Crime Donald Trump Hush Money Fraud Trial

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Trump's trial begins today with jury selection, expected to take about 2 weeks. These 2 weeks will be full of whining, crying, bitching and moaning from team trump. Expect maximum cope.


The first criminal trial of an American president will begin Monday as prosecutors and defense lawyers convene in a Manhattan courtroom to begin selecting the jury that will decide Donald J. Trump’s fate.

The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, has charged Mr. Trump with 34 felonies, accusing him of falsifying documents to conceal a sex scandal involving a porn star.

The case, one of four indictments facing the former president and presumptive Republican nominee, could reshape the political landscape ahead of Election Day.

Jury selection could last two weeks or more and the trial may spill into June. Mr. Trump is expected to be in the courtroom for much of it, bringing campaign theatrics to the sober atmosphere of a criminal proceeding.

The spectacle will be remarkable: a former president face-to-face with a part of his past that he has tried to bury but that could instead make him a felon. In 2016, Mr. Trump’s former fixer, Michael D. Cohen, paid $130,000 to the porn star, Stormy Daniels, to buy her silence about a story of having had sex with Mr. Trump a decade earlier.

Mr. Trump, who might take the witness stand in his own defense, has denied the sexual encounter. But prosecutors say that he falsified a series of documents to hide reimbursements to Mr. Cohen.

As Mr. Trump seeks to defend himself in court and on the campaign trail, he is likely to test the patience of the judge and the limits of the justice system. Already, the judge, Juan M. Merchan, has imposed a gag order, barring the former president from attacking witnesses, prosecutors, jurors and the judge’s family.

The Criminal Trial of Donald Trump in Manhattan
FsgONSMXsAE-ipY.jpg


A historic trial begins. Donald Trump, who faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the first degree to cover up a sex scandal, is set to go on trial in Manhattan on April 15. He will be the first former U.S. president to be criminally prosecuted. Here are answers to some key questions about the case:

What is Trump accused of? The charges trace back to a $130,000 hush-money payment that Trump’s fixer, Michael Cohen, made to the porn actress Stormy Daniels in 2016 to suppress her story of a sexual liaison with Trump in 2006. While serving as president, Trump reimbursed Cohen, and how he did so constituted fraud, prosecutors say.

Why did prosecutors cite other hush-money payments? Although the charges relate to the payment to Daniels, Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan district attorney, is expected to highlight two other hush-money deals. Prosecutors say that the deals show that Trump had orchestrated a wide-ranging scheme to influence the 2016 presidential election.

Who will the key witnesses be? Cohen is expected to be a crucial witness for prosecutors. Bragg is also expected to call David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer, as well as Hope Hicks, a former Trump aide, to shed light on the tumultuous period surrounding the payments. Trump said he plans to testify in his own defense.

Who is the judge? Juan Merchan, the judge, is a veteran of the bench known as a no-nonsense, drama-averse jurist. During the trial, Justice Merchan will be in charge of keeping order in the courtroom and ruling on objections made by prosecutors and Trump’s lawyers. The jury will decide whether Trump is guilty.

What happens if Trump is convicted? The charges against Trump are all Class E felonies, the least severe felony category in New York. If convicted, Trump faces a prison sentence of four years or less, or he could receive probation.

How is The New York Times covering the trial? The Times will provide comprehensive coverage of the trial, which is set to last six to eight weeks. Expect live updates from the courtroom in Manhattan, daily takeaways, explainers and analysis from our reporting team.

The 12 jurors, once selected, will have to judge Mr. Cohen’s story themselves: He is expected to be the prosecution’s star witness, confronting a boss he once idolized and now despises.

Jury selection will be crucial for both sides; a good case means little to an unfriendly jury. Prosecutors have some advantage, as the jury pool is drawn from Manhattan, one of the most Democratic counties in America. Mr. Trump’s team will be looking for red needles in a blue haystack.


Here’s what else to know about Mr. Trump’s trial:

Which Case Is This?

