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Tag: Trump Trials

  • Exonerated ‘Central Park Five’ members sue Trump for defamation

    Exonerated ‘Central Park Five’ members sue Trump for defamation

    Five men wrongfully convicted of assaulting and raping a woman in New York’s Central Park in 1989 have sued former President Donald Trump for defamation over comments he made in a debate against Vice President Kamala Harris last month.


    What You Need To Know

    • The five men known as the “Central Park Five” have sued former President Donald Trump for defamation over comments he made in a debate last month
    • They were wrongfully convicted of assaulting and raping a woman in New York’s Central Park in 1989; their convictions were vacated more than a decade later after someone else confessed to the crime
    • At last month’s debate, Vice President Kamala Harris hammered Trump for taking out a full-page ad in all four of New York’s major newspapers in the aftermath of the attack calling for the return of the death penalty 
    • Trump fired back by saying that Harris and other opponents had “to stretch back years” to come up with lines of attack against him, before falsely saying that the five men pleaded guilty and killed someone



    Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, Kevin Richardson, Antron Brown and Korey Wise, initially known as the “Central Park Five” and, later, the “Exonerated Five,” accused Trump in a lawsuit filed in Pennsylvania of making “false, misleading and defamatory” statements about their case at the debate.

    The five men were convicted of the attack and sentenced to multiple years in prison. Their convictions were vacated in 2002, more than a decade later, after a serial rapist confessed to the attack, and DNA evidence confirmed he was involved. They sued the city the next year, accusing the city of false arrest, a racially motivated conspiracy to deprive them of their civil rights and a malicious prosecution, and they settled the case in 2014.

    At one point during last month’s debate, Harris condemned Trump for taking out a full-page ad in all four of the city’s major newspapers in the aftermath of the attack calling for the return of the death penalty. Trump fired back by saying that Harris and other opponents had “to stretch back years” to come up with lines of attack against him, before falsely saying that the five men pleaded guilty and killed someone.

    “[T]hey come up with things like what she just said, going back many, many years, when a lot of people including [former New York] Mayor [Michael] Bloomberg agreed with me on the Central Park Five,” Trump said. “They admitted — they said, they pled guilty. And I said, well, if they pled guilty, they badly hurt a person, killed a person ultimately. And if they pled guilty — then they pled we’re not guilty.”

    The five men did not plead guilty in the case, nor was the victim of the attack killed — as the lawsuit points out, while also pointing out that Ed Koch, not Bloomberg, was mayor at the time of the attack.

    “These statements are demonstrably false,” the complaint says, calling Trump’s rhetoric “extreme and outrageous” and charging that he “intended to cause severe emotional distress to Plaintiffs.”

    The Trump campaign has not responded to a request for comment from Spectrum News. A spokesperson for the former president’s campaign called the lawsuit “frivolous” in a statement to NBC News.

    According to the lawsuit, Salaam — now a New York City Council member — attempted to engage with Trump after the debate in the spin room. People asked Trump if he would “apologize to the Exonerated Five,” and after he didn’t respond, Salaam introduced himself to the former president.

    “Ah, so you’re on my side them,” Trump said, per the lawsuit.

    “No no no, I’m not on your side,” Salaam replied to Trump, who smiled, waved and walked away, according to the complaint.

    The lawsuit also makes note of other statements Trump has made about the case, including posts on his Twitter account from 2013 and a New York Daily News op-ed from 2014 calling the city’s settlement with the men a “disgrace.”

    The defendants are asking for “compensatory damages, for punitive damages and for costs, in an as yet unliquidated sum in excess of $75,000,” and asked for a jury trial to determine that figure.

    Justin Tasolides

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  • Trump loses gag order appeal in hush money case

    Trump loses gag order appeal in hush money case

    A New York appeals court on Thursday denied Donald Trump’s bid to end a gag order in his hush money criminal case, rejecting the Republican ex-president’s argument that his May conviction “constitutes a change in circumstances” that warrants lifting the restrictions.


    What You Need To Know

    • A New York appeals court on Thursday denied Donald Trump’s bid to end a gag order in his hush money criminal case
    • The five-judge panel ruled that the trial judge, Juan M. Merchan, was correct in extending parts of the gag order until Trump is sentenced, writing that “the fair administration of justice necessarily includes sentencing”
    • Merchan imposed the gag order in March after prosecutors raised concerns about Trump’s habit of attacking people involved in his cases
    • The judge lifted some restrictions in June, freeing Trump to comment about witnesses and jurors but keeping trial prosecutors, court staffers and their families — including his own daughter — off limits until he is sentenced



    A five-judge panel in the state’s mid-level appellate court ruled that the trial judge, Juan M. Merchan, was correct in extending parts of the gag order until Trump is sentenced, writing that “the fair administration of justice necessarily includes sentencing.”

    Merchan imposed the gag order in March, a few weeks before the trial started, after prosecutors raised concerns about Trump’s habit of attacking people involved in his cases. During the trial, he held Trump in contempt of court and fined him $10,000 for violations, and he threatened to jail him if he did it again.

    The judge lifted some restrictions in June, freeing Trump to comment about witnesses and jurors but keeping trial prosecutors, court staffers and their families — including his own daughter — off limits until he is sentenced.

    Trump, who has denied any wrongdoing, was originally scheduled to be sentenced July 11, but Merchan postponed it until Sept. 18, if necessary, while he weighs a defense request to throw out his conviction in the wake of the Supreme Court’s presidential immunity ruling.

    Associated Press

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  • Letters: Housing bond | Resolving ambiguities | Harris critique | Get serious | Cruel order | Best hope

    Letters: Housing bond | Resolving ambiguities | Harris critique | Get serious | Cruel order | Best hope

    Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.

    $20B housing bond
    should be voted down

    The $20 billion housing bond that will be on the Nov. 5 ballot is like snake oil.

    Only as little as 72% of the $20 billion housing bond will be spent to actually build affordable housing for extremely low-income, very low-income, and low-income households. Ten percent can be spent on grants for “transportation, schools, and parks.” Notably, only 80% of the proceeds of the bond issue need to be spent in the county funding the bonds. Thus, Contra Costa County residents could end up paying for parks in San Mateo County.

    The decision to place the bond on the ballot was made by the MTC, which includes unelected, unaccountable officials and is therefore like taxation without representation. We can and must do better.

    Nick Waranoff
    Orinda

    Critique of Harris
    applies to others

    Re: “Democrats deserved contest, not coronation” (Page A7, July 25).

    In his critique of Kamala Harris, Bret Stephens mentions high staff turnover during her time as vice president and the fact that she failed the bar exam on the first try.

    Regarding turnover, he should have started by looking at the mile-long list of senior and mid-level Trump people who quit or were fired.

    As for the bar exam, Harris is in good company. Others who took the exam more than once include Franklin D. Roosevelt, Michele Obama, John F, Kennedy Jr., and former California Governors Jerry Brown and Pete Wilson.

    He also claims she has been a bad campaigner. He’s entitled to his opinion, but her first speech in Milwaukee looked pretty impressive to me, in contrast to Donald Trump’s 93-minute meandering speech at the Republican convention.

    John Walkmeyer
    San Ramon

    We must get serious
    after record heat

    Re: “Last Sunday was hottest day on Earth in recorded history” (Page A2, July 24)

    That alarming headline was corrected the next day online: “Sunday was hottest day on the planet – no, wait, it’s Monday.” Things are just starting to warm up.

    It is now obvious that the cost of this heat — both in dollars and in human lives — far outstrips the cost of reducing CO2 emissions. Are we going to follow Ben Franklin’s advice: “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure”? Or John Paul Jones, “I have not yet begun to fight”? We need to get serious, folks.

    Cliff Gold
    Fremont

    Newsom’s order to
    sweep camps is cruel

    Re: “Newsom orders sweeps of camps” (Page A1, July 26).

    The scary truth is most Californians are only a few bad breaks away from homelessness. The unlucky blow may come from a wildfire or, worse, an unexpected medical bill. Insurers profit most off denying coverage, that is, if you were fortunate enough to have health insurance in the first place.

