Washington: After the ex-president of United States Donald Trump's indictment makes headlines, porn actress Stormy Daniels, who was involved in the sex scandal that had brought the fate on Trump, has taken to Twitter thanking people for their support and love.
She tweeted, "I have so many messages coming in that I can't respond...also don't want to spill my champagne#Teamstormy merch/autograph orders are pouring in, too! Thank you for that as well, but allow a few extra days for shipment."
Thank you to everyone for your support and love! I have so many messages coming in that I can't respond...also don't want to spill my champagne 😜 #Teamstormy merch/autograph orders are pouring in, too! Thank you for that as well but allow a few extra days for shipment.
— Stormy Daniels (@StormyDaniels) March 30, 2023
Meanwhile, Donald Trump keeps denying all charges regarding the hush money payment. The indictment was moved over allegations that Trump paid Daniels $130,000 weeks before the 2016 elections to stop her from going public about a private session the duo had a decade before.
Trump alleged that the motion against him was the highest political persecution and election interference in history. Way before his assent as US president, radical democrats, the enemy of "hard-working men and women in of this country", had been engaged in a Witch-Hunt.
He shared an old meme of his own which says, "In reality, they're not after me. They're after you." The meme features himself pointing at those reading it.
It's more true now than ever before!!! pic.twitter.com/B3b58P3TEZ
— Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr) March 31, 2023
Actress Daniels released a tell-all book in 2018 about a tryst she had with Trump a decade before the 2016 elections. However, Trump denied the narrative and accused the actress of extortion. But Trump's personal lawyer Michael Cohen admitted arranging $130,000 as hush money to Daniels weeks before the 2016 election, stopping her from going public about the tryst.
NDTV reports that the payment was revealed by The Wall Street Journal in January 2018.