This is the Manhattan criminal case against Mr. Trump. It was brought by Mr. Bragg in March 2023. Mr. Trump is facing 34 felony counts of falsifying business records and, if convicted, could face up to four years in prison. It is the former president’s first criminal trial and may be the only one that takes place before the 2024 presidential election.

His three other criminal cases — involving accusations that he mishandled classified documents and plotted to overturn his 2020 election loss — are mired in delays. And two recent civil cases, one for defamation and the other for fraud, concluded early this year with Mr. Trump facing more than $500 million in judgments.

Jury Selection
Lego-Court-4.jpg

Hundreds of potential jurors have been summoned. Nearly all will be dismissed. Justice Merchan plans to excuse jurors who say they cannot be fair and impartial or who are otherwise unwilling to serve.

Those remaining will answer 42 questions compiled before the trial, including about which media outlets they follow, whether they are adherents of the pro-Trump QAnon movement or the far-left antifascist group Antifa and whether they have read any of Mr. Cohen’s books.

How The Times Is Covering the Trump Trial
Expect live updates from the courtroom, daily takeaways, explainers and analysis. Meet our reporting team and find out how they have prepared for the trial.

The Mechanics of Covering Trump’s Manhattan Criminal Trial
April 12, 2024
Each side will be able to remove a limited number of jurors without explanation. The lawyers can also ask that jurors be removed “for cause” by providing specific reasons they believe a juror cannot be fair and impartial. The 12 who remain — along with several alternates in case any of the first dozen have to be excused during the trial — will be impaneled.

The Lawyers
$_1.PNG

Mr. Trump’s lead lawyer is Todd Blanche, a former federal prosecutor and white-collar defense lawyer who has bet his professional future on representing the former president.

Also on the defense team are Susan Necheles, an experienced New York defense lawyer who represented Mr. Trump’s company in a Manhattan criminal trial in 2022, and Emil Bove, who worked as a federal prosecutor in Manhattan and who has taken the lead on some of Mr. Trump’s delay efforts.

Mr. Bragg, a veteran of the same prosecutor’s office as Mr. Blanche and Mr. Bove, has assembled some of the same lawyers who convicted Mr. Trump’s company. They include Joshua Steinglass, a longtime homicide prosecutor, and Susan Hoffinger, the office’s head of investigations.

Matthew Colangelo, a former Justice Department official recruited by Mr. Bragg, and Chris Conroy, who has been part of the team investigating Mr. Trump from the very beginning, are also on the team.

The Other Hush-Money Deals
images

Although the charges relate to the payment to Ms. Daniels, Mr. Bragg’s office is expected to highlight two other deals. Both involve the National Enquirer, which has longstanding ties to Mr. Trump.

In the first deal, the tabloid paid $30,000 to a former doorman employed by the Trump Organization who had heard that Mr. Trump had fathered a child out of wedlock, a rumor that turned out to be false. The publication later determined the claim to be untrue.

In the other deal, the National Enquirer paid Karen McDougal, a former Playboy model who wanted to sell her story of an affair with Mr. Trump. She reached a $150,000 agreement with the tabloid, which bought the rights to her story in order to suppress it — a practice known as “catch and kill.”

Prosecutors say the hush-money deals show that Mr. Trump orchestrated a wide-ranging scheme to influence the 2016 presidential election by keeping damaging stories under wraps.

The Witness List
A list of potential witnesses will be revealed in court on Monday, and it is expected to resemble a 2016-era roster of Mr. Trump’s campaign aides, employees and friends.

In addition to Mr. Cohen, Mr. Bragg’s office is expected to call David Pecker, the former publisher of the National Enquirer, as well as Hope Hicks, a former campaign and White House aide to Mr. Trump. Ms. Daniels and Ms. McDougal could be witnesses as well.

And Mr. Trump said on Friday that he plans to testify in his own defense, though that is not a certainty.

The Gag Order
The trial is the realization of Mr. Trump’s long-held fear that prosecutors would flip trusted aides into dangerous witnesses. To avoid a situation like this, he has sought to exert control over potential witnesses, mixing enticements (covering their legal bills) with threats (assailing them on social media and at rallies).

