Trump criminal hush-money trial aims to complete jury selection

Lawyers in Donald Trump's criminal trial are expected on Friday to wrap up the painstaking process of selecting a jury that will for the first time in U.S. history determine whether a former president is guilty of breaking the law.


Reuters | Updated: 19-04-2024 22:26 IST | Created: 19-04-2024 22:26 IST
Trump criminal hush-money trial aims to complete jury selection

Lawyers in Donald Trump's criminal trial are expected on Friday to wrap up the painstaking process of selecting a jury that will for the first time in U.S. history determine whether a former president is guilty of breaking the law. With the 12-member jury already chosen, prosecutors and defense lawyers need six alternates for the trial, which is expected to run through May. Opening statements could start on Monday.

Two jurors have already been removed from the case. Justice Juan Merchan dismissed one juror on Thursday who said she felt intimidated after friends and relatives figured out she had been chosen for the trial. Another was dismissed after prosecutors questioned whether he had been truthful about prior run-ins with the law. The jury consists of seven men and five women, mostly employed in white-collar professions: two corporate lawyers, a software engineer, a speech therapist and an English teacher. Most are not native New Yorkers, hailing from across the United States and countries like Ireland and Lebanon.

Jury selection is often a contentious process, as lawyers on either side jockey to assemble a panel they hope will be most sympathetic to their interests. But it has proven especially challenging in this case, which involves a controversial former president who is accused of covering up a hush-money payment to a porn star shortly before he was elected in 2016. Trump has pleaded not guilty.

It is one of four criminal cases Trump faces, but the only one certain to go to trial ahead of the Nov. 5 election, when the Republican politician aims to again take on Democratic President Joe Biden. A conviction would not bar him from office. Roughly half of the more than 200 potential jurors who were screened, including two on Friday, said they would not be able to impartially assess Trump's guilt or innocence. All were drawn from Manhattan, a heavily Democratic borough of New York City, which was once Trump's hometown.

"This is so much more stressful than I thought this was going to be," one potential juror said through tears while being questioned by prosecutor Susan Hoffinger. Merchan dismissed her. Another potential juror said she had participated in a protest march after Trump's inauguration in 2017, but was not clear what policy positions he held. "That's an issue for me in the ballot box I'm going to have to deal with, but not necessarily in the courtroom," she said.

Trump argues that all four criminal cases are an effort by Biden allies to undercut his campaign. His criticism of witnesses, prosecutors, the judge and their relatives in this case and others has sparked concerns about harassment, prompting Merchan to impose a partial gag order. Trump has tested the limits of that gag order, and prosecutors have asked Merchan to penalize him.

As he arrived at court on Friday, Trump called the gag order "unfair" because it did not prevent other people from criticizing him. "They're real scum," he said, without clarifying who he was speaking about. Hoffinger told prospective jurors that the case was about steps Trump may have taken to influence the 2016 outcome, not his current campaign. "It's not about his being a candidate for the presidency," she said.

Merchan has taken steps to shield jurors from harassment, saying they will remain anonymous except to Trump, his lawyers, and prosecutors. On Thursday, the judge said he would prohibit news outlets from reporting on aspects of potential jurors' employment. In this case, Trump is accused of covering up a $130,000 payment his former lawyer Michael Cohen made to porn star Stormy Daniels for her silence before the 2016 election about a sexual encounter she says they had a decade earlier.

Trump has pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and denies any such encounter with Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford. Trump has pleaded not guilty in his other three criminal cases as well. Two accuse him of trying to overturn his 2020 election loss to Biden, while another accuses him of mishandling classified documents after he left office.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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