hoffman had been found dead in his West Village apartment.
He asked for my help on the story.
Our crime reporters tracked down the name of the person who found the body,
David Barr Katz, a close friend of Hoffman's and a playwright,
but all our attempts to reach him had not borne fruit. Soon the National Enquirer hit newsstands with an exclusive
interview with Katz. He said that he and Hoffman were homosexual lovers and that he watched Hoffman
freebase cocaine the night before his death. The story quickly unraveled. The Inquirer had been talking to a David Katz,
but this one was a freelance TV producer based in New Jersey. After being bombarded with calls
from reporters and consuming several beers, he later told the New York Post he apparently decided
to have some fun. The actual David Barr Katz sued AMI for $50 million.
The magazine withdrew the story and settled out of court.
In the end, the Inquirer took out a full-page ad in the New York Times,
acknowledging the error and paid Katz enough that he was able to establish an annual prize for playwrights in Hoffman's honour.
David Pecker, the chief executive of AMI, removed the top editor.
In his place, Pecker pulled a chief executive of AMI, removed the top editor.
In his place, Pecker pulled a young editor named Dylan Howard over from another AMI publication, Radar Online.
Howard and I met a few years earlier in New York.
He attended the same university I did in Melbourne, though we weren't friends in Australia.
Now, two Aussie journalists in New York, we swapped gossip and hit it off. I helped land him one of his biggest scoops. In 2010, I passed Charlie Sheen's private
cell number to him, and he figured out that texting Sheen when he was partying would get
his attention. The two developed a rapport, and after a series of well-publicized meltdowns,
Sheen invited Howard to Los Angeles to watch him take a drug test and reveal the results live on Good Morning America.
In March 2014, Howard and I started talking about the possibility of my coming to the Enquirer as his number two.
During a booze-fueled night at The Electric Room, a nightclub in the meatpacking district, he walked me through the offer.
A $60,000 bump in
compensation which worked out to a 75% raise, and I would be running a national news operation with
the resources he promised to break agenda-setting stories. I had never paid that much attention to
the supermarket tabloids, but I knew enough to know what the Enquirer was. It published a sensational mix of celebrity
scandal, true crime, and triumph over tragedy real-life stories. It might not have been a
respected newspaper, especially because of its tendency to print cover lines that stretched
the truth to the breaking point, but it's not as if it published stories about Batboy either.
That's the Weekly World News.
The Enquirer's reporters were fearless,
and they did sometimes win the respect of the mainstream press.
During the wrongful death suit brought against O.J. Simpson
by the parents of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman,
it was the Enquirer's reporters who found photos of Simpson wearing Bruno Maggi shoes,
the same type that left prints in blood
at the scene of the murders. The revelation helped a jury decide that Simpson could be
held responsible for the deaths. By the time I started, the Inquirer's weekly newsstand sales
figures hovered around 360,000, down from a high of about 4 million in the 1990s. Still, even in recent years,
the Inquirer had broken big stories. In fact, the tabloid most likely altered the course of the 2008
presidential election when it exposed John Edwards' affair and love child with a campaign
staff member. That investigation showed the muscle and drive of the inquirer's reporting.
Stakeouts, door knocks, documents, reporters flying across the country, persisting until
they got the story right. Howard told me that he wanted the magazine to land ambitious stories
like that. All things going well, he texted me, a bit hyperbolically, you and I will be youngest editors of a national US publication ever.
I was agonising over the offer when the editor-in-chief of the Daily News,
Colin Myler, called me into his office.
Myler presented me with a $10,000 raise and thanked me for my work.
I thought he might have caught wind of the job offer, so I mentioned it to him.
He said I would be making a big mistake if I went to work for David Pecker.
Deep down, I was hoping Myler would make a counteroffer, but he didn't. I took Howard on
his word. Ultimately, my hubris sealed the deal. I started as executive editor of the Inquirer and Radar Online in mid-May. What I
soon learned is that Howard, even if he wanted to, wouldn't be changing the operation. PECA
really ran the place. On Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings,
there were cover meetings when Howard and the editors of the Inquirer's sister titles would
go before PECA and several of his top lieutenants to show a few options and analyse sales figures.
If one title had a week-to-week decline, PECA became apoplectic. I would walk through the back
of the newsroom near Pekka's office
and hear him screaming through the walls. Sometimes Pekka would suggest a preferred
cover line, forcing us to twist a story to fit the language. In that paranoid environment,
all anyone cared about was not incurring Pekka's wrath and being fired.
