What to Know About the Trial Donald Trump Faces
in Manhattan
Prosecutors accused Mr. Trump of falsifying business
records to cover up a sex scandal. It will be the first criminal trial of a
former president.
By Ben
Protess, Kate Christobek and Jonah E. Bromwich
April 12,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/article/donald-trump-trial-what-to-know.html
On Monday,
Donald J. Trump will go on trial in Manhattan — the first former U.S. president
to be criminally prosecuted.
The trial,
which will begin with jury selection and last up to two months, will oscillate
between salacious testimony on sex scandals and granular detail about corporate
documents.
Mr. Trump
faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the first degree, all
of which are tied to the former president’s role in a hush-money payment to a
porn star, Stormy Daniels.
But that
payoff is not the only hush-money deal that prosecutors plan to highlight. The
prosecutors, from the Manhattan district attorney’s office, have accused Mr.
Trump of orchestrating a broader scheme to influence the 2016 presidential
election by directing his allies to purchase damaging stories about him to keep
them under wraps.
It is the
first of Mr. Trump’s four criminal cases to go to trial — and it could be the
only one to do so before Election Day.
Mr. Trump,
who is again the presumptive Republican nominee for president, has denied all
wrongdoing. He also assailed the district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, for
bringing the charges, accusing him of carrying out a politically motivated
witch hunt. And he has attacked the judge presiding over the case, Juan M.
Merchan.
Here are
answers to some key questions about the trial:
What is Mr.
Trump accused of?
The charges
trace back to a $130,000 hush-money payment that Mr. Trump’s fixer, Michael D.
Cohen, made to Ms. Daniels in the final days of the 2016 campaign. The payment,
which Mr. Cohen said he had made at Mr. Trump’s direction, suppressed her story
of a sexual liaison that she said she had with Mr. Trump.
Paying hush
money is not always illegal.
But while
serving as the commander in chief, Mr. Trump reimbursed Mr. Cohen, and how he
did so constituted fraud, prosecutors say.
In internal
records, Mr. Trump’s company classified the repayment to Mr. Cohen as legal
expenses, citing a retainer agreement. Yet there were no such expenses, the
prosecutors say, and the retainer agreement was fictional too.
Those
records underpin the 34 counts of falsifying business records: 11 counts
involve the checks, 11 center on monthly invoices Mr. Cohen submitted to the
company, and 12 involve entries in the general ledger for Mr. Trump’s trust.
Why did
prosecutors cite other hush-money payments?
Mr. Bragg’s
office linked Mr. Trump to three hush-money deals. While Mr. Trump is indicted
only in connection with the business records related to Ms. Daniels, the
prosecutors most likely mentioned the other deals to begin the work of proving
that Mr. Trump intended to conceal a second crime.
In addition
to the indictment, the prosecutors filed a so-called statement of facts that
referenced the other payoffs.
That
document, common in complex white-collar cases, provides something of a road
map for what the prosecutors could reveal at trial. And based on evidence
presented to the grand jury, the document details the two hush-money deals
involving The National Enquirer, which has longstanding ties to Mr. Trump.
The first
involved the tabloid’s payment of $30,000 to a former Trump Tower doorman who
claimed to know that Mr. Trump had fathered a child out of wedlock. The
publication later determined the claim to be untrue.
The
National Enquirer also made a payment to Karen McDougal, Playboy’s Playmate of
the Year in 1998, who wanted to sell her story of an affair with Mr. Trump
during the 2016 campaign. She reached a $150,000 agreement with the tabloid,
which bought the rights to her story to suppress it — a practice known as
“catch and kill.”
The deals
suggest that the payment to Ms. Daniels was not an isolated incident but rather
part of a broader strategy to influence the 2016 election.
Why is it a
felony to falsify records?
Falsifying
business records in New York State can be a misdemeanor. But it can be elevated
to a felony if prosecutors prove that the records were falsified to conceal
another crime.
In this
case, there are three potential additional crimes that Mr. Bragg has accused
Mr. Trump of concealing: a federal campaign finance violation, a state
election-law crime and tax fraud.
The
campaign crimes, prosecutors say, involve the hush-money payoffs to Ms. Daniels
and Ms. McDougal. The payments, they argue, were illegal donations to Mr.
