Trump

2023 - 4 - 3

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Image courtesy of "The Guardian"

Trump arrives in New York City ahead of Tuesday court appearance (The Guardian)

Ex-president departed Florida around midday and is expected to appear at the Manhattan courthouse Tuesday afternoon.

“What he does have is a venue where it is IMPOSSIBLE for me to get a Fair Trial (it must be changed!), and a Trump Hating Judge, hand selected by the Soros backed D.A. The former president says he will give an address after the hearing, but may not be able to say all that’s on his mind. “America was not supposed to be this way!” Trump lamented on his Truth Social account on Sunday evening, in a post where he announced his travel plans for the coming days. The horde of reporters that has camped outside the Manhattan criminal court where the charges were handed down will likely swell on Tuesday, when Trump makes his appearance under heavy security. However he rules, the former president’s appearance in New York will receive the maximum amount of publicity possible. Late afternoon he entered the Trump Tower complex on New York’s Fifth Avenue not far from Central Park, where he has an apartment and offices.

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Image courtesy of "CNN"

What to know about the Trump indictment on the eve of his court ... (CNN)

Donald Trump, the first ex-president in history to face criminal charges, is headed to New York this week for an expected arraignment on Tuesday after being ...

[asking to move the case to a different New York City borough](https://edition.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-indictment-stormy-daniels-news-04-01-23/h_be67165fd28cec4c69c3d221f46f3ca8), Tacopina said. His team “will look at every potential issue that we will be able to challenge, and we will challenge,” Tacopina said. Ordinarily, a defendant who is released would walk out the front doors, but Secret Service will want to limit the time and space where Trump is in public. By the afternoon, Trump is expected to be brought to the courtroom, where the indictment will be unsealed and he will formally face the charges. Tacopina suggested in TV interviews Sunday the statute of limitations may have passed, and said the Trump businesses didn’t make false entries. Once the former president is finished being processed, he’ll be taken through a back set of hallways and elevators to the floor where the courtroom is located. “The office is more important than any individual person. “All the Tuesday stuff is still very much up in the air, other than the fact that we will very loudly and proudly say not guilty.” The Secret Service, the New York Police Department and the court officers are coordinating security for Trump’s expected appearance. The former president will stay at Trump Tower Monday night and is expected to depart New York immediately after Tuesday’s arraignment to head back to Florida, the source said. The Manhattan district attorney’s office has been investigating Trump in connection with his alleged role in a hush money payment scheme and cover-up involving adult film star Stormy Daniels that dates to the 2016 presidential election. Trump is expected to leave Florida around noon ET on Monday, landing at New York’s LaGuardia airport around 3 p.m.

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Image courtesy of "Financial Times"

Donald Trump poised to fly to New York to face criminal charges (Financial Times)

Former US president to travel from Florida to Trump Tower ahead of arraignment in Manhattan on Tuesday.

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Image courtesy of "CNN"

America faces a fateful moment ahead of Trump arraignment (CNN)

Donald Trump will take America through yet another grave and unprecedented national drama this week when he becomes the first ex-president to appear in ...