    Capitalism turns housing into a scarce commodity and then blames people who lack it. Rather than treating the unhoused as untouchable, we should give them security and more chances. It is the Christian thing to do and a humane imperative.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order to sweep away homeless encampments is cruel. It does nothing to solve the systemic problems that cause homelessness in the first place. And by treating other people like trash, the Ggovernor has proven he’s garbage.

    Alan Marling
    Livermore

    Harris win is best hope
    for multiracial society

    I was one of 50,000 Black men on a call for Kamala Harris, a day after 44,000 Black women got together. I haven’t seen this level of excitement since Barack Obama in 2008. Black women and men being this energized is how we will win the fight for a multiracial democracy.

    Letters To The Editor

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  • Supreme Court rules in Trump immunity case

    Supreme Court rules in Trump immunity case

    In Donald Trump’s immunity case, the Supreme Court ruled Monday that presidents are shielded from prosecution for official acts, but not unofficial ones.

    The case was sent back to a lower court, further delaying the historic prosecution against the Republican ex-president on charges that he sought to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, which culminated in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob of his supporters.

    The ruling was 6-3 along the high court’s ideological lines, with Trump’s three appointed conservative justices ruling in favor, but the three liberal justices on the bench dissenting. 

    “Under our constitutional structure of separated powers, the nature of Presidential power entitles a former President to absolute immunity from criminal prosecution for actions within his conclusive and preclusive constitutional authority,” the ruling reads. “And he is entitled to at least presumptive immunity from prosecution for all his official acts. There is no immunity for unofficial acts.”

    In a blistering dissent, liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor, an appointee of Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama, expressed grave concern for how this ruling could impact the future of American democracy.

    “Looking beyond the fate of this particular prosecution, the long-term consequences of today’s decision are stark,” she wrote. “The Court effectively creates a law-free zone around the President, upsetting the status quo that has existed since the Founding. This new official-acts immunity now ‘lies about like a loaded weapon’ for any President that wishes to place his own interests, his own political survival, or his own financial gain, above the interests of the Nation.”

    “When he uses his official powers in any way, under the majority’s reasoning, he now will be insulated from criminal prosecution. Orders the Navy’s Seal Team 6 to assassinate a political rival? Immune. Organizes a military coup to hold onto power? Immune. Takes a bribe in exchange for a pardon? Immune. Immune, immune, immune. Let the President violate the law, let him exploit the trappings of his office for personal gain, let him use his official power for evil ends. Because if he knew that he may one day face liability for breaking the law, he might not be as bold and fearless as we would like him to be. That is the majority’s message today.”

    “Even if these nightmare scenarios never play out, and I pray they never do, the damage has been done,” Sotomayor wrote. “The relationship between the President and the people he serves has shifted irrevocably. In every use of official power, the President is now a king above the law. 

    “Never in the history of our Republic has a President had reason to believe that he would be immune from criminal prosecution if he used the trappings of his office to violate the criminal law,” she later added. “Moving forward, however, all former Presidents will be cloaked in such immunity. If the occupant of that office misuses official power for personal gain, the criminal law that the rest of us must abide will not provide a backstop.”

    “With fear for our democracy, I dissent,” Sotomayor concluded.

    In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump called it a “BIG WIN FOR OUR CONSTITUTION AND DEMOCRACY” in all-caps.

    “PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN!” he added.

    This is a developing story. Check back later for updates.

    Justin Tasolides

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  • Trump to undergo probation interview ahead of N.Y. sentencing

    Trump to undergo probation interview ahead of N.Y. sentencing

    Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to be interviewed by New York probation officials Monday, a required step before his July sentencing in his criminal hush money case, according to three people familiar with the plan.


    What You Need To Know

    • Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to be interviewed by New York probation officials, a required step before his July sentencing in his criminal hush money case
    • Trump will do the interview via a computer video conference from his Florida home, according to those familiar with his planning
    • The usual purpose of a probation interview is to prepare a report that will tell the judge more about the defendant
    • People convicted of crimes in New York usually meet with probation officials without their lawyers, but the judge in Trump’s case, Juan Merchan, said in a letter Friday that he would allow Blanche’s presence


    Trump will do the interview via a computer video conference from his residence at the Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, the people told The Associated Press.

    One of Trump’s lawyers, Todd Blanche, will be present for the interview. People convicted of crimes in New York usually meet with probation officials without their lawyers, but the judge in Trump’s case, Juan Merchan, said in a letter Friday that he would allow Blanche’s presence.

    The usual purpose of a pre-sentencing probation interview is to prepare a report that will tell the judge more about the defendant, and potentially help determine the proper punishment for the crime.

    Such reports are typically prepared by a probation officer, a social worker or a psychologist working for the probation department who interviews the defendant and possibly that person’s family and friends, as well as people affected by the crime.

    Presentence reports include a defendant’s personal history, criminal record and recommendations for sentencing. It will also include information about employment and any obligations to help care for a family member. It is also a chance for a defendant to say why they think they deserve a lighter punishment.

    A jury convicted Trump of falsifying business records at his own company as part of a broader scheme to buy the silence of people who might have told embarrassing stories about him during the 2016 presidential campaign. One $130,000 payment went to a porn actor, Stormy Daniels, who claimed to have had a sexual encounter with Trump, which he denied.

    Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, says he is innocent of any crime and that the criminal case was brought to hurt his chances to regain the White House.

    Trump’s campaign spokesman, Steven Cheung, said in statement Sunday that President Joe Biden’s Democratic Party allies “continue to ramp up their ongoing Witch-Hunts, further abusing and misusing the power of their offices to interfere in the presidential election.”

    “President Trump and his legal team are already taking necessary steps to challenge and defeat the lawless Manhattan DA case,” he said.

    Merchan has scheduled Trump’s sentencing for July 11. He has discretion to impose a wide range of punishments, ranging from probation and community service to up to four years in prison.

    Associated Press

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  • Trump says he’s ‘OK’ with possible imprisonment

    Trump says he’s ‘OK’ with possible imprisonment

    Days after he became the first former president convicted of a crime in U.S. history, Donald Trump said he would be “OK” with house arrest or jail.

    But the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee warned that “it’d be tough for the public to take,” adding: “At a certain point there’s a breaking point.”


    What You Need To Know

    • Days after he became the first former president convicted of a crime in U.S. history, Donald Trump said he would be “OK” with house arrest or jail
    • But the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee warned “it’d be tough for the public to take” and “at a certain point there’s a breaking point”
    • Trump’s warning comes as multiple media outlets have reported about threats of violence towards the judge, the district attorney and the 12 jurors who voted to convict him on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in his criminal hush-money trial in New York City last week
    • The judge scheduled sentencing for July 11, with both the prosecution and defense expected to make their case in court filings in the interim
    • Each count of falsifying business records is punishable by up to four years behind bars, but it’s possible that Trump will get only fines or probation. Trump’s attorneys say they will appeal regardless


    “I’m OK with it,” Trump said at his Bedminister, N.J., golf club when asked by a host of Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” about facing possible imprisonment. “I don’t know that the public would stand it.”

    “I think it’d be tough for the public to take,” the former president said in the interview which aired Sunday. “You know, at a certain point there’s a breaking point.”

    Trump’s warning comes as multiple media outlets have reported about threats of violence — including on Trump’s social media network Truth Social — towards the judge, the district attorney and the 12 jurors who voted to convict him on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in his criminal hush-money trial in New York City last week. Trump himself frequently attacked Judge Juan Merchan, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, witnesses and the judge’s daughter in public remarks and social media posts.

    Merchan scheduled sentencing for July 11, with both the prosecution and defense expected to make their case in court filings in the interim. Each count of falsifying business records is punishable by up to four years behind bars, but it’s possible that Trump will get only fines or probation. Beyond the unprecedented complications of imprisoning a former president and current candidate for president months before November’s election, Trump’s attorneys have said they will appeal and will fight the state case all the way to the Supreme Court if they can.

    “We’re going to be vigorously challenging this verdict on appeal. We think we have ample grounds,” said Will Scharf, a Republican candidate for Missouri secretary of state and an attorney for Trump in other cases, on ABC News’ “This Week” on Sunday. “I think Judge Merchan should have clearly recused, I think he was irretrievably biased and I think that came through in decisions throughout the conduct of this trial.”

