Arraignment

2023 - 4 - 5

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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 "The Guardian"

Trump is being arraigned – here's what that means and what ... (The Guardian)

Former president will answer criminal charges related to alleged hush money scheme in Manhattan.

Once the arraignment comes to a close, Trump will almost certainly be released and allowed to return to Florida. Even though the trial is probably still months away, Trump is already planning for a guilty verdict. Once Trump enters a plea, the judge will set a schedule for next steps in the pre-trial process. Tacopina has said he does not expect officers to put Trump in handcuffs, but the former president is likely to be fingerprinted and get his mugshot taken once he surrenders. The New York Young Republican Club has already announced it will hold a rally at a park near the courthouse to protest against Bragg’s “heinous attack” on Trump. On Monday, the former president and current presidential candidate traveled from his Florida home of Mar-a-Lago to New York, where he spent the night at Trump Tower.

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Image courtesy of "ABC News"

Live updates: Donald Trump faces arraignment in New York ... (ABC News)

Donald Trump is flying back to Florida after being arraigned in a New York courthouse. He is the first US president to face criminal charges. Follow live.

Nine of those checks were signed by Trump. In total, 11 checks were issued for a phony purpose. - 12 days before the presidential general election – the Special Counsel wired $US130,000 to an attorney for an adult film actress. - AMI paid $US150,000 to a woman who alleged she had a sexual relationship with Trump. This is the United States – we're better than this," she said. "His promise was to help the working man of America, guys like me, and women like me too. I would gladly take a bullet for you if necessary'," he said. But the concern is what's next?" By Shiloh Payne " He is the first US president to face criminal charges. Donald Trump has returned to Florida after being arraigned in a New York courthouse.

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Image courtesy of "ABC News"

Historic Trump photo released from inside courtroom arraignment ... (ABC News)

The first images of former President Donald Trump being arraigned inside a Manhattan criminal courtroom have been released.

The judge and prosecutors have reiterated that Trump is presumed innocent under the indictment. Trump appeared in court and remained silent as he entered the room. He made his first court appearance Tuesday and

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Image courtesy of "TIME"

Banning Video Cameras From Trump's Arraignment Was Bad for ... (TIME)

The ringmaster-in-chief happened to concur. In a letter, Trump's lawyers urged Judge Juan Merchan to deny news organizations' request to allow video cameras in ...

[QAnon](https://time.com/6076590/qanon-conspiracy-why-people-believe/)). 6](https://time.com/tag/january-6/)), it seems fair to worry that these remarks will pose their own suite of risks, in terms of prejudicing legal proceedings and jeopardizing public safety. But, in an atmosphere where even [fake Trump mug shots](https://time.com/6268286/donald-trump-fake-mugshots/) are a concern, cameras in the courtroom would’ve been the best bulwark available against a flood of misinformation. [catch and kill](https://www.manhattanda.org/district-attorney-bragg-announces-34-count-felony-indictment-of-former-president-donald-j-trump/#:~:text=During%20the%20election%2C%20TRUMP%20and,and%20boost%20his%20electoral%20prospects.)” scheme directed at influencing the 2016 election. Precedent aside, legitimate concerns, such as [security](https://time.com/6268059/trump-arraignment-security-new-york/) and the potential for news coverage to prejudice the proceedings, have been raised. Conspiracy theories that continue to harm American democracy and destroy individual lives have been launched over far less substantive matters than a President’s prosecution (see: But even in the event that everyone is on their best behavior tonight, the press conference gives Trump the day’s final say in a conversation whose other side—that is, the arraignment of a former President on criminal charges for the first time in U.S. [arraignment of Donald Trump](https://time.com/longform/trump-stormy-daniels-indictment-arraignment/) is a “spectacle” and a “circus.” These are the words that came up, over and over again, on cable news in the 24 hours before the former President of the United States faced a judge in Manhattan—as though the networks’ own around-the-clock coverage, featuring live footage of absolutely nothing happening at Trump Tower and roundtables of pundits engaging in pure speculation about what would happen on Tuesday afternoon, was not the height of big-top theatrics. [ruling](cnn.com/2023/04/03/politics/trump-courtroom-camera/index.html) released Monday night, Merchan banned all photography (as well as all electronic devices) from the courtroom, with the exception that five press-pool photographers would be allowed to take still shots at the beginning of the arraignment. To televise every other moment of this story, as news networks have inevitably done, without allowing video in the courtroom, is kind of like inviting Americans to a circus of major national importance and then forcing them to glean what’s going on in the tent from the carnival barkers, popcorn vendors, and snake-oil salesmen roaming the grounds. Once the unexpectedly lengthy arraignment finally began, actual news started to dribble out. That didn’t stop talking heads from offering inane close reads; CNN’s Van Jones interpreted a shot of Trump leaving Trump Tower as “a grandad having a very bad day.” Everyone seemed extremely impressed at the serious expression on his face.

