NEW YORK (AP) - Media outlets are reporting that federal prosecutors have granted immunity to the executive in charge of the National Enquirer amid an investigation into hush-money payments made on behalf of President Donald Trump.
Vanity Fair and The Wall Street Journal, citing anonymous sources, on Thursday were first to report the development involving David Pecker, CEO of the tabloid's publisher, American Media Inc., and a longtime friend of the president.
Court papers connected to ex-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen's guilty plea Tuesday say Pecker offered to help Trump squash negative stories during the 2016 campaign.
The Journal said Pecker shared details with prosecutors about payments Cohen says Trump directed to buy the silence of two women alleging affairs with him.
Trump's account has shifted. He said recently he knew about payments "later on."
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This story has been corrected to show the reports came out Thursday, not Wednesday.
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