Pekka did not respond to requests for comment. A frustrating first year spent in a
windowless office was suddenly interrupted on the afternoon of March 29, 2015, when a source told
me about a woman named Ambra Batilana Gutierrez, who went to the New York Police Department after
being groped by Harvey Weinstein in Tribeca. My pulse was racing.
Finally, a worthwhile scoop.
There had been rumors about Weinstein and women for years.
Affairs, the casting couch, and worse.
I called Howard and was struck by his response.
He seemed less interested in the story than in the identity of my source.
In response to questions from the Times, Howard said he was simply vetting
the story's sourcing, a routine part of his job duties. I could not figure out his attitude.
But before we got any further, the Daily News broke the story, with the help of police sources.
But Gutierrez still hadn't spoken publicly, and Howard went into overdrive trying to buy
her side of the story.
The Inquirer, like many tabloids, sometimes paid sources for exclusive stories.
This is not an acceptable practice in most newsrooms or in the ones I've worked in since.
Still, it seemed odd that we were trying to buy a story that we could have had free.
Cash, really no object, Howard messaged me. So I can sling your source 5k to get it done, in addition to her 20k. But Gutierrez didn't want $20,000. She wanted her
story heard. And it continued to roll out in other outlets, through leaks from law enforcement and
movie industry sources, who framed the matter in the media as
a blackmail attempt. Howard was in and out of my office asking for updates.
I think the stakes just increased, he texted me, and your source could earn some big bucks.
I texted the source saying that Gutierrez could ask for any amount of money and that the source
could take a substantial cut.
She's less concerned with money than the right moves, the source responded.
By the middle of the week, Howard told me to offer Gutierrez $150,000 with a $25,000 finder's fee
to my go-between. An extraordinary amount of money. Most stories we bought cost us about a few thousand dollars
Howard says he was merely conveying offers at the direction of Pekka
She says no, the source texted back
Don't ask again
Unknown to me at the time, Weinstein had all but secured a guarantee
that we would never report on his sexual transgressions
Earlier that year,
the Weinstein Company signed a deal with AMI to produce something called Radar TV.
The plan was to take our celebrity coverage from Radar Online and use it to make a daily,
live TV show in the mould of Access Hollywood. The deal entailed lots of lunches between Weinstein
and Howard at Tribeca Grill, but never resulted
in an actual TV show. Still, the partnership did make Weinstein a fop, friend of Pecker,
which entitled him to protection from negative coverage. He was also able to leverage his
relationship with AMI to use our vast newsgathering resources to collect dirt on the actresses who he thought
might talk to the press. The New York Post, the Daily Mail and other outlets painted Gutierrez
as a gold digger who had attended the bunga-bunga parties of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of
Italy. Years later, I learned that one of AMI's top lawyers had informed someone in the office
of Cy Vance, the Manhattan district
attorney at the time, that Gutierrez was trying to sell her story to us. Vance's office eventually
announced that it would not pursue charges against Weinstein. In the end, Gutierrez reached
a settlement with Weinstein and went on to tell her story to the press.
tell her story to the press. A couple of months later, Trump descended the escalator at Trump Tower. Editorial discussions about John Travolta, Lisa Marie Presley, and Bill Cosby were now
interspersed with chatter about Hillary Clinton, Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubio. The headlines that
resulted were not ambiguous. Why I am the only choice for president. Exclusive.
Donald Trump writes for the Enquirer. He didn't. A colleague cobbled the piece together and Michael
Cohen, Trump's lawyer and go-between with AMI, got Trump's approval for it. Who's Chelsea's real dad?
Prez hopeful Hillary's moment of truth, exclusive DNA test results bombshell.
We had mounted an operation to collect Chelsea Clinton's trash in an effort to get her DNA.
But because Clinton lived in a big Manhattan apartment building, it was virtually impossible
to get access to her garbage. We instead got a sample off a pen she used to sign a book.
The results were inconclusive,
but we published the story anyway. Hillary, six months to live. Cruel Bill forces her to stay on
campaign trail. These covers came with doctored images of Clinton looking frail, bolstered by
quotes from anyone who would say the right things, and had a title
that tenuously qualified him to offer an opinion.