Mr. Cohen has felt the brunt of the attacks: Mr. Trump has called him a “rat” and “death.” On Saturday, Mr. Trump risked violating Justice Merchan’s gag order when he again attacked Mr. Cohen on social media, calling him a “disgraced attorney and felon.”

Mr. Trump has also taken aim at Justice Merchan’s daughter, a Democratic political consultant, and called for the judge’s recusal. Justice Merchan has declined to step aside from the case, citing a ruling by a judicial ethics commission that found his daughter’s work posed no conflict for the judge.

Courthouse Security
LEGO-DC-Super-Heroes-Security-Guard-70910-Minifigure_a7c9f495-835c-4ed6-ba98-30a0f0e5a9a2.2fdf43bbb450a000b5f308886a587dbc.jpeg

The courthouse at 100 Centre Street in Lower Manhattan will be crawling with security.

The U.S. Secret Service will protect Mr. Trump, court officers will search anyone who enters the building and police officers will patrol the neighboring streets, where protesters and counterprotesters could clog public plazas.
 
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Prosecuted for having a sex life. Isn't that how it works, or does that only apply to DAs paying male prostitutes with tax money?
 
To claim that no one has ever seen anything like this is downright absurd and you really have to have an extremely low opinion of other people to even try to say anything like that. However, on one hand I guess he's right in not having a high opinion of people since apparently there's plenty that are unintelligent and uneducated enough to keep believing him. On the other hand he may just believe it himself though.
 
Trump's trial begins today with jury selection, expected to take about 2 weeks. These 2 weeks will be full of whining, crying, bitching and moaning from team trump. Expect maximum cope.


The first criminal trial of an American president will begin Monday as prosecutors and defense lawyers convene in a Manhattan courtroom to begin selecting the jury that will decide Donald J. Trump’s fate.

The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, has charged Mr. Trump with 34 felonies, accusing him of falsifying documents to conceal a sex scandal involving a porn star.

The case, one of four indictments facing the former president and presumptive Republican nominee, could reshape the political landscape ahead of Election Day.

Jury selection could last two weeks or more and the trial may spill into June. Mr. Trump is expected to be in the courtroom for much of it, bringing campaign theatrics to the sober atmosphere of a criminal proceeding.

The spectacle will be remarkable: a former president face-to-face with a part of his past that he has tried to bury but that could instead make him a felon. In 2016, Mr. Trump’s former fixer, Michael D. Cohen, paid $130,000 to the porn star, Stormy Daniels, to buy her silence about a story of having had sex with Mr. Trump a decade earlier.

Mr. Trump, who might take the witness stand in his own defense, has denied the sexual encounter. But prosecutors say that he falsified a series of documents to hide reimbursements to Mr. Cohen.

As Mr. Trump seeks to defend himself in court and on the campaign trail, he is likely to test the patience of the judge and the limits of the justice system. Already, the judge, Juan M. Merchan, has imposed a gag order, barring the former president from attacking witnesses, prosecutors, jurors and the judge’s family.

The Criminal Trial of Donald Trump in Manhattan
FsgONSMXsAE-ipY.jpg


A historic trial begins. Donald Trump, who faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the first degree to cover up a sex scandal, is set to go on trial in Manhattan on April 15. He will be the first former U.S. president to be criminally prosecuted. Here are answers to some key questions about the case:

What is Trump accused of? The charges trace back to a $130,000 hush-money payment that Trump’s fixer, Michael Cohen, made to the porn actress Stormy Daniels in 2016 to suppress her story of a sexual liaison with Trump in 2006. While serving as president, Trump reimbursed Cohen, and how he did so constituted fraud, prosecutors say.

Why did prosecutors cite other hush-money payments? Although the charges relate to the payment to Daniels, Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan district attorney, is expected to highlight two other hush-money deals. Prosecutors say that the deals show that Trump had orchestrated a wide-ranging scheme to influence the 2016 presidential election.

Who will the key witnesses be? Cohen is expected to be a crucial witness for prosecutors. Bragg is also expected to call David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer, as well as Hope Hicks, a former Trump aide, to shed light on the tumultuous period surrounding the payments. Trump said he plans to testify in his own defense.