    “I don’t think President Trump is going to end up being subjected to any sentence whatsoever,” he later added.

    But Trump’s lead trial attorney in the Manhattan case, former federal prosecutor Todd Blanche, acknowledged in an interview with The Associated Press this weekend that Trump may face jail time.

    “On the one hand, it would be extraordinary to send a 77-year-old to prison for a case like this. A first-time offender who was also president of the United States, I mean, I think almost unheard of,” Blanche said, while noting the “highly publicized” nature of the case and Trump’s three other yet-to-be-resolved prosecutions may weigh against his favor. “It’s going to be a very, I think, contentious sentencing where we’re going to obviously argue strenuously for a non-incarceratory sentence.”

    Trump faces a federal prosecution centered on his attempts to stay in power after his 2020 election loss and the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol, as well as a racketeering prosecution in Georgia for his attempts to overturn his 2020 loss there and another federal prosecution in Florida for his handling of classified documents after leaving office. Those cases are in limbo as Trump’s legal team makes appeals and, for the federal cases, awaits word from the Supreme Court on their argument that presidents have total immunity for official acts conducted while in office. 

    In an interview of his own with “Fox News Sunday,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said congressional Republicans would continue investigations into Bragg and special prosecutor Jack Smith, who is overseeing Trump’s federal cases. Johnson said he believes Smith was “abusing his authority” and noted Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, is trying to get Bragg and another Manhattan prosecutor to testify at Congress later this month.

    “We have to fight back and we will with everything in our arsenal, but we’ll do that within the confines of the rule of law,” Johnson said. “We’re not going to tolerate this you had and at the end of the day, people are losing their faith in our system of justice itself. And that’s a serious threat.”

    After Trump was arrested and arraigned last April, Bragg’s offices received racist emails, death threats and two packages containing white powder. Last August, the FBI killed a Utah man during an attempted arrest for violent threats to President Joe Biden, Bragg and others. The Long Island home of another New York judge overseeing Trump’s civil fraud trial received a bomb threat in January. 

    During the Manhattan criminal trial, Merchan hit Trump with a gag order preventing him from publicly addressing witnesses, jurors, court staff, Bragg’s staff and Merchan’s daughter, a Democratic operative who came under attack by Trump and his allies. Bragg and Merchan themselves were not protected by the order. Trump was held in contempt of court, fined $10,000 and threatened with jail time for violating the gag order ten times.

    Adapting to the gag order, Trump invited campaign surrogates, vice presidential hopefuls and members of Congress — including Johnson — to do his criticizing and insulting for him in remarks to the press outside the courthouse.

    Scharf argued on Sunday that Trump’s attacks on Merchan, often from a rally stage, and witnesses like his former attorney Michael Cohen shouldn’t factor into the sentencing.

    “I think it’s really important to note that President Trump is running for president of the United States of America and he has an absolute constitutional right to comment on matters of public importance,” Scharf said. “I think the fact that he labored under a gag order for as long as he did, was manifestly unjust… and I don’t see how anyone can really poke holes at that.”

    In his Fox News interview, Trump said the guilty verdicts were “tougher” on his family than him.

    “They’ve good people, all of them, everyone. I have a wonderful wife who has to listen to this stuff all the time. They do that for this reason. They do that, all these salacious names that they put in of these people. And I’m not even allowed to defend myself because of a gag order,” Trump said. “She’s fine, but I think it’s very hard for her. I mean, she’s fine. But it’s, you know, she has to read all this crap.”

    Trump was convicted of falsifying business records to cover up payments made during the 2016 campaign to adult film actress Stormy Daniels who testified she had an affair with the newly married businessman in 2006. Former First Lady Melania Trump did not attend the six-week trial.

    The former president blames much of his legal woes on President Joe Biden, who has no role in local New York City prosecutions and who refrained from commenting on the case publicly until after the verdict. On Saturday, he said “revenge will be success, and I mean that,” but did not rule out wielding the Department of Justice in the way he claims without evidence that Biden does.

    “It’s awfully hard when you see what they’ve done,” Trump said. “These people are so evil.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Joseph Konig

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  • Live Updates: Trump hush money trial resumes

    Live Updates: Trump hush money trial resumes

    Opening statements began Monday in the hush money trial against Donald Trump, the first criminal case against a former president in U.S. history, after a full jury was selected last week. Witness testimony continues Thursday.

    Trump faces 34 charges of falsifying business records around purported efforts to cover up his alleged infidelity with an adult film actress during his 2016 presidential campaign. The former president has pleaded not guilty and denied any wrongdoing.

     

    Spectrum News Staff

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  • The Who’s Who of Trump’s Trial

    The Who’s Who of Trump’s Trial

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photos: Getty, Supreme Court

    Once a jury is finally seated for Donald Trump’s criminal trial in Manhattan, all eyes will turn to the key players. and witnesses. Here’s who they are.

    The first former president to be charged with a crime, Trump appeared in a Manhattan courtroom last year and pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. Prosecutors allege that in 2016 he personally played a role in Cohen paying Daniels $130,000 to silence her allegation that she and Trump had an affair years earlier. (He has consistently denied her allegation.) Trump is accused of breaking the law by categorizing the reimbursements to Cohen as a legal retainer; prosecutors say Cohen performed no legal services. Trump is charged for each of the records prosecutors say were bogus: checks made out to Cohen, invoices from Cohen, and accounting entries in Trump’s books.

    Although once a loyal enforcer for Trump, Cohen now calls him “a cheat, a liar, a fraud, a bully, a racist, a predator, a con man.” A key witness for the prosecution, he alleges that during the 2016 election, Trump directed him to facilitate a $130,000 payment through a shell company to Daniels in order to suppress her story that she and Trump had sex a decade earlier. He claims that Trump later reimbursed him for the payment, disguising the expense in business records as a retainer for legal services. (Cohen has also said that he played a role in the National Enquirer’s parent company, AMI, paying to “catch and kill” model Karen McDougal’s story of her own affair with Trump.)

    Cohen’s credibility is expected to come under fire because of his own legal history: In 2018, he pleaded guilty to lying to Congress. That same year, he was also sentenced to three years in federal prison for tax evasion, bank fraud, and campaign-finance violations in connection to the payments made to Daniels and McDougal.

    Stephanie Clifford took the stage name Stormy Daniels when she began working as a stripper and kept that name when she transitioned into adult films. In 2006, according to Daniels, she met Trump in Lake Tahoe, where he was hosting a celebrity golf tournament. She alleges that he invited her to dinner in his hotel suite and, after some conversation and Daniels spanking Trump with a copy of Forbes, the two had sex.

    In January 2018, after The Wall Street Journal broke the story that Cohen had paid off Daniels, she sued Trump to get out of their nondisclosure agreement. Soon after, she went on 60 Minutes, during which she detailed having sex with Trump and said she only signed the NDA out of concern for her and her family’s safety. Daniels will be allowed to testify after Judge Merchan rejected an attempt from Trump’s legal team to block her testimony.

    McDougal is a model and former Playboy Playmate of the Year who has claimed to have had a monthslong affair with Trump back in 2006, when he was newly married to his wife, Melania Trump. In 2016, McDougal was paid $150,000 by American Media, Inc. in exchange for the rights to her story about the affair and for her to stay silent on the subject in the media. AMI never published her story about Trump — a move known as a “catch and kill.” McDougal went on to sue AMI in order to be freed from her contract. She and the company would later reach a settlement, allowing her to speak about her experience with Trump. She is expected to testify during the trial.

    David Pecker is the former head of American Media, Inc., the publisher of the infamous National Enquirer. A longtime friend of Trump’s, he frequently used the Enquirer to run unflattering stories about Trump’s rivals, including Hillary Clinton and Ted Cruz.

    Also during Pecker’s time at AMI, the company often utilized the practice of “catch and kill” — when a publication buys the rights to a potentially damaging story and suppresses the information by declining to publish it. Pecker did this to McDougal and a former doorman at Trump Tower who prosecutors allege was trying to sell a story about a supposed love child of Trump’s. Pecker also communicated with Cohen regarding Daniels’s story. He is expected to testify.