DeSantis, who has yet to declare a run, is running a shadow campaign rooted in the premise that he could offer Trump-style policies without the chaos or distractions of the ex-president. In an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Trump lawyer Joe Tacopina said the ex-president’s team would loudly and proudly declare he is not guilty and signaled an attempt to try to prevent the case ever from reaching trial. CNN has reported that Trump was caught off guard by the grand jury’s decision to indict him, according to a person who spoke directly with him. But the complexities of arraigning a former president under close Secret Service protection means that this is no ordinary case – even if justice suggests Trump should be treated like any other citizen. Trump may have been indicted for infringing laws in New York, but since the charges haven’t been made public, it is impossible to assess his claims. In the run-up to Tuesday’s appearance, Trump’s legal team gave a preview of a robust defense that will unfold against a backdrop of a furious political campaign. While Trump’s characteristically aggressive attacks on Bragg, the judge in the case, and the Biden Justice Department might be effective in a political context, there’s no guarantee they’ll work in court. According to fundraising numbers that his campaign is touting, Trump is getting a political boost from the attention. But Trump, using his bond with his most loyal supporters, is claiming the prosecution is a case of naked political persecution from District Attorney Alvin Bragg, a Democrat, that’s designed to thwart the possibility of a presidential comeback. Trump plans to make a make a speech when he gets back to Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday night in which he will seek to leverage political advantage out of a perilous, personal legal crisis. At the same time, it is ultimately Trump’s norm-busting behavior that pushed the country to this somber moment. For many Americans who disdain Trump and his riotous single term, the case could be a sign that, finally, he is being called to account for his rule-crushing behavior and that everyone – even former presidents – are equal under the law.

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

Donald Trump arrives in New York ahead of arraignment (BBC News)

The former US president is now making his way to Trump Tower in Manhattan, where he will spend the night before attending court on Tuesday. The exact charges he ...

Mr Trump waved at supporters as he walked into the tower under tight security, just after 16:15 local time (20:15 GMT). His lawyers have already said he will plead not guilty. Dozens of media crews had set up camp on every available corner while at least five news helicopters hovered high over Fifth Avenue.

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Image courtesy of "PBS NewsHour"

What's an arraignment, and other questions answered about ... (PBS NewsHour)

Former President Donald Trump's court appearance Tuesday will kick off an intense legal battle as the 2024 Republican presidential candidate also fights for ...

Edwards had argued that the payments were a personal matter — intended to keep an affair secret from his wife — and had nothing to do with the election. Already, the charges have been a boon to his fundraising. Former Vice President Mike Pence called the indictment “an outrage” and “nothing more than a political prosecution.” Former South Carolina Gov. The judge will tell Trump the charges against him and advise him of his right to go to trial and other things. Trump is expected to walk out of the courtroom because the charges against him don’t require that bail be set in New York. Proceedings are closed to the public, including the media. Federal prosecutors say the payments amounted to illegal, unreported assistance to Trump’s campaign. But in New York, the clock can stop on the statute of limitations when a potential defendant is continuously outside the state. Trump may also argue that the statute of limitations has passed. Trump will no doubt try to fight the case on multiple fronts. But he says it had nothing to do with the campaign. The indictment against Trump remains sealed, as is standard in New York before an arraignment.

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

Four things to watch for in Trump indictment charges (BBC News)

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has been investigating a $130,000 (£105,000) payment made by Mr Trump's former lawyer Michael Cohen to porn star Stormy ...

Ms Daniels was threatening to cancel her previous nondisclosure agreement to keep the alleged affair a secret, according to Sources close to the case have told US media that they believe at least one of the charges against Mr Trump could be a felony. Ms McDougal has claimed she had a relationship with Mr Trump in 2006. The indictment is expected to set out what prosecutors believe Mr Trump has done, with some information as to how and when, and from that we will get a sense of the case they have built against him. This would mean prosecutors believe that Mr Trump tried to hide his payments to Ms Daniels because he didn't want voters to know they had an affair - the payments were allegedly made in the weeks before the 2016 election, and so it is possible they could be considered a part of his campaign. Prosecutors say this amounts to Mr Trump falsifying business records, which is a misdemeanour - a criminal offence - in New York, and we expect the charges to be related to that.

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Image courtesy of "Politico"

Trump arrives in Manhattan ahead of court appearance (Politico)

NEW YORK — Former President Donald Trump arrived in New York late Monday afternoon ahead of his court appearance in Manhattan the following day.