The Enquirer did employ real reporters who would comb through documents, cultivate sources
and use old-school reporting techniques, but I was coming to terms with the other side
of the magazine, where a headline was chosen and editors and
writers spun up a tenuous story to match. This all came on the heels of a family tragedy that
made my job seem even more detestable and stupid. In the spring, my dad grew ill and when he finally
got to a doctor, irregularities were found in his blood. Stomach cancer. Stage four. He was told he had three
months to live. I had a contentious relationship with him during my adolescence, and by 22 I had
moved to London to pursue journalism. He and my mother would visit, but because I was gay and
hiding this from them, it kept us distant. Soon after my younger brother came out, I asked my father how he
was dealing with it. It could be worse, he told me. We could have two of them.
When I finally came out several years later, my father took it in and asked me,
Are you sure you're not bi? It took a few years, but he came to terms with having two sons who
weren't straight. By the time of his 70th birthday, he had visited me in New York, and we ran around town like
teenagers. He would tell me it was one of the best weeks of his life. I landed back in Melbourne just
in time. When I had last seen my dad a few months earlier, he was a fit 71-year-old. Now the color
had drained from his skin. His voice was hoarse as we hugged.
Just nine days after I landed, he was admitted to a palliative care facility.
He was unconscious, but we talked to him as if he were lucid. We all slept in his room.
I lay awake and listened as his breaths got further and further apart.
as his breaths got further and further apart.
Just after 5am on May 1st, 2015, he took his last.
I buried my father and returned to New York, dazed by grief.
I cried in the shower before work.
I sat blankly in editorial meetings.
I don't know how I would have responded to the events that followed had I not been so depressed.
But the truth is that I was.
I was drinking heavily and life felt hopeless.
I was angry.
I became lazy.
Even a little bit crazy.
In the fall, we got a startling tip over the transom from a former doorman at Trump World Tower who said that
Trump had an affair with a woman who worked in the building and that she had given birth to a
secret love child. The tip line was a lot of fun but presented its fair share of headaches.
Because we advertised that we paid for stories we got all types of chances and charlatans trying
their luck. So we proceeded cautiously,
not only because of that but also because we knew Trump was a fop. Howard had to check with the boss
before we could make any moves. The word came back that we could proceed and we quickly signed the
tipster, Dino Sedutin, to a source contract that would pay $30,000 if we ran his story.
to a source contract that would pay $30,000 if we ran his story. We assigned a team of reporters to firm it up. Before any calls were made, we wanted to ensure that we had photos of both the
woman and the love child in hand in case they went to ground. There was a stakeout at the home of the
woman. Another reporter was sent to the address of the love child. With photos of both secured, we arranged for Sir Juden to sit for a polygraph.
This was standard practice for stories that could draw legal action from a subject.
We had two private investigators who would routinely conduct lie detector tests on sources before we ran their stories.
It was an extra layer of insurance, especially because the
inquirer was a constant target of lawsuits. A polygraph could demonstrate that we had gone
above and beyond to confirm that a source was telling the truth. We would sometimes spike
stories when sources failed polygraphs, but over time I came to feel that the tests were a cynical way of manufacturing a good faith effort before publication.
Sir Juden passed his polygraph,
but it turned out that the information was second-hand.
He had heard his colleagues talking about it and had no proof.
He had serious credibility issues besides.
If you ran his name through Google,
you would find an anonymous website
that accused Sir Juden of making similar allegations about a Trump World Tower resident.
I could hear from Howard's office that Michael Cohen was calling and I assumed he was looking
for updates. I had my doubts about the story, especially as the love adult, as I was now
calling her, she was in her late 20s,
looked just like the man named on her birth certificate, who was not Donald Trump.
Then, out of nowhere, the order came to stand down.
Pekka made the call to pay Sir Juden $30,000,
and the story was killed without Howard explaining why.
It was an enormous amount of money to pay someone,
especially for a story we were not running. In December, a reporter met Sir Juden at a
McDonald's in Pennsylvania to present him with the check. In return, he signed a new contract
that stipulated that if he told the story to any third parties, he would be on the hook for a
million dollars in damages to AMI. It was a highly unusual clause.
The signed contract was put into a safe.
A colleague who was working with me described what happened as a catch and kill.
It was the first time I had heard the phrase, but it would not be the last.
As we hurtled toward the presidential primaries,
there was a laser focus on stories about Trump's rivals.
Ben Carson, we alleged, had left a sponge in a woman's brain.
Bernie Sanders, we accused, without any evidence of being caught in a child sex probe.
Marco Rubio, or at least someone with a similar haircut,
had been photographed at a Manfest foam party.
While I had serious misgivings about publishing stories like these,
which took cues from sites like Infowars and the Gateway Pundit,
it also felt totally meaningless.
Would anyone take this stuff seriously?