    In 2021, voters elected Democrat Alvin Bragg to be the Manhattan district attorney — the first Black person to serve in the role. Last April, Bragg announced that his office had filed felony charges against the former president, becoming the first prosecutor in the nation to indict Trump. To do so, though, Bragg used a novel legal theory to upgrade what is usually a misdemeanor (falsifying business records) to a felony by arguing that the records were changed in order to cover up another crime: in this case, violations of the state’s campaign-finance laws. Bragg’s office alleges Trump tried to hide relevant information about his alleged affair from the voting public prior to the election.

    Judge Merchan is presiding over the historic trial, though it’s not his first time dealing with Trump figures. He oversaw the trial of former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg for financial fraud and tax evasion, sentencing him to five months in prison. He is also presiding over the pending trial of Steve Bannon, who is charged with fraud for allegedly bilking donors for a border-wall scheme.

    Merchan immigrated to the United States with his family from Colombia when he was 6 years old, growing up in Jackson Heights. After working as a prosecutor in both the Manhattan district attorney’s office and the state attorney general’s office, he was appointed as a Family Court judge in 2006 and to the State Supreme Court three years later.

    As he has done with other judges, Trump has attacked Merchan on social media, hurling insults and claiming that he is “corrupt.” Things escalated after Trump targeted Merchan’s daughter, suggesting that the judge is biased owing to his daughter’s work as a Democratic strategist. Merchan revised the gag order he placed on Trump to bar him from talking about his and Bragg’s families in addition to court staff and potential witnesses.

    In an interview with the Associated Press, Merchan did not discuss specifics about the case but said that he and his staff want to be sure that they “dispense justice.”

    “There’s no agenda here,” he said. “We want to follow the law. We want justice to be done.”

    One of Trump’s closest aides as president, Hope Hicks first began working for Ivanka in the Trump Organization in 2014 before she became the Trump campaign’s press secretary in 2015. Hicks is expected to testify at the trial as a witness for the prosecution because she communicated with various figures involved in silencing Daniels, including Daniels’s then-lawyer, Keith Davidson, as well as Pecker and Dylan Howard, two AMI executives. The communications started the day after the release of the Access Hollywood tape in October 2016, which is believed to have sparked the plan to pay Daniels.

    In 2023, Trump tapped attorney Todd Blanche to lead his defense in the Manhattan case. A veteran federal prosecutor experienced in white-collar cases, Blanche left his job as a partner at the prominent law firm Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft to defend Trump. He previously represented Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, and Igor Fruman, an associate of Rudy Giuliani’s, in separate federal cases.

    If defending Trump in Manhattan weren’t enough, Blanche is also taking the lead for Trump’s defense in the federal government’s classified-documents case in Florida and is co-counsel for the January 6–related case in Washington, D.C.

    After defending the Trump Organization against tax-fraud charges filed by Bragg’s office in 2022, Susan Necheles is working alongside Blanche to defend Trump himself. A veteran defense attorney, she has represented no shortage of notorious clients throughout her career: Pedro Espada Jr., the New York State Senate majority leader found guilty of embezzlement; Clare Bronfman, the Seagram’s heiress in the NXIVM sex-cult case; and Venero Mangano, an underboss for the Genovese crime family known as Benny Eggs.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty (Trump, Cohen, Daniels, McDougal, Pecker, Bragg, Hicks, Blanche, Necheles), Redux (Merchan)

    This post has been updated.


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    Nia Prater

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  • What Happened in the Trump Trial Today: Some Sleep, No Jury

    What Happened in the Trump Trial Today: Some Sleep, No Jury

    Photo-Illustration: Joanne Imperio; Photos Getty Images

    Donald Trump’s first and potentially only criminal trial before Election Day has begun. He’s returned to his former hometown to be tried by a jury of his peers in Manhattan that will determine whether he broke the law by paying, and subsequently disguising, hush money to Stormy Daniels to protect his reputation in the closing days of the 2016 election. The first-ever such trial for a former president, Trump could be sent to prison if convicted. (Judge Juan Merchan could jail him in the meantime for contempt of court, such as repeatedly violating a gag order.) The stakes could not be higher for the 77-year-old defendant or the country, which faces the possibility that he will end up behind bars or back in the White House or both. Below, our recap of the trial, which we’ll update daily with all the important developments and drama. (And here are the key people involved in the trial.)

    On the first day of the trial, Judge Merchan worked to hammer down what would and wouldn’t be allowed in the court proceedings moving forward. Prosecutors from the Manhattan district attorney’s office sought a fine against Trump over a social-media post that called potential witnesses Michael Cohen and Stormy Daniels “sleaze bags.” On his way into the courtroom, Trump railed against the trial, but he dozed off in his chair. And the jury-selection process got underway, but just barely.

    Trump arrived at the courthouse in his motorcade around 9 a.m., stopping in the hallway outside of the courtroom to address reporters. He reiterated his claims that the case against him is unfair and politically motivated, calling it “political persecution” and “an assault on America.”

    Trump arrives at court in lower Manhattan on Monday.
    Photo: Mark Peterson

    Judge Merchan denied a motion from Trump’s legal team that called for him to recuse himself. He said that Trump was using a “series of inferences, innuendos, and unsupported speculation” to support his recusal claim. He reiterated his earlier decision that the Access Hollywood tape could not be shown in court, deeming it too prejudicial. Prosecutors are also barred from mentioning the numerous sexual-assault allegations against Trump. However, he ruled that Karen McDougal will be allowed to testify, though the prosecution won’t be allowed to mention her claim that her alleged affair with Trump occurred while his wife, Melania, was pregnant with their son, Barron. The prosecution will also be allowed to enter evidence about the National Enquirer’s past coverage of Trump.

    Prosecutors filed a motion, claiming that several of Trump’s social-media posts violated the gag order Merchan set on Trump, which bars him from commenting publicly on potential witnesses, among others — he called Daniels and Cohen “sleaze bags.” Prosecutors are seeking a $1,000 fine per post.

    The buzz of pretrial hype wasn’t enough to keep the 77-year-old awake. The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman caught Trump appearing to fall asleep at one point during the proceedings, writing, “His head keeps dropping down and his mouth goes slack.”

    P.S. Will “Sleepy Don” stick?

    96 prospective jurors were brought into the courtroom to kick off the jury-selection process, but more than half were quickly sent home after stating they couldn’t be impartial or were unable to serve. By the end of the day’s proceedings, Merchan had only gotten through the questionnaires of nine jurors, and none have been selected for the final panel. The novelty of possibly sitting on this particular jury wasn’t lost on these Manhattanites, some of whom were seen craning their heads to sneak a peek at the defendant. One juror was excused owing to a potential conflict with his son’s wedding in June, prompting congratulations from Merchan. Another who listed clubbing among her hobbies was dismissed after acknowledging she had “strong opinions or firmly held beliefs” about Trump. Another potential juror said his girlfriend worked in finance but admitted that he didn’t know what she did, sparking laughter from the prosecutors. A second group of prospective jurors will get their shot on Tuesday.

    Behold the dour glowerer-in-chief:

    Photo: MICHAEL NAGLE/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

    A kidnapped-Biden truck drove in circles outside court on Monday morning:

    Like any other trial, this one begins with the process of selecting a jury, which could take several days. Attorneys for the defense and prosecution will question a large pool of Manhattan residents until they find 12 jurors and six alternates. Judge Merchan drafted a 42-question-long survey for prospective jurors to fill out in order to determine their impartiality. In addition to personal questions, potential jurors are asked about their media diets, whether they’ve volunteered for Trump’s campaign or attended a rally, and if they’ve ever read any books or listened to any podcasts by Michael Cohen, a key witness for prosecutors, or Mark Pomerantz, the attorney who previously worked on the DA’s investigation into Trump. It also asks whether they have been a member of several extremist groups and movements, such as the Proud Boys and antifa.

    Merchan previously ruled that jurors will be anonymous and have their identities shielded from the public owing to the risk of “a likelihood of bribery, jury tampering, or of physical injury or harassment.” Trump, his attorneys, and prosecutors will have access to the jurors’ names and addresses.

