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Tag: Manhattan District Attorney's Office

  • Former Manhattan prosecutor to testify before House committee investigating Trump case

    Former Manhattan prosecutor to testify before House committee investigating Trump case

    Manhattan DA sues Jim Jordan over subpoena


    Manhattan DA sues Rep. Jim Jordan over subpoena of former investigator

    00:34

    The Republican-led House Judiciary Committee has reached an agreement with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, whom it is investigating, to allow a former prosecutor from that office to testify in a Congressional probe into the indictment of former President Donald Trump.

    Attorneys for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan, and the ex-prosecutor, Mark Pomerantz, informed a federal appeals court Friday evening that they had reached an agreement which will allow Pomerantz to go forward with the testimony. The committee said in a tweet that the testimony is scheduled for May 12.

    Bragg’s office had appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Wednesday evening after a federal judge rejected his attempt to block the Judiciary Committee’s subpoena of Pomerantz.

    The judge, Mary Kay Vyskocil, concluded earlier that day that she has no standing to block the subpoena. Jordan and the committee have aggressively confronted Bragg in the weeks since Trump was indicted late last month. 

    Jordan and Trump have claimed that the case brought by Bragg, a Democrat, is motivated by political retribution. On April 4, Trump entered a not guilty plea to 34 felony counts of falsification of business records.

    Pomerantz resigned from the Manhattan D.A.’s office in February 2022 after working on the Trump investigation for a year, and  subsequently penned a memoir about the job. 

    Matthew Berry, an attorney for the committee, said during a court hearing Wednesday that Pomerantz was subpoenaed as part of an effort to determine how much federal funding was used in the Manhattan probe, and if politics came into play during the investigation.

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  • Will there be cameras in the courtroom for Trump’s arraignment?

    Will there be cameras in the courtroom for Trump’s arraignment?

    Those eager to know more about the charges against former President Donald Trump will have to be in the packed courtroom for his arraignment on Tuesday or wait a little longer for the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office to release the indictment after a judge ruled Monday that video of the proceedings would not be allowed.

    Several media organizations, including CBS News, had petitioned to allow video and photo coverage of Trump’s arraignment, but New York has one of the strictest policies in the country against cameras in the courtroom, according to The Fund for Modern Courts, a nonpartisan nonprofit. 

    Judge Juan Merchan ruled that five photographers would be allowed in the courtroom before the arraignment begins to take still photos “for several minutes.” After that, “No further photography will be permitted in the courtroom.” Electronic devices, including cell phones and laptops, will also not be permitted.

    Cameras will be allowed in the hallways of the courthouse, Merchan ruled.

    Trump’s legal team wanted cameras kept out of the courtroom, saying they would “create a circus-like atmosphere,” “raise unique security concerns” and are “inconsistent with President Trump’s presumption of innocence.”

    “This case presents extraordinary security concerns (including Secret Service-related concerns) and we submit that any video or photography of the proceedings will only heighten these serious concerns,” Trump’s attorneys wrote to Merchan on Monday. 

    The attorneys also said that any video or photography of the proceedings “will detract from both the dignity and decorum of the proceedings” and “interfere with the fair administration of justice.” 

    The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, which is prosecuting Trump, did not take a position on whether cameras should be allowed in the courtroom in its own letter to Merchan on Monday. But the letter noted that New York’s highest court has upheld the constitutionality of the law prohibiting audio and visual coverage of most courtroom proceedings. 

    “It would thus be a defensible exercise of the Court’s discretion to exclude or restrict videography, photography, and radio coverage of the arraignment in the interest of avoiding potential prejudice to the defendant, maintaining an orderly proceeding, assuring the safety of the participants in the proceeding, or for other reasons within the Court’s broad authority to manage and control these proceedings,” assistant District Attorney Matthew Colangelo wrote. 

    Colangelo also noted that Merchan allowed photography before the start of proceedings in another high-profile case against the Trump Organization.

    A grand jury voted last week to indict Trump in a case related to payments made to porn star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

    —Matt Mosk and Nick Poser contributed.

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  • Trump faces felony charge, source says

    Trump faces felony charge, source says

    Former President Donald Trump faces a felony charge, a source told CBS News Saturday. A person familiar with the matter told CBS News that Trump is being charged with falsifying business records in the first degree, a felony in New York State. 

    The charge stems from alleged hush money paid in 2016 to adult film star Stormy Daniels to buy her silence regarding an affair she claimed to have had with Trump. The indictment handed up by a New York grand jury remains sealed, so the details of the charge are not immediately available.