It will be a return to the normal schedule for the former president, which has included evening dinners with family and associates, as well as golfing at his nearby clubs. He’ll give a speech in mid-April at the National Rifle Association conference in Indianapolis, but there are no other major events on his calendar. The former president’s motorcade arrived at Trump Tower, in Midtown, shortly after. The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office “Have you looked at your 401K?” asked Vito Dichiara. The former president will stay the night in his penthouse at Trump Tower before heading to the courthouse on Tuesday morning, according to

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Image courtesy of "ABC News"

Is Donald Trump going to jail? What is he being charged with? (ABC News)

The countdown is on until the former US president faces court. Get up to speed about what's happening before proceedings kick off.

Mr Trump denies the affair. A lawyer by training, Michael Cohen worked for the Trump Organization from 2006 to 2017, serving as Mr Trump's fixer. During the Trump Organization trial, she made a point of referring to Mr Trump as "President Trump". The story never ran. Previously, Mr Colangelo served as deputy assistant to then-president Barack Obama, was a deputy director of the National Economic Council and was a chief of staff for the US labor secretary. In a TV appearance in 2018, long before Mr Tacopina started representing Mr Trump, he told CNN that the payment to Ms Daniels appeared to be "illegal" and a "potential campaign finance issue". Cohen made recordings of a conversation in which he and Mr Trump spoke about the arrangement to pay Karen McDougal through the tabloid publisher. Cohen, who blamed Mr Trump for his legal problems, pleaded guilty and served about a year in prison before being released to home confinement because of the COVID-19 pandemic. A few months earlier, Cohen had also arranged for the publisher of the National Enquirer to make a similar payment to Ms McDougal for the rights to her story about an alleged affair with Mr Trump. Ms McDougal was paid $223,000 in 2016 by the parent company of the National Enquirer for the rights to her story about the alleged relationship. Karen McDougal is a former Playboy model who said she had a 10-month affair with Mr Trump in the mid-2000s. Mr Trump said he was "completely innocent" and indicated he would not drop out of the race.

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Image courtesy of "The New Yorker"

The Return of the Non-stop Trump News Cycle (The New Yorker)

The former President's indictment in Manhattan means the reprieve from his dominance of American media is officially over. Will it be any better this time?

On Monday, as I watched Trump’s private plane touch down at LaGuardia—and then his motorcade wend its way on the Grand Central Parkway toward Manhattan—that moment came back to me; the Trump reprieve is officially over. The Times [reported](https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/21/us/politics/trump-pending-indictment.html) that Trump was mulling whether to smile for the cameras. There’s the political angle: Trump is fund-raising off of the indictment, and Republicans are calling the prosecutorial work of Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan District Attorney, politically motivated. The Manhattan grand jury’s indictment is a complex story, and an early test of whether the media has learned any lessons about how to healthily metabolize a Trump news cycle. The idea is to hold officials to account, even after a news cycle is over. There were the reports on his ever-changing moods, staff turnover in the White House, and the occasional moments when Trump “met the basic standards of his office, especially when a teleprompter has been involved.” In particular, Allsop and Vernon called out the “interminable bloviating on the part of a Mueller-industrial complex of cable-news prosecutors and pundits.” Insert any other Trump-era scandal in that sentence and you’ll conjure up the cottage industry of roundtables and op-eds each inspired. The problem is that we were applying this old standard to a candidate who was exploiting it for his own purposes—while seeking to undermine democracy itself.” An Axios [graphic](https://www.axios.com/2017/12/15/the-insane-news-cycle-of-trumps-presidency-in-1-chart-1513305658) from September, 2017—“The insane news cycle of Trump’s presidency in 1 chart”—is a helpful reminder of that era. [imminent](https://www.newyorker.com/news/letter-from-bidens-washington/trolled-by-trump-again), the country has been in thrall to a familiar phenomenon: the frantic Trump news cycle. [look back](https://www.cjr.org/special_report/coverage-trump-presidency-2020-election.php) for the Columbia Journalism Review, from October, 2020, Jon Allsop and Pete Vernon outlined the common categories of a Trump story. Most of the country was just plain burned out on news following the Trump Presidency. [potential indictments](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/04/03/how-republicans-are-handling-trumps-possible-indictment) mean the country is about to be deluged with Trump news: a jarring prospect, given that the past two years provided a relative reprieve from the former President’s antics.