I also quieted my conscience by continuing to drink heavily, every night
Ted Cruz was a major target
We ran thinly sourced stories that suggested that he was a raging alcoholic
who had five secret mistresses and was named in a madam's black book
And we ran a cover story linking his father, Raphael, to the assassination of John F. Kennedy
That article hinged on a grainy photo
contained in the Warren Commission report purporting to show Lee Harvey Oswald handing out
pro-Castro flyers with Raphael Cruz. The money quote came from a guy who ran a photo digitization
website who told the reporter with a high degree of confidence that it was the same person.
told the reporter with a high degree of confidence that it was the same person.
Then, much to everyone's surprise and my horror, the Cruz story was picked up by the mainstream media. Trump went on Fox News to repeat the claims and the Cruz campaign was forced to respond.
I watched in Howard's office dumbfounded as Cruz denied the story on CNN.
I was eventually moved into a better office,
one that had windows and an old safe about the size of a mini-fridge. The Sedutin contract was
inside it, and I used it as a footrest. My old office, meanwhile, was littered with dozens of
boxes that had been brought up from AMI's offices in Boca Raton, Florida. This was all the material the newsroom had collected
on the Clintons over the decades.
I was directed to hire a freelance researcher
to go through them and generate memos so we could gin up hit pieces.
The Enquirer had a similar archive of files on Trump,
perhaps the most amazing trove of Trump material
of any national media organisation,
but it was not receiving the same careful review.
Instead, I was going through the memos from the freelancer that provided the basis for
spurious stories accusing Hillary Clinton of forming a hit squad to kill Vince Foster.
Then we moved on to hyperbolic material on Bill Clinton and women.
Hillary's hiding Bill's sex crimes.
36 women break their silence was the cover that landed in May 2016.
Between those were a drumbeat of fictitious health crises
for the former First Lady and presidential candidate,
with the help of so-called medical experts,
typically publicity-hungry
pundits who understood what we wanted to hear, and the assistance of a talented art department,
we tried to kill her off in print almost weekly. She would appear with her eyes made baggy and the
colours in the images desaturated. In others, she swelled to fit the cover line that she had gained 103 pounds and was
eating herself to death. In another, we purported to have her full medical file, which, as the cover
screamed, said she had three strokes, Alzheimer's, liver damage from booze, and violent rages.
We had another secret weapon, Michael Silvestra. By day, Silvestra worked at the Walt
Disney Company, but at night he operated Truth and Deception Technologies in Florida. We would
send Silvestra audio clips of politicians or celebrities speaking, and after using software
that he called Decept Tech voice stress analysis, he sent back charts at $500 per test.
Hillary failed secret FBI lie detector was one such cover. We had no reason to believe Deceptec
had been used by the FBI. We went to him so often that I could signal that we required his services
again by using a cranking hand motion.
In August, Howard told me he had met with a former Playboy playmate named Karen McDougall,
who said she had an affair with Trump.
The woman was being represented by a lawyer, Keith Davidson,
and Howard said he found her story credible.
Howard told me that Pekka bought her story for $150,000, but that it would never see the light of day. It was the second catch and kill on Trump's behalf that I heard about.
I started to avoid Howard as best as I could. Our interactions became icy and colleagues in
the newsroom started to notice. I felt as if I were being suffocated,
and I feared that being near all of this would mean the end of my career.
Late in the afternoon, on the Friday before the 2016 election,
I received a call from Lucas Alpert, a Wall Street Journal reporter.
He and I used to work together at the New York Post and we kept in touch. He was
on the media desk now but explained that he had been asked by a colleague on the investigative
team for help on a story. Did I know anything about a woman named Karen McDougall? I froze.
I was in the newsroom and only feet from Howard. I told Alpert I would call him back. I walked to the elevator and
rode it down to the entrance of the building. I explained the huge risk I was taking by helping
him and the consequences if Pecker or Howard found out. I thought if I used an old school
tabloid term it would give me some cover. Only the guys who had been there forever used that term.
Only the guys who had been there forever used that term.
This was a catch-and-kill, I told Alpert.
What's a catch-and-kill? he asked.
I went on to explain the tabloid practice of buying stories to bury them.
Alpert already had the outline of the story, I learned, and I filled him in on more.
How Howard had flown out to Los Angeles that summer to buy McDougal's story for $150,000 with the direction from Pecker to kill it to protect Trump.
I stressed to him the importance of the term catch and kill
and told him that if the journal included it, it would give me some breathing room.
