It seems as though the legal battle between Stormy Daniels and President Donald Trump takes new twists and turns every day, playing out in headlines and on Twitter despite the non-disclosure agreement under dispute. For former prosecutor Jonna Spilbor, all of this rests on an “unwinnable case” and may just be a publicity stunt. “[In] simple contract law a deal is a deal,” Spilbor told Cheddar Friday. “She got the money, she cashed the check, the deal is done...She cannot now go back and say ‘I want another deal.’ It doesn’t work that way.” Daniels, the adult film star whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, allegedly had an affair with Trump back in 2006. During the 2016 presidential campaign, the then-candidate’s lawyer Michael Cohen, paid Daniels $130,000 in exchange for her silence. Earlier this month, in an attempt to invalidate an attached non-disclosure agreement, Daniels filed a lawsuit claiming that deal with Cohen was null and void because Trump never signed it. She sat down with CBS’s “60 Minutes” to tell her side of the story at the beginning of March. The interview will air next week. For the full interview, click [here](https://cheddar.com/videos/stormy-daniels-case-against-trump).

Share:
More In Politics
'Momentous Step': Trump Signs U.S.-China Phase One Trade Deal
President Trump signed a so-called "phase one" trade deal with China on Wednesday, signaling a détente in a protracted trade war that resulted in hundreds of billions of dollars of tariffs being exchanged on exports between the world's two largest economies over the better part of two years.
Green Energy Coalition Dives Back in After White House Killed Key Tax Credits
Weeks after the White House unexpectedly derailed a bipartisan tax deal for electric vehicles, offshore wind energy, and other major green priorities, dozens of emissaries from the nation’s renewable energy industries and environmental advocacy groups are gathering in the nation’s capital to begin charting their green-energy push for 2020 — and to dissect what went wrong in the final hours of its 2019 influence campaign.
Load More