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

Donald Trump hunkers down in New York ahead of arraignment (BBC News)

Mr Trump's whirlwind trip to Manhattan will see the former president charged for his alleged role in hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels. The exact ...

Mr Trump waved at supporters as he walked into the tower under tight security, just after 16:15 local time (20:15 GMT). His lawyers have already said he will plead not guilty. Dozens of media crews had set up camp on every available corner while at least five news helicopters hovered high over Fifth Avenue.

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Image courtesy of "Sky News"

Donald Trump to appear in court to face criminal charges (Sky News)

Police in New York have erected barricades along pavements around Trump Tower and the Manhattan criminal court building, with demonstrations expected.

[The key figures in the Trump hush money case - including ex-Playboy model](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trump-indicted-the-key-figures-in-the-hush-money-case-including-ex-playboy-model-12846224) [Media launch bid to allow cameras in court for Trump hearing](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trump-media-launch-bid-to-allow-cameras-in-court-for-ex-us-presidents-hearing-12848126) [Stormy Daniels says indictment will cause 'violence and death'](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trump-indictment-stormy-daniels-says-legal-process-will-spark-violence-injuries-and-death-12846685) [Trump's 'knees don't buckle' and he will not take plea deal, lawyer says](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trumps-knees-dont-buckle-and-he-will-not-take-a-plea-deal-in-face-of-criminal-charges-says-lawyer-12846393) [launched a bid to regain the presidency in 2024](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trump-announces-he-will-run-to-become-us-president-again-in-2024-12741322), aiming to deny Democratic President [Joe Biden](https://news.sky.com/topic/joe-biden-7848) a second term in office. He added that Trump's lawyers will "dissect" the indictment once it is made public and will look at "every potential issue" to challenge. Trump has said he is innocent and he and his allies have portrayed the charges as politically motivated. "Officers have been placed on alert and the department remains ready to respond as needed and will ensure everyone is able to peacefully exercise their rights," the New York Police Department said in a statement. The arraignment, which refers to the formal reading of a criminal charging document in the presence of the defendant, marks Trump's first appearance in court and first in front of a judge in the case. The former president is due to be back at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, at 8.15pm local time on Tuesday (1.15am UK time on Wednesday) [Stormy Daniels](https://news.sky.com/topic/stormy-daniels-8033) allegedly made in the waning days of the 2016 presidential campaign. The case is set to be heard at 2.15pm US time (7.15pm UK time) but it is thought it could take place earlier. The 76-year-old will appear at the Manhattan court at 6.30am local time (11.30am UK time) on Tuesday. Donald Trump is set to appear at a court in Manhattan for his arraignment over alleged hush money paid to a porn actress before the 2016 election. [Trump](https://news.sky.com/topic/donald-trump-5711), the first former US president to face criminal charges, is due to be arraigned, fingerprinted and photographed this morning.

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Image courtesy of "CNN"

Trump is losing his capacity to control his fate with legal threats ... (CNN)

Former President Donald Trump is seen in New York City on April 3, 2023. Gotham/GC Images/Getty Images. CNN ...