    From potential witnesses to the judge and attorneys, here’s a quick primer on the big names in the trial.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    The first former president to be charged with a crime, Trump appeared in a Manhattan courtroom last year and pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. Prosecutors allege that in 2016 he personally played a role in Cohen paying Daniels $130,000 to silence her allegation that she and Trump had an affair years earlier. (He has consistently denied her allegation.) Trump is accused of breaking the law by categorizing the reimbursements to Cohen as a legal retainer; prosecutors say Cohen performed no legal services. Trump is charged for each of the records prosecutors say were bogus: checks made out to Cohen, invoices from Cohen, and accounting entries in Trump’s books.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    Although once a loyal enforcer for Trump, Cohen now calls him “a cheat, a liar, a fraud, a bully, a racist, a predator, a con man.” A key witness for the prosecution, he alleges that during the 2016 election, Trump directed him to facilitate a $130,000 payment through a shell company to Daniels in order to suppress her story that she and Trump had sex a decade earlier. He claims that Trump later reimbursed him for the payment, disguising the expense in business records as a retainer for legal services. (Cohen has also said that he played a role in the National Enquirer’s parent company, AMI, paying to “catch and kill” model Karen McDougal’s story of her own affair with Trump.)

    Cohen’s credibility is expected to come under fire because of his own legal history: In 2018, he pleaded guilty to lying to Congress. That same year, he was also sentenced to three years in federal prison for tax evasion, bank fraud, and campaign-finance violations in connection to the payments made to Daniels and McDougal.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    Stephanie Clifford took the stage name Stormy Daniels when she began working as a stripper and kept that name when she transitioned into adult films. In 2006, according to Daniels, she met Trump in Lake Tahoe, where he was hosting a celebrity golf tournament. She alleges that he invited her to dinner in his hotel suite and, after some conversation and Daniels spanking Trump with a copy of Forbes, the two had sex.

    In January 2018, after The Wall Street Journal broke the story that Cohen had paid off Daniels, she sued Trump to get out of their nondisclosure agreement. Soon after, she went on 60 Minutes, during which she detailed having sex with Trump and said she only signed the NDA out of concern for her and her family’s safety. Daniels will be allowed to testify after Judge Merchan rejected an attempt from Trump’s legal team to block her testimony.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    McDougal is a model and former Playboy Playmate of the Year who has claimed to have had a monthslong affair with Trump back in 2006, when he was newly married to his wife, Melania Trump. In 2016, McDougal was paid $150,000 by American Media, Inc. in exchange for the rights to her story about the affair and for her to stay silent on the subject in the media. AMI never published her story about Trump — a move known as a “catch and kill.” McDougal went on to sue AMI in order to be freed from her contract. She and the company would later reach a settlement, allowing her to speak about her experience with Trump. She is expected to testify during the trial.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    David Pecker is the former head of American Media, Inc., the publisher of the infamous National Enquirer. A longtime friend of Trump’s, he frequently used the Enquirer to run unflattering stories about Trump’s rivals, including Hillary Clinton and Ted Cruz.

    Also during Pecker’s time at AMI, the company often utilized the practice of “catch and kill” — when a publication buys the rights to a potentially damaging story and suppresses the information by declining to publish it. Pecker did this to McDougal and a former doorman at Trump Tower who prosecutors allege was trying to sell a story about a supposed love child of Trump’s. Pecker also communicated with Cohen regarding Daniels’s story. He is expected to testify.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    In 2021, voters elected Democrat Alvin Bragg to be the Manhattan district attorney — the first Black person to serve in the role. Last April, Bragg announced that his office had filed felony charges against the former president, becoming the first prosecutor in the nation to indict Trump. To do so, though, Bragg used a novel legal theory to upgrade what is usually a misdemeanor (falsifying business records) to a felony by arguing that the records were changed in order to cover up another crime: in this case, violations of the state’s campaign-finance laws. Bragg’s office alleges Trump tried to hide relevant information about his alleged affair from the voting public prior to the election.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Redux

    Judge Merchan is presiding over the historic trial, though it’s not his first time dealing with Trump figures. He oversaw the trial of former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg for financial fraud and tax evasion, sentencing him to five months in prison. He is also presiding over the pending trial of Steve Bannon, who is charged with fraud for allegedly bilking donors for a border-wall scheme.

    Merchan immigrated to the United States with his family from Colombia when he was 6 years old, growing up in Jackson Heights. After working as a prosecutor in both the Manhattan district attorney’s office and the state attorney general’s office, he was appointed as a Family Court judge in 2006 and to the State Supreme Court three years later.

    As he has done with other judges, Trump has attacked Merchan on social media, hurling insults and claiming that he is “corrupt.” Things escalated after Trump targeted Merchan’s daughter, suggesting that the judge is biased owing to his daughter’s work as a Democratic strategist. Merchan revised the gag order he placed on Trump to bar him from talking about his and Bragg’s families in addition to court staff and potential witnesses.

    In an interview with the Associated Press, Merchan did not discuss specifics about the case but said that he and his staff want to be sure that they “dispense justice.”

    “There’s no agenda here,” he said. “We want to follow the law. We want justice to be done.”

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    One of Trump’s closest aides as president, Hope Hicks first began working for Ivanka in the Trump Organization in 2014 before she became the Trump campaign’s press secretary in 2015. Hicks is expected to testify at the trial as a witness for the prosecution because she communicated with various figures involved in silencing Daniels, including Daniels’s then-lawyer, Keith Davidson, as well as Pecker and Dylan Howard, two AMI executives. The communications started the day after the release of the Access Hollywood tape in October 2016, which is believed to have sparked the plan to pay Daniels.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    In 2023, Trump tapped attorney Todd Blanche to lead his defense in the Manhattan case. A veteran federal prosecutor experienced in white-collar cases, Blanche left his job as a partner at the prominent law firm Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft to defend Trump. He previously represented Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, and Igor Fruman, an associate of Rudy Giuliani’s, in separate federal cases.

    If defending Trump in Manhattan weren’t enough, Blanche is also taking the lead for Trump’s defense in the federal government’s classified-documents case in Florida and is co-counsel for the January 6–related case in Washington, D.C.

    Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty

    After defending the Trump Organization against tax-fraud charges filed by Bragg’s office in 2022, Susan Necheles is working alongside Blanche to defend Trump himself. A veteran defense attorney, she has represented no shortage of notorious clients throughout her career: Pedro Espada Jr., the New York State Senate majority leader found guilty of embezzlement; Clare Bronfman, the Seagram’s heiress in the NXIVM sex-cult case; and Venero Mangano, an underboss for the Genovese crime family known as Benny Eggs.

    This post has been updated.


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    Intelligencer Staff

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  • Manhattan court must find a dozen jurors for Trump hush-money trial

    Manhattan court must find a dozen jurors for Trump hush-money trial

    Of the 1.4 million adults who live in Manhattan, a dozen are soon to become the first Americans to sit in judgment of a former president charged with a crime.


    What You Need To Know

    • A dozen Manhattan residents are soon to become the first Americans ever to sit in judgment of a former president charged with a crime
    • Jury selection is set to start Monday in former President Donald Trump’s hush-money trial
    • The presumptive Republican nominee has pleaded not guilty
    • The proceedings present a historic challenge for the court, the lawyers and the everyday citizens who find themselves in the jury pool
    • Those problems include finding people who can be impartial about one of the most polarizing figures in American life and detecting any bias among prospective jurors without invading the privacy of the ballot box

    Jury selection is set to start Monday in former President Donald Trump’s hush money case — the first trial among four criminal prosecutions of the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. The proceedings present a historic challenge for the court, the lawyers and the everyday citizens who find themselves in the jury pool.

    “There is no question that picking a jury in a case involving someone as familiar to everyone as former President Trump poses unique problems,” one of the trial prosecutors, Joshua Steinglass, said during a hearing.

    Those problems include finding people who can be impartial about one of the most polarizing figures in American life and detecting any bias among prospective jurors without invading the privacy of the ballot box.

    There’s also the risk that people may try to game their way onto the jury to serve a personal agenda. Or they may be reluctant to decide a case against a politician who has used his social media megaphone to tear into court decisions that go against him and has tens of millions of fervent supporters.