Trump’s campaign.
The
potential tax fraud stems from the way in which Mr. Cohen was reimbursed for
his payment to Ms. Daniels.
Do
prosecutors need to convict Mr. Trump of the other crimes?
No.
Prosecutors do not have to charge Mr. Trump with any secondary crime or prove
that he committed it.
They still
must show, however, that there was intent to “commit or conceal” a second
crime.
Will the
trial be televised?
No. There
will be no audio or video broadcast of the trial available, though cameras will
be stationed in the hallway outside the courtroom to capture Mr. Trump’s
remarks going in and out of the trial.
Who will
the witnesses be?
Mr. Cohen
is expected to be a crucial witness for the prosecution. His testimony could
take days.
Mr. Bragg’s
prosecutors are also expected to call David Pecker, the former publisher of the
National Enquirer, as well as Hope Hicks, a former campaign and White House
aide to Mr. Trump, to shed light on the tumultuous period surrounding the
hush-money payments.
Ms. Daniels
and Ms. McDougal could be witnesses as well.
What will
the defense do?
The defense
will most likely try to paint Mr. Cohen as a Trump-hating liar, noting that he
and the former president had a falling-out years ago. Mr. Trump’s lawyers are
expected to emphasize that Mr. Cohen pleaded guilty to a variety of federal
crimes in 2018 — including for his role in the hush-money payment.
Mr. Cohen
might be the only witness who could directly tie Mr. Trump to the false
business records, a potential limitation of the case that Mr. Trump’s lawyers
could seek to exploit.
Whether Mr.
Trump’s lawyers will call any witnesses is unclear, but Mr. Trump could take
the stand in his own defense.
Will Trump
attend the trial?
Nothing is
ever certain with Mr. Trump, but he is currently expected to attend much of the
trial. To be absent, he will need to seek a waiver from the judge.
When Mr.
Trump is there, it will create a host of security and logistical issues around
the Lower Manhattan courthouse. In addition to the U.S. Secret Service
protecting Mr. Trump, there will be a heavy police presence outside the
building, as protesters and counterprotesters could fill the streets.
Who is the
judge?
Justice
Merchan is a veteran judge known as a no-nonsense, drama-averse jurist. This
case is already testing his patience.
Since the
Manhattan district attorney charged Mr. Trump last year, the former president
has used campaign emails, social media and repetitive legal filings to attack
the judge’s integrity and family. Last week, the former president demanded for
a second time that Justice Merchan step aside, citing his daughter’s position
at a Democratic consulting firm that worked for the 2020 Biden campaign.
The judge,
who is expected to rule on that request in the coming days, has also issued a
gag order to protect prosecutors, witnesses and his own family from Mr. Trump’s
vitriol. And yet the former president has continued to post articles with
pictures of the justice’s daughter.
During the
trial, Justice Merchan will be in charge of keeping order in the courtroom and
ruling on objections made by prosecutors and Mr. Trump’s lawyers. The jury will
ultimately decide whether Mr. Trump is guilty.
What is the
maximum sentence if Mr. Trump is convicted?
The charges
against Mr. Trump are all Class E felonies, the lowest category of felonies in
New York. Each count carries a maximum prison sentence of four years. Justice
Merchan has made it clear that he takes white-collar crime seriously and could
throw Mr. Trump behind bars. It’s possible, however, that Justice Merchan would
impose a concurrent sentence — under which Mr. Trump would serve all prison
time simultaneously — if the former president were convicted of more than one
count.
And nothing
in the law requires Justice Merchan to imprison Mr. Trump if he’s convicted by
a jury. The judge could instead sentence him to probation.
Ben Protess
is an investigative reporter at The Times, writing about public corruption. He
has been covering the various criminal investigations into former President
Trump and his allies. More about Ben Protess
Kate
Christobek is a reporter covering the civil and criminal cases against former
president Donald J. Trump for The Times. More about Kate Christobek
Jonah E.
Bromwich covers criminal justice in New York, with a focus on the Manhattan
district attorney’s office and state criminal courts in Manhattan. More about Jonah E. Bromwich


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