[ad_1]
Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks from the hallway outside a courtroom where he is attending a hearing in his criminal case on charges stemming from hush money paid to a porn star, in New York City on March 25, 2024.
Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters
Donald Trump has used every legal tool at his disposal to try to dismiss, diminish or delay the four active criminal cases against him.
But on Monday, barring a last-minute court intervention, Trump will become the first former president ever to be tried on felony charges.
The trial in New York Supreme Court centers on allegations that Trump falsified business records as part of a scheme to conceal a $130,000 hush money payment in 2016 to porn star Stormy Daniels, who says she had an extramarital affair with Trump years earlier.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg accuses Trump of using a “catch and kill” tactic to hide damaging information from voters ahead of the 2016 presidential election.
This case may be the only one of Trump’s 88 criminal charges across four separate cases to make it to trial before the Nov. 5 presidential election.
If he is convicted in this case, the 77-year-old ex-president could be sentenced to serve time at New York’s notorious Rikers Island jail complex or in a state prison.
Here is what to know about the historic trial:
What are the charges?
Trump is charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree.
Under New York law, a person is guilty of that crime when their records are falsified with the intent to commit or conceal another crime.
The DA alleges Trump and others violated election laws to carry out an illegal scheme to influence the 2016 election, by buying and suppressing negative information about him.
How did the alleged scheme work?
How long will the trial last?
The trial was originally scheduled to start March 25, but it was delayed until Monday to give Trump’s team time to look at some recently acquired documents.
The trial will begin with the process of selecting 12 jurors, plus alternates.
Judge Juan Merchan has said he expects the trial will last about six weeks.
Will Trump be there?
Yes, Trump will be there. New York law requires defendants to attend their trials, with few exceptions.
Trump has voluntarily attended numerous hearings in the hush money case and his other criminal cases, generating waves of mainstream media attention that his regular campaign events no longer muster.
Trump had also been scheduled to sit for a deposition Monday in a separate lawsuit related to the public merger of his media company, Trump Media & Technology Group, but that appearance was reportedly postponed.
Could Trump go to jail?
Who are the witnesses?
That same source told NBC that the potential defense witness list could include Trump himself.
Trump has not yet said if he plans to testify in his defense. When he took the stand in November in his New York civil business fraud case, Trump angrily lashed out at the judge, the state’s attorney general and many other “haters.”
Bradley Smith, a former commissioner with the Federal Election Commission, is another potential defense witness, NBC reported.