    Still, if jury selection will be tricky, it’s not impossible, says John Jay College of Criminal Justice psychology professor Margaret Bull Kovera.

    “There are people who will look at the law, look at the evidence that’s shown and make a decision,” says Kovera, whose research includes the psychology of juries. “And the job of the judge and the attorneys right now is to figure out who those people are.”

    Trump has pleaded not guilty to fudging his company’s books as part of an effort to conceal payments made to hide claims of extramarital sex during his 2016 campaign. He denies the encounters and contends the case is a legally bogus, politically engineered effort to sabotage his current run.

    He will go on trial in a criminal court system where juries have decided cases against a roster of famous names, including mob boss John Gotti, disgraced film mogul Harvey Weinstein and Trump’s own company.

    Over the last year, writer E. Jean Carroll’s sex assault and defamation civil suits against Trump went before juries in a nearby federal courthouse. New York state’s fraud lawsuit against the ex-president and his company went to trial without a jury last fall in a state court next door.

    But the hush-money case, which carries the possibility of up to four years in prison if he’s convicted, raises the stakes.

    Trump lived for decades in Manhattan, where he first made his name as a swaggering real estate developer with a flair for publicity. As Steinglass put it, “There is no chance that we’re going to find a single juror that doesn’t have a view” of Trump.

    But the question isn’t whether a prospective juror does or doesn’t like Trump or anyone else in the case, Judge Juan M. Merchan wrote in a filing Monday. Rather, he said, it’s whether the person can “set aside any personal feelings or biases and render a decision that is based on the evidence and the law.”

    The process of choosing a jury begins when Merchan fills his New Deal-era courtroom with prospective jurors, giving them a brief description of the case and other basics. Then the judge will excuse any people who indicate by a show of hands that they can’t serve or can’t be fair and impartial, he wrote.

    Those who remain will be called in groups into the jury box — by number, as their names won’t be made public — to answer 42 questions, some with multiple parts.

    Some are standard inquiries about prospective jurors’ backgrounds. But the two sides have vigorously debated what, if anything, prospective jurors should be asked about their political activities and opinions.

    Merchan emphasized that he won’t let the lawyers ask about jurors’ voting choices, political contributions or party registration.

    But the approved questionnaire asks, for example, whether someone has “political, moral, intellectual or religious beliefs or opinions” that might “slant your approach to this case.” Another query probes whether prospective jurors support any of a half-dozen far-right or far-left groups, have attended Trump or anti-Trump rallies, and have worked or volunteered for Trump or for organizations that criticize him.

    Potential jurors also will be quizzed about any “strong opinions or firmly held beliefs” about Trump or his candidacy that would cloud their ability to be fair, any feelings about how Trump is being treated in the case and any “strong opinions” on whether ex-presidents can be charged in state courts.

    The process of choosing 12 jurors and six alternates can be chesslike, as the opposing sides try to game out whom they want and whom their adversaries want. They must also weigh which prospective jurors they can challenge as unable to serve or be impartial and when it’s worth using one of their limited chances to rule someone out without giving a reason.

    “A lot of times you make assumptions, and arguably stereotypes, about people that aren’t true, so it’s important to listen to what they say” in court and, if possible, online, says Thaddeus Hoffmeister, a University of Dayton law professor who studies juries.

    In prominent cases, courts and attorneys watch out for “stealth jurors,” people trying to be chosen because they want to steer the verdict, profit off the experience or have other private motives.

    Conversely, some people might want to avoid the attention that comes with a case against a famous person. To try to address that, Merchan decided to shield the jurors’ names from everyone except prosecutors, Trump and their respective legal teams.

    The six jurors and three alternates in each of Carroll’s federal civil cases against Trump were driven to and from court through an underground garage, and their names were withheld from the public, Carroll, Trump, their attorneys and even the judge.

    Carroll’s lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, says that if she were involved in the hush-money case, she would ask the court to do everything possible to ensure that jurors stay anonymous and don’t fear being singled out online or in the media.

    “The main concern, given the world we live in, has to be the potential for juror intimidation,” Kaplan said.

    Jurors were chosen within hours for both trials of Carroll’s claims, which Trump denies. Carroll’s lawyers later tried midtrial to boot a juror who had mentioned listening to a conservative podcaster who criticized Carroll’s case. The judge privately queried the juror, who insisted he could be fair and impartial.

    He remained on the panel, which unanimously found Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation and awarded Carroll $5 million. Eight months later, the second jury awarded Carroll an additional $83.5 million for defamation.

    Associated Press

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  • Judge: DA or special prosecutor must step aside in Trump case

    Judge: DA or special prosecutor must step aside in Trump case

    Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis must step aside from the Georgia election interference case against Donald Trump or remove the special prosecutor with whom she had a romantic relationship before the case can proceed, the judge overseeing it ruled Friday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The judge in the Georgia election interference case against Donald Trump and others says Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis must step aside or remove the special prosecutor with whom she had a romantic relationship before the case can proceed
    • Willis and special prosecutor Nathan Wade testified at a hearing last month they had engaged in a romantic relationship but rejected the idea Willis improperly benefited from it as lawyers for Trump and some of his co-defendants alleged
    • Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said Friday he found the “allegations and evidence legally insufficient to support a finding of an actual conflict of interest,” but he found there remains an “appearance of impropriety”
    • An attorney for Trump said that while they respect the court’s ruling, they “believe that the Court did not afford appropriate significance to the prosecutorial misconduct of Willis and Wade”

    Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee did not find that Willis’ relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade amounted to a conflict of interest that should disqualify her from the case. However, he said, the allegations created an “appearance of impropriety” that infected the prosecution team.

    “As the case moves forward, reasonable members of the public could easily be left to wonder whether the financial exchanges have continued resulting in some form of benefit to the District Attorney, or even whether the romantic relationship has resumed,” the judge wrote.

    “Put differently, an outsider could reasonably think that the District Attorney is not exercising her independent professional judgment totally free of any compromising influences. As long as Wade remains on the case, this unnecessary perception will persist.”

    Willis hired Wade to lead the team to investigate and ultimately prosecute Trump and 18 others accused of participating in a wide-ranging scheme to illegally try to overturn Trump’s narrow loss to Democrat Joe Biden in Georgia in 2020. Willis and Wade testified at a hearing last month that they had engaged in a romantic relationship, but they rejected the idea that Willis improperly benefited from it, as lawyers for Trump and some of his co-defendants alleged.

    McAfee wrote that there was insufficient evidence that Willis had a personal stake in the prosecution. But he condemned what he described as a “tremendous” lapse in judgment and the “unprofessional manner of the District Attorney’s testimony.” Even so, he said dismissal of the case was not the appropriate remedy to “adequately dissipate the financial cloud of impropriety and potential untruthfulness found here.”

    McAfee found no showing that the due process rights of Trump and the other defendants had been violated or that the issues involved prejudiced them in any way. He also said the disqualification of a constitutional officer, like a district attorney, is not necessary “when a less drastic and sufficiently remedial option is available.”

    The judge said he believes that “Georgia law does not permit the finding of an actual conflict for simply making bad choices — even repeatedly — and it is the trial court’s duty to confine itself to the relevant issues and applicable law properly brought before it.”

    An attorney for co-defendant Michael Roman asked McAfee to dismiss the indictment and prevent Willis and Wade and their offices from continuing to prosecute the case. The attorney, Ashleigh Merchant, alleged that Willis paid Wade large sums for his work and then improperly benefited from the prosecution of the case when Wade used his earnings to pay for vacations for the two of them.

    Willis had insisted that the relationship created no financial or personal conflict of interest that justified removing her office from the case. She and Wade both testified that their relationship began in the spring of 2022 and ended in the summer of 2023. They both said that Willis either paid for things herself or used cash to reimburse Wade for travel expenses.

    An attorney for Trump said that while they respect the court’s ruling, they “believe that the Court did not afford appropriate significance to the prosecutorial misconduct of Willis and Wade.”

    “We will use all legal options available as we continue to fight to end this case, which should never have been brought in the first place,” said Trump attorney Steve Sadow, who also alleged that Willis “played the race card and falsely accused the defendants and their counsel of racism.”