I went back to my office and closed the door.
My heart was racing and I was sweating.
A short time later, Howard burst in.
The Wall Street Journal has a story coming, I recall him saying, before naming two former employees, blaming them for the leak. He slammed the door shut. The story went live after nine
that night. National Enquirer shielded Donald Trump from Playboy Models Affair
allegation. And there it was in the third paragraph. Quashing stories that way is known
in the tabloid world as catch and kill. I didn't hear from Howard that weekend. No one thought
Trump was going to win at that point, and the story was swallowed up in the pre-election frenzy.
win at that point, and the story was swallowed up in the pre-election frenzy. That same week,
I had finally hit my breaking point with the job. A few days earlier, Howard called me into his office. He explained that we would be crashing a late exclusive. He had obtained a seven-page
dossier that contained what he said were emails between Hillary Clinton and Huma Abedin, one of her longtime aides.
The only snag was that the emails were in Italian, and we had just hours to get them
translated if we wanted any chance of meeting our print deadlines. Howard told me that Pekka
had spent thousands of dollars to buy the file from a private investigator. Pekka was always
paranoid about leaks
and had paid this investigator's firm
to do sweeps of AMI's office
looking for listening devices.
And now the investigator had become a source.
In response to questions from the Times,
the investigator said he could not remember
many details of this episode.
The dossier, Howard explained,
had come to our source via the Agenzia Informazione
e Sicurezza Esterna, Italian intelligence, where the source apparently had connections.
This is why the emails, though originally written in English, were in Italian. The agency had
received the emails from Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service, the source said, which had itself hacked Clinton's servers and obtained the emails from a laptop Aberdeen shared with her
estranged husband, Anthony Weiner. Despite the many red flags and ethical questions that chain
of custody raised, Howard believed in the dossier. And besides, Pekka had already decreed that this would be the cover story
The research team had found two New York University students to translate the documents
When they arrived, I was instructed to confiscate their cell phones
The translators finished and we managed to close the issue by midnight
Hillary and Huma going to jail was the cover line
With bullet points claiming,
among other things, a secret hospitalisation and truth about gay affair. The translations
in the article were totally garbled, and the inferences we made from them were absurd.
While it made its way to the printers, I went with Howard and some colleagues to Whitehorse Tavern,
not the famous
one, the one in the financial district. He was buzzing with glee. I could barely look him in the
eyes. I needed to get out, but I needed my visa to stay in the country and find another job.
I held onto the thought that this would all soon be over. The election was just six days away.
Clinton looked sure to win. Trump would fade away. I would
be able to find my way out and back to actual journalism. Instead, my duties somehow became
even more depraved. When the Wall Street Journal contacted AMI for comment about the $150,000
payment to Karen McDougal, the company claimed that the money
was not to kill her story, but rather to purchase her life rights to any relationship she has had
with a then-married man, as well as two years of fitness columns and magazine covers.
This had in fact been stipulated in the contract AMI drew up with her lawyer,
but now we had to actually come up
with the columns. I signed a reporter to ghostwrite them, and he got on a call with McDougall to take
notes while cribbing fitness tips from the internet. Alpert and his colleagues at the
journal were chasing fresh leads. I mentioned the doorman and the events of the previous year.
Alpert asked for the names, so I opened the safe
and got out the contract, which contained notes with the names of the woman and the love adult.
I texted them to Alpert, put the documents back and went to close the safe, but the door wouldn't
shut. I tried desperately, but this rickety old safe refused to close. I was starting to panic.
At any time Howard could come in.
I turned up the sound on my office TV as I sat hammering at this old metal door.
Finally, the bloody thing shut.
After Trump won, I could not hide my utter contempt for Howard. My position as his deputy
became untenable. By this point the two of us
were barely on speaking terms. I wasted my afternoons drinking alone in nearby bars and
restaurants while I devised an exit strategy. I retained an employment attorney knowing that
both Howard and Pecker would love nothing more than to screw me on the way out. Howard was enraged by my behavior
and made it known to others in the newsroom. In July 2017, after weeks of negotiations,
I was presented with a nine-page separation agreement. I would be kept on as an employee
for the next nine months, collecting half my salary as a form of severance. That meant I
would be able to continue living in the United States until my visa expired.
But the price would be my silence,
a non-disclosure agreement covering AMI in general and PECA in particular.
The contract's language was so broad that it prohibited me,
in perpetuity, from even writing a work of fiction about my time at the company.
On August 4th, I entered the morning news meeting for the final time.