Who is the judge? Juan Merchan, the judge, is a veteran of the bench known as a no-nonsense, drama-averse jurist. During the trial, Justice Merchan will be in charge of keeping order in the courtroom and ruling on objections made by prosecutors and Trump’s lawyers. The jury will decide whether Trump is guilty.

What happens if Trump is convicted? The charges against Trump are all Class E felonies, the least severe felony category in New York. If convicted, Trump faces a prison sentence of four years or less, or he could receive probation.

How is The New York Times covering the trial? The Times will provide comprehensive coverage of the trial, which is set to last six to eight weeks. Expect live updates from the courtroom in Manhattan, daily takeaways, explainers and analysis from our reporting team.

The 12 jurors, once selected, will have to judge Mr. Cohen’s story themselves: He is expected to be the prosecution’s star witness, confronting a boss he once idolized and now despises.

Jury selection will be crucial for both sides; a good case means little to an unfriendly jury. Prosecutors have some advantage, as the jury pool is drawn from Manhattan, one of the most Democratic counties in America. Mr. Trump’s team will be looking for red needles in a blue haystack.


Here’s what else to know about Mr. Trump’s trial:

Which Case Is This?

This is the Manhattan criminal case against Mr. Trump. It was brought by Mr. Bragg in March 2023. Mr. Trump is facing 34 felony counts of falsifying business records and, if convicted, could face up to four years in prison. It is the former president’s first criminal trial and may be the only one that takes place before the 2024 presidential election.

His three other criminal cases — involving accusations that he mishandled classified documents and plotted to overturn his 2020 election loss — are mired in delays. And two recent civil cases, one for defamation and the other for fraud, concluded early this year with Mr. Trump facing more than $500 million in judgments.

Jury Selection
Lego-Court-4.jpg

Hundreds of potential jurors have been summoned. Nearly all will be dismissed. Justice Merchan plans to excuse jurors who say they cannot be fair and impartial or who are otherwise unwilling to serve.

Those remaining will answer 42 questions compiled before the trial, including about which media outlets they follow, whether they are adherents of the pro-Trump QAnon movement or the far-left antifascist group Antifa and whether they have read any of Mr. Cohen’s books.

How The Times Is Covering the Trump Trial
Expect live updates from the courtroom, daily takeaways, explainers and analysis. Meet our reporting team and find out how they have prepared for the trial.

The Mechanics of Covering Trump’s Manhattan Criminal Trial
April 12, 2024
Each side will be able to remove a limited number of jurors without explanation. The lawyers can also ask that jurors be removed “for cause” by providing specific reasons they believe a juror cannot be fair and impartial. The 12 who remain — along with several alternates in case any of the first dozen have to be excused during the trial — will be impaneled.

The Lawyers
$_1.PNG

Mr. Trump’s lead lawyer is Todd Blanche, a former federal prosecutor and white-collar defense lawyer who has bet his professional future on representing the former president.

Also on the defense team are Susan Necheles, an experienced New York defense lawyer who represented Mr. Trump’s company in a Manhattan criminal trial in 2022, and Emil Bove, who worked as a federal prosecutor in Manhattan and who has taken the lead on some of Mr. Trump’s delay efforts.

Mr. Bragg, a veteran of the same prosecutor’s office as Mr. Blanche and Mr. Bove, has assembled some of the same lawyers who convicted Mr. Trump’s company. They include Joshua Steinglass, a longtime homicide prosecutor, and Susan Hoffinger, the office’s head of investigations.

Matthew Colangelo, a former Justice Department official recruited by Mr. Bragg, and Chris Conroy, who has been part of the team investigating Mr. Trump from the very beginning, are also on the team.

The Other Hush-Money Deals
images

Although the charges relate to the payment to Ms. Daniels, Mr. Bragg’s office is expected to highlight two other deals. Both involve the National Enquirer, which has longstanding ties to Mr. Trump.

In the first deal, the tabloid paid $30,000 to a former doorman employed by the Trump Organization who had heard that Mr. Trump had fathered a child out of wedlock, a rumor that turned out to be false. The publication later determined the claim to be untrue.