    Trump is the first former president in U.S. history to face criminal charges.  

    The former president is expected to be arraigned before Judge Juan Merchan on Tuesday, two sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.  The indictment would be read to him at that time. 

    In total, there are approximately 30 counts in the indictment, two sources confirmed to CBS News on Friday.

    In a statement responding to news of his indictment, the former president called it “Political Persecution and Election Interference at the highest level in history,” and accused Democrats of “weaponizing our justice system to punish a political opponent, who just so happens to be a President of the United States.”

    Two Trump attorneys, Joseph Tacopina and Susan Necheles, issued a statement saying that the former president “did not commit any crime” and vowed to “vigorously fight this political prosecution in Court.”

    Prosecutors did not inform Necheles and Tacopina of the charge, they told CBS News.

    — Graham Kates contibuted reporting. 

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  • What does it mean that Trump has been indicted?

    What does it mean that Trump has been indicted?

    Grand jury indicts former President Trump


    Grand jury votes to indict former President Trump in case linked to Stormy Daniels

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    Former President Donald Trump has been indicted by a New York grand jury on charges in connection with hush money payments made to adult film star Stormy Daniels, the Manhattan District Attorney confirmed Thursday.

    Trump is the first former president in U.S. history to be indicted on criminal charges.

    At a basic level, an indictment consists of a formal written list of what a suspect is accused of. An indictment, though, is not a conviction.

    In the case of Trump, the indictment means that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg can move forward with criminal charges. The exact charge or charges Trump faces were still unclear as of Thursday evening, however, and have not been made public.

    When a suspect is indicted, it means that a grand jury has found sufficient evidence to charge the suspect with a crime, and that prosecutors can move forward with a case. 

    Depending on the jurisdiction and the case, prosecutors are either required to employ a grand jury or choose to do so. Or, they sometimes have the option of bypassing a grand jury entirely and bringing charges directly. This can vary from state to state.

    Prosecutors will sometimes choose to utilize a grand jury in order to protect themselves in a high-profile case, such as this one.

    In some jurisdictions, prosecutors may also employ special grand juries for specific cases.

    In 2016, just days just before Trump was elected president, Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen, paid Daniels $130,000 in the form of a wire transfer. Daniels said she was paid in exchange for remaining quiet about an alleged affair she had with Trump.

    In 2018, Cohen pleaded guilty to federal tax evasion and campaign-finance violations in connection with the payments made to Daniels and was sentenced to three years in prison, but was released in mid-2020 amid the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. 


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  • Attorney seeks to discredit Michael Cohen in Trump grand jury investigation

    Attorney seeks to discredit Michael Cohen in Trump grand jury investigation

    A former legal adviser to Michael Cohen, a key witness in a Manhattan grand jury’s investigation into former President Donald Trump, sought to discredit Cohen on Monday as a liar on a “revenge tour.” 

    Robert Costello, who appeared before the grand jury at the request of Trump’s attorneys, told reporters after his testimony that Cohen has said things “that are directly contrary to what he said to us.” 

    Costello described Cohen as being in “a manic state” when they met for the first time at Cohen’s request in April 2018. By that time, federal agents had already raided Cohen’s home and office as part of a number of investigations, including a probe into the $130,000 payment made to porn star Stormy Daniels shortly before the 2016 election. 

    “He’d be talking to us while pacing like a wild tiger in a cage, back and forth,” Costello said. “He was really frazzled. He looked like he hadn’t slept in three, four, five days. And he’d just suddenly stop in the middle of talking about something, point at us and he’d say, ‘I want you guys to know, I will do whatever the f— it takes. I will never spend one day in jail.’ He must have said that close to 20 times. 

    “Well, he went to jail,” Costello continued. “And now he’s on the revenge tour.” Cohen was sentenced to 3 years, which he served partly in home confinement. 

    “If Bob Costello’s comments were any more fantastical, he would be a bestselling fiction author,” Cohen told CBS News on Monday evening. “It is important to note that I am not the one who slept with Stormy. I stated years ago and remain consistent that the payment was done at the direction of, in coordination with and for the benefit of Donald J. Trump. Truth is truth and the documents in the possession of the DANY demonstrate this. Then again, Bob works for Rudy Giuliani which should explain his lack of veracity.”

    As the Manhattan district attorney’s investigation picked up steam, Cohen repeatedly met with investigators and spent two days testifying before the grand jury about Trump’s alleged role in the payments, including potential campaign finance violations and falsification of business records. 

