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After Trump’s Conviction, a National Enquirer Editor Sends His Regrets

For Barry Levine, a former top journalist at the supermarket tabloid, the former president’s trial was its own kind of tear-jerker.

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A photograph of issues of The National Enquirer. One is open to a two-page spread. The large headline reads, “John Edwards Love Child Scandal.”
Issues of The National Enquirer from its high point, when it broke news on the presidential candidate John Edwards.Credit...Hiroko Masuike for The New York Times

Even before former President Donald J. Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to conceal a sex scandal, a verdict was being delivered on The National Enquirer.

The no-holds-barred supermarket tabloid was once famous for publishing salacious stories about celebrities and politicians. Now it may be better known for suppressing them.

“It’s just a tragedy for the paper,” said Barry Levine, the publication’s former executive editor, sitting in the living room of his one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan on a recent morning.

Was he being overly dramatic? Perhaps.

Even among those who consider it a guilty pleasure, The Enquirer can hardly be described as a national treasure. But try telling that to Mr. Levine, a swashbuckling journalist who worked there from 1999 until 2016 and whose professional and personal identity was shaped by it.

“I grew up with the romantic vision of ‘The Front Page,’ the press cards and hats, the larger than life personalities of Fleet Street reporters who did whatever they had to do to get the story,” Mr. Levine said. “I was in love with that type of journalism — and I found it at The National Enquirer.”

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Mr. Levine at his apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.Credit...Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

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