In the other deal, the National Enquirer paid Karen McDougal, a former Playboy model who wanted to sell her story of an affair with Mr. Trump. She reached a $150,000 agreement with the tabloid, which bought the rights to her story in order to suppress it — a practice known as “catch and kill.”

Prosecutors say the hush-money deals show that Mr. Trump orchestrated a wide-ranging scheme to influence the 2016 presidential election by keeping damaging stories under wraps.

The Witness List
A list of potential witnesses will be revealed in court on Monday, and it is expected to resemble a 2016-era roster of Mr. Trump’s campaign aides, employees and friends.

In addition to Mr. Cohen, Mr. Bragg’s office is expected to call David Pecker, the former publisher of the National Enquirer, as well as Hope Hicks, a former campaign and White House aide to Mr. Trump. Ms. Daniels and Ms. McDougal could be witnesses as well.

And Mr. Trump said on Friday that he plans to testify in his own defense, though that is not a certainty.

The Gag Order
The trial is the realization of Mr. Trump’s long-held fear that prosecutors would flip trusted aides into dangerous witnesses. To avoid a situation like this, he has sought to exert control over potential witnesses, mixing enticements (covering their legal bills) with threats (assailing them on social media and at rallies).

Mr. Cohen has felt the brunt of the attacks: Mr. Trump has called him a “rat” and “death.” On Saturday, Mr. Trump risked violating Justice Merchan’s gag order when he again attacked Mr. Cohen on social media, calling him a “disgraced attorney and felon.”

Mr. Trump has also taken aim at Justice Merchan’s daughter, a Democratic political consultant, and called for the judge’s recusal. Justice Merchan has declined to step aside from the case, citing a ruling by a judicial ethics commission that found his daughter’s work posed no conflict for the judge.

Courthouse Security
LEGO-DC-Super-Heroes-Security-Guard-70910-Minifigure_a7c9f495-835c-4ed6-ba98-30a0f0e5a9a2.2fdf43bbb450a000b5f308886a587dbc.jpeg

The courthouse at 100 Centre Street in Lower Manhattan will be crawling with security.

The U.S. Secret Service will protect Mr. Trump, court officers will search anyone who enters the building and police officers will patrol the neighboring streets, where protesters and counterprotesters could clog public plazas.
How are you going to bite on @LeonardoBjj lego style?
 
Prosecuted for having a sex life. Isn't that how it works, or does that only apply to DAs paying male prostitutes with tax money?
Not an accurate reflection of reality, it's a falsehood even. Prosecuted for covering up naked prostitute with campaign funds. [Edit: correction. Paid for as "legal fees".]
 
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Prosecuted for having a sex life. Isn't that how it works, or does that only apply to DAs paying male prostitutes with tax money?

Not an accurate reflection of reality, it's a falsehood even. Prosecuted for covering up an affair with campaign funds.

Of course he is lying. What is he going to to? Try to defend him on the facts of the case?

He knows as well as everyone else that Trump is guilty of everything he is being charged with in this trial.
 
Of course he is lying. What is he going to to? Try to defend him on the facts of the case?

He knows as well as everyone else that Trump is guilty of everything he is being charged with in this trial.
I know, but I think it is sometimes helpful to the peanut gallery to put a fine point on it.

We've got a lot of lurkers,

USERS WHO ARE VIEWING THIS THREAD​

Edit: oops, I didn't mean to actually tag all of you, but rather just mention how many people there are viewing the thread. My fat DERP and my humble apologies to all. I would edit the post to remove the @'s if it would help but it wouldn't prevent you from receiving notifications you've already gotten.
 
I know, but I think it is sometimes helpful to the peanut gallery to put a fine point on it.

We've got a lot of lurkers,

USERS WHO ARE VIEWING THIS THREAD​

Edit: oops, I didn't mean to actually tag all of you, but rather just mention how many people there are viewing the thread. My fat DERP and my humble apologies to all. I would edit the post to remove the @'s if it would help but it wouldn't prevent you from receiving notifications you've already gotten.
2.gif
 

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