    Costello said Cohen told him that he was approached by Daniels’ lawyer about a potential lawsuit. Daniels has claimed she had sex with Trump in 2006, which he denies. 

    “So Michael Cohen decided on his own — that’s what he told us, on his own — to see if he could take care of this,” Costello said. “So he sat with the lawyer for Stormy Daniels. They negotiated a nondisclosure agreement for $130,000.” 

    Costello said he asked Cohen whether he took the money from his own account or whether it was Trump’s money, and Cohen told him it was from a home equity line of credit. 

    “I said, ‘Why would you do that?’” Costello said of their conversation. “He said, ‘Because I wanted to keep this secret, even secret from my own wife.’” 

    Cohen has alleged that Trump authorized the payment to Daniels to buy her silence during the 2016 campaign and that the Trump Organization reimbursed him for the payment.

    “He’s totally unreliable,” Costello said. 

    Costello said he has given five packets of materials that contain hundreds of emails between Cohen and his law firm from 2018 and 2019 to the Manhattan district attorney and Trump’s lawyers. He urged the district attorney to provide all the documents to the grand jury, instead of a select few. 

    “Let them see exactly who Michael Cohen is,” he said. 

    –Graham Kates contributed to this report.

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  • NYPD among local, state and federal agencies gearing up for Trump indictment

    NYPD among local, state and federal agencies gearing up for Trump indictment

    A law enforcement source said the New York Police Department along with federal, state and local agencies are gearing up for a possible indictment against former President Donald Trump in New York as early as next week.

    The NYPD and other law enforcement agencies — including the U.S. Secret Service and the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force — are preparing security plans in and around the Manhattan criminal courthouse where Trump will potentially appear if he is charged in connection with a $130,000 alleged hush money payment to Stormy Daniels, an adult film star, according to the source. Daniels alleges the money was paid to keep her quiet about a sexual encounter with Trump years earlier.

    Michael Cohen, Trump’s former personal lawyer, pleaded guilty in 2018 to campaign finance charges stemming from his involvement with the payments and was sentenced to three years in prison.

    The alleged scheme first came to light years ago, when Trump was still in office. The investigation gained new momentum in recent months, with the Manhattan district attorney’s office convening a grand jury to examine the matter.

    A grand jury in New York has been hearing the case and could possibly vote to hand up an indictment against Trump. 

    On Saturday, Trump, who denies the allegations, said in a social media post that he expects to be arrested Tuesday.

    He added that “illegal leaks” from the Manhattan district attorney’s office indicate that “THE FAR & AWAY LEADING REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE & FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, WILL BE ARRESTED ON TUESDAY OF NEXT WEEK.”

    Trump also implored his supporters to protest, saying, “THEY’RE KILLING OUR NATION AS WE SIT BACK & WATCH. WE MUST SAVE AMERICA! PROTEST, PROTEST, PROTEST!!!”

    An indictment of a former president would be a first in American history as Trump seeks the GOP nomination for president in 2024.

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  • Michael Cohen to testify to grand jury next week in Trump probe

    Michael Cohen to testify to grand jury next week in Trump probe

    Trump asked to testify before grand jury


    Former President Donald Trump asked to testify before a Manhattan grand jury

    02:58

    Michael Cohen, Donald Trump’s former attorney and fixer, is expected to testify to a Manhattan grand jury next week amid an investigation into the former president, a person familiar with the plans told CBS News. 

    The New York Times first reported the timing of the testimony.

    Cohen has been preparing for an appearance before a grand jury examining allegations related to alleged “hush money” payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels during former President Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. 

    A week ago, Cohen said he had met with prosecutors 18 times. He met again with investigators on Friday, telling reporters he had not testified before the grand jury yet. 

    The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has also invited Trump to testify before the grand jury, a move that suggests he could face an indictment in the case, according to a source familiar with the matter. An offer to testify often precedes an indictment in New York. 

    “The Manhattan District Attorney’s threat to indict President Trump is simply insane,” a Trump spokesperson said in a statement Thursday. “For the past five years, the DA’s office has been on a Witch Hunt, investigating every aspect of President Trump’s life, and they’ve come up empty at every turn — and now this.” 

    Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s White House counselor and former campaign manager, met for at least the second time with prosecutors on Wednesday. Days earlier, Trump’s former director of strategic communications, Hope Hicks, was also reportedly escorted into the D.A.’s office building through the back entrance.

    Robert Costa contributed to this report. 

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