Howard announced to the staff I would be working from home for the foreseeable future.
I looked him in the eye and shook his hand. It would be the last time I saw him.
About six weeks after I left, and around the time the New York Times and the New Yorker
broke the Weinstein story, I was walking back to my apartment when I got a call from my attorney.
AMI's lawyers had sent him a letter accusing me of breaching my non-disclosure agreement on three
occasions. The letter threatened termination and damages, but it was the next sentence that got me.
threatened termination and damages, but it was the next sentence that got me. In the event AMI terminates Mr Cartwright's employment, he will not be entitled to lawfully remain in the USA.
I vomited. They might not have known what I'd actually done, but it seemed they were trying
to scare me into silence. I resolved that if I was approached by a journalist whom I trusted and who I knew
would protect me, I would do my best to help. Someone out there could do the work I should
have been doing all along. A few weeks later, I received a direct message on Twitter from a New
York Times reporter. I responded to him with my cell number and agreed to meet. I told the reporter what happened in 2015 with Gutierrez.
I detailed Howard's requests for damaging information on women connected to Weinstein,
which usually followed their regular Tribeca lunches.
Howard says he never asked Inquirer staffers to share damaging information on women connected to Weinstein,
but I stressed that the real story was the inquiry's work on behalf of Trump.
Eventually I got a burner phone,
as I was in almost daily contact with the reporter at The Times,
my contact at The Journal and others.
It was hard to keep them all straight.
I emailed the New Yorker writer Ronan Farrow with the subject line,
Signal, are you on it? I asked.
He was in touch an hour later and I began telling him what happened with Dino the doorman.
It became clear to me that reporters from the journal were in possession of information
that could have come from only a small circle of people
and I feared that the source was Howard.
If the reporters I had been talking to were incautious, they could have easily revealed to him that I had been a source too.
It would be the ammunition Howard needed to terminate my agreement and have me booted from
the country. But on the other hand, if he was a source, how could he tell Pekka that he had learned I was too? These paranoid thoughts kept
me up at night. I had heard AMI sometimes tailed current and former employees. I became convinced
that the same was happening to me. That might explain an incident that took place one evening
when I went to Babeland, an adult store in Soho, and walked out with a dildo, lubricant and condoms.
As I exited the store a car pulled up and out jumped a man with a camera,
who proceeded in the most indiscreet way to take a series of photos of me with a bright flash.
Before I knew it he had jumped back in the car and it sped off. Were those photos going to be
used to embarrass me? Was it a way to scare me?
With just weeks left on my visa, I had spent six months working free as a source,
a self-imposed sentence for my many crimes against journalism.
By this time I was in the late stages of interviews for a new job with the Daily Beast
and an opportunity to resuscitate my byline.
Daily Beast and an opportunity to resuscitate my byline. Since I left AMI, I have lived under constant threat of litigation from my former employer. AMI has threatened me with a $5 million
lawsuit for breach of contract. Howard has threatened me with another $5 million suit
over articles I wrote for the Daily Beast, accusing me of defamation and breach of contract.
But now the facts of what happened are a matter of public record,
the basis for the first ever criminal trial of a former president.
Indeed, Pecker and Howard have already testified before Bragg's grand jury.
If they're called again to testify at the trial,
they will in all likelihood
be revealing some of the same information they tried to intimidate me into withholding.
As I've tried to come to terms with just how corrupt an organization I worked for in those
years, I've taken some comfort in the fact that acting as a source for other journalists
helped rebalance the scales,
not only for me, but for the public too.
After the last legal threat Howard sent me in October 2020,
a lawyer representing me wrote a strongly worded letter in response,
arguing that the information I shared was in the public interest, and in some cases it was of profound national importance. The letters
stopped. No suits have been filed. Three years after leaving the building for the last time,
I finally felt free of the place. Then the brag indictment outlined in plain and unafraid black
and white the schemes that felt so opaque and contentious and complex when
I had to navigate my way through them in real time. But it was the 13-page statement of facts
that brought me to tears. On page three, prosecutors outlined the catch and kill scheme to suppress
negative information, and it revealed to me that I had been managing a newsroom with improvised explosive devices planted everywhere.
The secret deal that was made at Trump Tower, where Pecker told Cohen he would act as the campaign's eyes and ears.
The harsh money payoffs.
The plot to publish negative stories about Trump's rivals.
A scheme to influence the 2016 election.
Everything finally fit into place.
There were no more secrets.
And I wasn't alone anymore.
Everyone now knew. Thank you.