Five still photographers will be allowed to take pictures of Trump and the courtroom before the hearing begins, however. And even a former president can’t disregard the choreography of a court case and rules of criminal procedure. But now he will be subject to the dictates of a judge and the rules and conventions of the legal system, which will be far harder for him to disrupt and divert than the institutions of political accountability he has subverted. If anyone knows how to thrive in a media circus, it is Trump. The media outlets argued that the case was of such public interest that it should be broadcast. Trump’s lawyers attempted to wrest some control of the court proceedings on Monday, arguing against a request by news organizations, including CNN, to allow television cameras into Tuesday’s arraignment. And it would further disrupt the ex-president’s capacity to dictate his political schedule and control his destiny. When he was under scrutiny in the Russia investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller, or during his two impeachments, Trump exploited his huge popularity with Republican voters to discredit accusations against him. Ahead of his appearance Tuesday, for instance, Trump made a late shuffle of his legal team, bringing in another attorney, Todd Blanche, to serve as his lead counsel – a move some saw as sidelining another attorney, Joe Tacopina. Trump made a big show on Monday of his return to New York ahead of his arraignment. Trump hasn’t been charged in any of the other cases, but a multi-front defense in multiple cases would represent an extraordinary storm. Then there’s also a possible prosecution in Georgia led by a district attorney probing the ex-president’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election result in the swing state.

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Image courtesy of "Financial Times"

After the arraignment: the next steps in the case against Donald Trump (Financial Times)

The arraignment of former president Donald Trump, in the presence of a secret service detail and with the world's media camped outside, will be unlike any ...

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Image courtesy of "Sky News"

Donald Trump indicted: What is the former president accused of? (Sky News)

The case against Donald Trump centres on an alleged $130000 (£105000) payment made to adult film star Stormy Daniels during the final days of the 2016 ...

The former president is due to be back at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, at 8.15pm local time on Tuesday (1.15am UK time on Wednesday) where he will address the media. The case is due to be heard at 2.15pm US time (7.15pm UK time) but it is thought it could take place earlier. [case against him](https://news.sky.com/story/grand-jury-votes-to-indict-donald-trump-over-alleged-payments-to-adult-film-actress-us-media-12839058) centres on an alleged $130,000 (£105,000) payment made to adult film star [Stormy Daniels](https://news.sky.com/topic/stormy-daniels-8033) during the final days of the 2016 presidential campaign. [The key figures in the Trump hush money case](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trump-indicted-the-key-figures-in-the-hush-money-case-including-ex-playboy-model-12846224) [Media launch bid to allow cameras in court for Trump hearing](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trump-media-launch-bid-to-allow-cameras-in-court-for-ex-us-presidents-hearing-12848126) [Stormy Daniels says indictment will cause 'violence and death'](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trump-indictment-stormy-daniels-says-legal-process-will-spark-violence-injuries-and-death-12846685) [Trump's 'knees don't buckle' and he will not take plea deal, lawyer says](https://news.sky.com/story/donald-trumps-knees-dont-buckle-and-he-will-not-take-a-plea-deal-in-face-of-criminal-charges-says-lawyer-12846393) The 76-year-old is set to arrive at 6.30am local time (11.30am UK time). The case against Donald Trump centres on an alleged $130,000 (£105,000) payment made to adult film star Stormy Daniels during the final days of the 2016 presidential campaign.

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

Can Trump turn prosecution into an electoral asset? (BBC News)

The former president's historic court date in Manhattan is also an election campaign event.

And he said he would not assist if there was a request to extradite Mr Trump from Florida to New York Of course you expect this kind of macho bravado to come from the Trump camp. His appearance in court on Tuesday as a criminal defendant will test that cliché to the limit.

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Image courtesy of "RTE.ie"

Mugshot and fingerprints: Trump's court appearance (RTE.ie)

Donald Trump is to appear before a judge in New York today to face charges over a hush-money payment to a porn star.

Nothing in the Constitution prevents someone from running for the nation's highest office while facing charges. "President Trump will not take a plea deal in this case," Mr Tacopina told NBC's Today show. Mr Trump has no criminal record and whether he would be sentenced to prison in the event of a conviction remains to be seen. There's no crime." Mr Trump is expected to be fingerprinted and may also have a mugshot taken at a Manhattan courthouse, but Joe Tacopina, one of Mr Trump's lawyers, said the former president would not be placed in handcuffs. Here is what is expected as the 76-year-old Mr Trump becomes the first former US president to face criminal charges:

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