    The sprawling indictment charges Trump and more than a dozen other defendants with violating Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, known as RICO. The case uses a statute normally associated with mobsters to accuse the former president, lawyers and other aides of a “criminal enterprise” to keep him in power after he lost the 2020 election to Democrat Joe Biden.

    Trump, Republicans’ presumptive presidential nominee for 2024, has denied doing anything wrong and pleaded not guilty.

    Earlier this week, the judge dismissed some of the charges against Trump.

    The six challenged counts charged the defendants with soliciting public officers to violate their oaths. One count stemmed from a phone call Trump made to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a fellow Republican, on Jan. 2, 2021, in which Trump urged Raffensperger to “find 11,780 votes” for him to win the election in the state.

    Another of the dismissed counts accused Trump of soliciting then-Georgia House Speaker David Ralston to violate his oath of office by calling a special session of the legislature to unlawfully appoint presidential electors.

    McAfee said the counts did not allege sufficient detail regarding the nature of the violations.

    Associated Press

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  • Judge overseeing Georgia election case dismisses some charges against Trump

    Judge overseeing Georgia election case dismisses some charges against Trump

    The judge overseeing the Georgia 2020 election interference case on Wednesday dismissed some of the charges against former President Donald Trump and others, but the rest of the sweeping racketeering indictment remains intact.


    What You Need To Know

    • The judge overseeing the Georgia election interference case has dismissed some of the charges against ex-President Donald Trump, but others remain
    • Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee wrote Wednesday in an order six of the charges in the indictment must be quashed, including three against Trump
    • The judge wrote that prosecutors could seek a new indictment on the charges he dismissed
    • The six charges in question have to do with soliciting elected officials to violate their oaths of office, including two charges related to the phone call Trump made to fellow Republican Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger on Jan. 2, 2021

    Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee wrote in an order that six of the counts in the indictment must be quashed, including three against Trump, the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee. But he left in place other counts — including 10 facing Trump — and said prosecutors could seek a new indictment on the charges he dismissed.

    The ruling is a blow for Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who already is facing an effort to have her removed from the prosecution over her romantic relationship with a colleague. It’s the first time charges in any of Trump’s four criminal cases have been dismissed, with the judge saying prosecutors failed to provide enough detail about the alleged crime.

    The sprawling indictment charges Trump and more than a dozen other defendants with violating Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, known as RICO. The case uses a statute normally associated with mobsters to accuse the former president, lawyers and other aides of a “criminal enterprise” to keep him in power after he lost the 2020 election to Democrat Joe Biden.

    Lawyers for Trump did not immediately respond to a text message seeking comment Wednesday. A Willis spokesperson also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    McAfee’s ruling came after challenges to parts of the indictment from Trump, former New York mayor and current Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and attorneys John Eastman, Ray Smith and Robert Cheeley. They have all pleaded not guilty. No trial date has been set.

    The six challenged counts charge the defendants with soliciting public officers to violate their oaths. One count stems from a phone call Trump made to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a fellow Republican, on Jan. 2, 2021, in which Trump urged Raffensperger to “find 11,780 votes.”

    Another of the dismissed counts accuses Trump of soliciting then-Georgia House Speaker David Ralson to violate his oath of office by calling a special session of the legislature to unlawfully appoint presidential electors.

    McAfee said the counts did not allege sufficient detail regarding the nature of the violations.

    “The lack of detail concerning an essential legal element is, in the undersigned’s opinion, fatal,” McAfee wrote. “They do not give the Defendants enough information to prepare their defenses intelligently.”

    McAfee’s order leaves Meadows facing only a RICO charge. Jim Durham, a lawyer for Meadows, declined to comment.

    The ruling comes as McAfee is considering a bid to have Willis disqualified from the case over what defense attorneys say is a conflict of interest due to her romantic relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade. McAfee could rule by the end of this week on the disqualification bid, which would throw the most sprawling of the four criminal cases against Trump into question.

    Willis, who has said their relationship ended months ago, has said there is no conflict of interest and no reason to remove her from the case.

    The nearly 100-page Georgia indictment details dozens of alleged acts by Trump or his allies to undo his defeat, including harassing an election worker, who faced false claims of fraud, and attempting to persuade Georgia lawmakers to ignore the will of voters and appoint a new slate of Electoral College electors favorable to Trump.

    Of the 19 people originally charged in the indictment, four have pleaded guilty after reaching deals with prosecutors. They include prominent Trump allies and attorneys Sidney Powell and Kenneth Chesebro.

    The Georgia case covers some of the same ground as the federal case in Washington brought by special counsel Jack Smith that charges Trump with conspiring to overturn his election loss in a desperate bid to stay in power. Trump is charged separately by Smith with hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate and thwarting government efforts to retrieve them.

    Trump is scheduled to go to trial later this month in New York in a case accusing him of falsifying his company’s internal records to hide the true nature of payments to a former lawyer who helped Trump bury negative stories during his 2016 presidential campaign.

    Associated Press

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  • Trump files appeal of E. Jean Carroll defamation verdict

    Trump files appeal of E. Jean Carroll defamation verdict

    Former President Donald Trump has filed a notice of appeal of the judgment in the E. Jean Carroll defamation case, indicating in a court filing that he has posted a nearly $92 million bond.


    What You Need To Know

    • Former President Donald Trump is appealing the $83.3 million verdict in the E. Jean Carroll defamation case and posted a nearly $92 million bond, court filings show
    • A jury in January awarded Carroll the $83.3 million in a case surrounding Trump’s denial that he sexually assaulted her in the 1990s and called her a liar
    • In New York, civil case defendants must post at least 110% of the judgment as a bond in order to appeal
    • The judgment is part of the roughly half a billion dollars in penalties that Trump, the Republican presidential frontrunner, owes in various civil cases


    Notice of the appeal and the $91.6 million bond were made in separate court federal court filings in New York on Friday. Trump is appealing the $83.3 million judgment that a jury awarded Carroll in January over Trump’s denial that he sexually assaulted her in the 1990s and called her a liar. In New York, civil case defendants must post at least 110% of the judgment as a bond in order to appeal.

    The filings came a day after Judge Lewis A. Kaplan refused to delay a Monday deadline for posting a bond to ensure that Carroll can collect the $83.3 million if it remains intact following appeals.

    The judgment is part of the roughly half a billion dollars in penalties that Trump, the Republican presidential frontrunner, owes in various civil cases.

    A separate jury awarded Carroll $5 million in damages last year in a separate case which found that Trump was liable for sexually abusing her. He also owes $355 million in a separate civil fraud case which charged that he took part in a scheme to dupe banks and others with financial statements that inflated his wealth; that total balloons to $454 million with interest, which adds about $112,000 each day. He faces a March 25 deadline to put up the bond in that case.

    Trump’s lawyers have asked for that judgment to be stayed on appeal, warning he might need to sell some properties to cover the penalty.

    On Thursday, Kaplan wrote that any financial harm to Trump results from his slow response to the late-January verdict in the defamation case over statements he made about Carroll while he was president in 2019 after she claimed in a memoir that he raped her in spring 1996 in a midtown Manhattan luxury department store dressing room.

    Trump vehemently denied the claims, saying that he didn’t know her and that the encounter at a Bergdorf Goodman store across the street from Trump Tower never took place.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Justin Tasolides

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  • Trump files appeal of E. Jean Carroll defamation verdict

    Trump files appeal of E. Jean Carroll defamation verdict

    Former President Donald Trump has filed a notice of appeal of the judgment in the E. Jean Carroll defamation case, indicating in a court filing that he has posted a nearly $92 million bond.


    What You Need To Know

    • Former President Donald Trump is appealing the $83.3 million verdict in the E. Jean Carroll defamation case and posted a nearly $92 million bond, court filings show
    • A jury in January awarded Carroll the $83.3 million in a case surrounding Trump’s denial that he sexually assaulted her in the 1990s and called her a liar
    • In New York, civil case defendants must post at least 110% of the judgment as a bond in order to appeal
    • The judgment is part of the roughly half a billion dollars in penalties that Trump, the Republican presidential frontrunner, owes in various civil cases


    Notice of the appeal and the $91.6 million bond were made in separate court federal court filings in New York on Friday. Trump is appealing the $83.3 million judgment that a jury awarded Carroll in January over Trump’s denial that he sexually assaulted her in the 1990s and called her a liar. In New York, civil case defendants must post at least 110% of the judgment as a bond in order to appeal.

    The filings came a day after Judge Lewis A. Kaplan refused to delay a Monday deadline for posting a bond to ensure that Carroll can collect the $83.3 million if it remains intact following appeals.

    The judgment is part of the roughly half a billion dollars in penalties that Trump, the Republican presidential frontrunner, owes in various civil cases.

    A separate jury awarded Carroll $5 million in damages last year in a separate case which found that Trump was liable for sexually abusing her. He also owes $355 million in a separate civil fraud case which charged that he took part in a scheme to dupe banks and others with financial statements that inflated his wealth; that total balloons to $454 million with interest, which adds about $112,000 each day. He faces a March 25 deadline to put up the bond in that case.

    Trump’s lawyers have asked for that judgment to be stayed on appeal, warning he might need to sell some properties to cover the penalty.

    On Thursday, Kaplan wrote that any financial harm to Trump results from his slow response to the late-January verdict in the defamation case over statements he made about Carroll while he was president in 2019 after she claimed in a memoir that he raped her in spring 1996 in a midtown Manhattan luxury department store dressing room.

    Trump vehemently denied the claims, saying that he didn’t know her and that the encounter at a Bergdorf Goodman store across the street from Trump Tower never took place.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Justin Tasolides

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  • Haley: Voters need to know outcome of Trump cases before Election Day

    Haley: Voters need to know outcome of Trump cases before Election Day

    Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley says she would like to see all of former President Donald Trump’s legal cases “dealt with” before the general presidential election in November. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley says she would like to see all of former President Donald Trump’s legal cases “dealt with” before the general presidential election in November
    • In an interview with NBC News’ Kristen Welker on Thursday, Haley said, “We need to know what’s going to happen before the presidency happens because after that, should he become president, I don’t think any of that’s going to get heard.”
    • She said the Supreme Court “needs to spell out” when the verdicts are issued
    • Haley also said she does not believe Trump or any president should have total legal immunity, an issue the Supreme Court is set to consider

    In an interview with NBC News’ Kristen Welker on Thursday, Haley said, “We need to know what’s going to happen before the presidency happens because after that, should he become president, I don’t think any of that’s going to get heard.”

    Haley is the only major candidate standing between Trump and the Republican nomination. However, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations has, to date, failed to beat her former boss in any state primaries or caucuses.

    She said she believes voters in November “are going to want to know what they’re walking into.”

    “And if they’re walking into a president who’s still going to have to be in court or if they’re walking into a presidency where he can get rid of a court case, voters are going to want to know that,” Haley said.

    She said the Supreme Court “needs to spell out” when the verdicts are issued.

    But Haley conceded there is a chance that at least some of Trump’s legal issues could still be unsettled by Election Day. 

    “I think he deserves the right to defend himself, and I think that, unfortunately, court cases take a long time and lawyers can drag them out,” she said. “And I think that’s probably going to happen.”

    The former South Carolina governor stressed she’d want to see court cases resolved for any presidential candidate before an election. 

    “I would want this for Biden. I would want it for Clinton. I want it for Trump,” she said. “This should be for any president. We need to make sure that no president ever thinks they’re above the law.”

    On Wednesday, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Trump’s claim that he should not be charged in a federal election interference case because he has presidential immunity. The order will delay the potential trial for months, possibly beyond Election Day.

    Haley said she does not believe a president should have “free rein to do whatever they want to do.”

    “I just think a president has to live according to the laws, too,” she said. “You don’t get complete immunity.”

    Haley also said the classified documents cases involving Trump and President Joe Biden “should be treated the same way.”

    Trump faces 41 charges for allegedly retaining classified documents after he left the White House and obstructing the government’s efforts to retrieve them. Special counsel Jack Smith is seeking a July 8 start to the trial. Trump has pleaded not guilty in all four criminal cases against him, including cases in New York and Georgia. 

    Following his investigation into Biden, special counsel Robert Hur said the president concluded Biden “willfully” retained and disclosed classified materials when he was a private citizen but that the evidence did not meet the standard for criminal charges because there was a high probability the Justice Department would not be able to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Haley said she finds fault with both Trump’s and Biden’s actions.

    “I was at the United Nations,” Haley said. “I know what it’s like to be around classified information. We know how it’s supposed to be handled. You can’t even leave the room with it sitting on a desk  or you will get called out for it. You can get fined for it. This is something where you know how protected this is. You know people could be in danger if it gets in the wrong hands. And so the idea that both of these men claim they didn’t know they weren’t supposed to take it is impossible.”

    Ryan Chatelain

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  • Haley: Voters need to know outcome of Trump cases before Election Day

    Haley: Voters need to know outcome of Trump cases before Election Day

    Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley says she would like to see all of former President Donald Trump’s legal cases “dealt with” before the general presidential election in November. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley says she would like to see all of former President Donald Trump’s legal cases “dealt with” before the general presidential election in November
    • In an interview with NBC News’ Kristen Welker on Thursday, Haley said, “We need to know what’s going to happen before the presidency happens because after that, should he become president, I don’t think any of that’s going to get heard.”
    • She said the Supreme Court “needs to spell out” when the verdicts are issued
    • Haley also said she does not believe Trump or any president should have total legal immunity, an issue the Supreme Court is set to consider

    In an interview with NBC News’ Kristen Welker on Thursday, Haley said, “We need to know what’s going to happen before the presidency happens because after that, should he become president, I don’t think any of that’s going to get heard.”

    Haley is the only major candidate standing between Trump and the Republican nomination. However, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations has, to date, failed to beat her former boss in any state primaries or caucuses.

    She said she believes voters in November “are going to want to know what they’re walking into.”

    “And if they’re walking into a president who’s still going to have to be in court or if they’re walking into a presidency where he can get rid of a court case, voters are going to want to know that,” Haley said.

    She said the Supreme Court “needs to spell out” when the verdicts are issued.

    But Haley conceded there is a chance that at least some of Trump’s legal issues could still be unsettled by Election Day. 

    “I think he deserves the right to defend himself, and I think that, unfortunately, court cases take a long time and lawyers can drag them out,” she said. “And I think that’s probably going to happen.”

    The former South Carolina governor stressed she’d want to see court cases resolved for any presidential candidate before an election. 

    “I would want this for Biden. I would want it for Clinton. I want it for Trump,” she said. “This should be for any president. We need to make sure that no president ever thinks they’re above the law.”

    On Wednesday, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Trump’s claim that he should not be charged in a federal election interference case because he has presidential immunity. The order will delay the potential trial for months, possibly beyond Election Day.

    Haley said she does not believe a president should have “free rein to do whatever they want to do.”

    “I just think a president has to live according to the laws, too,” she said. “You don’t get complete immunity.”

    Haley also said the classified documents cases involving Trump and President Joe Biden “should be treated the same way.”

    Trump faces 41 charges for allegedly retaining classified documents after he left the White House and obstructing the government’s efforts to retrieve them. Special counsel Jack Smith is seeking a July 8 start to the trial. Trump has pleaded not guilty in all four criminal cases against him, including cases in New York and Georgia. 

    Following his investigation into Biden, special counsel Robert Hur said the president concluded Biden “willfully” retained and disclosed classified materials when he was a private citizen but that the evidence did not meet the standard for criminal charges because there was a high probability the Justice Department would not be able to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Haley said she finds fault with both Trump’s and Biden’s actions.

    “I was at the United Nations,” Haley said. “I know what it’s like to be around classified information. We know how it’s supposed to be handled. You can’t even leave the room with it sitting on a desk  or you will get called out for it. You can get fined for it. This is something where you know how protected this is. You know people could be in danger if it gets in the wrong hands. And so the idea that both of these men claim they didn’t know they weren’t supposed to take it is impossible.”

    Ryan Chatelain

    Source link