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Image courtesy of "PBS NewsHour"

Trump's expected surrender and arraignment creates New York ... (PBS NewsHour)

A small park built on a site that was once a swampy, sewage-filled pond was ground zero for the frenzy surrounding former President Donald Trump's expected ...

In the late 1700s, Collect Pond Park was the site of a small body of water that had become an open sewer as the city grew. Some reporters had begun lining up for a seat in the courtroom on Monday afternoon, and stayed there all night or paid others to hold their place. A different sort of tension ran high around the courthouse and park Tuesday as news media jostled for position. Kyle Heath, 37, from Carmel, Indiana, was in the city for a family vacation that had been planned for some time. At one point, a tour guide led a group of tourists through the area. Police quickly diffused the scene. “I’m not here for the cameras,” he insisted to reporters. “In Indiana, we don’t have this much excitement.” The crowd was small, by the standards of New York City protests, which routinely draw thousands. But she drew cheers from the pro-Trump contingent before making a fast exit as journalists jostled for position around her. Metal barricades separated Trump supporters from anti-Trump protesters, and police stepped in to break up small skirmishes. history to face criminal charges.

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Image courtesy of "9News"

'The weight of it is hitting him': Trump defiant in historic court ... (9News)

Former President Donald Trump's motorcade departs a Manhattan court house after he pleaded not guilty to 34 felony charges related to falsifying business ...

On his way to the courthouse he posted on social media: "Heading to Lower Manhattan, the Courthouse. A court sketch of former president Donald Trump being asked "How do you plea?" The weight of the moment clearly weighed on the former president.

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Image courtesy of "USA TODAY"

Trump waves to crowd at courthouse as police keep supporters, foes ... (USA TODAY)

Steel barriers lined streets near the courthouse, roads were closed, and traffic was diverted across a swath of Manhattan on Tuesday. Live updates.

The heavy police presence is designed to prevent a repeat of the Jan. Tacopina also said he doubts the case will ever make it to a jury and that there will be no guilty plea. 6, 2021, riot in Washington, after Trump urged thousands of supporters to stop President-elect Joe Biden from taking office.] [Adams acknowledged that there may be "rabble rousers" taking to the streets, but added that "our message is clear and simple. Kidd, a university administrator, said he is from a small town in the Blue Ridge Mountains where he was "taught right from wrong." "He’s a criminal, he’s a traitor, he’s disgraced and he’s disgraceful." Santos said he didn’t plan to go inside the courthouse but came to “support the president.” Outside Trump Tower before he departed for the arraignment, a limousine disguised to look like a U.S. She dismissed the prosecution as politically motivated but said the Republican Party was obsessed with Trump and failed to see him as fallible. A Trump impersonator leaned out the window and railed against political “persecution.” [Demonstrators find different ways to express their views, pro and against Trump] [Hundreds of demonstrators and members of the press remained in a park outside the courthouse long after Trump's arrival, which many missed. Wearing a dark suit and red tie, Trump waved to the crowd as helicopters whirred above before he stepped inside. Later, Trump was seen on camera somberly entering a courtroom to hear the charges against him.

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Image courtesy of "Reuters"

Trump backers, detractors face off outside New York courthouse (Reuters)

Hundreds of raucous Donald Trump supporters and anti-Trump protesters swarmed around a New York courthouse on Tuesday as the former president appeared for ...

He declined to address reporters as he entered and exited the courtroom. By then, the crowd at the park had shrunk and bystanders seemed unaware of his departure. Earlier, Republican lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene, a U.S. , a reference to a chant directed at Trump's opponent Hillary Clinton during his successful presidential campaign in 2016. Many of them celebrated the former president's indictment with signs that read "Lock him up!" Register for free to Reuters and know the full story

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Image courtesy of "Los Angeles Times"

Manhattan on edge ahead of Trump's arraignment (Los Angeles Times)

Former President Donald Trump, center, at criminal court in New York on Tuesday. Trump, the first former U.S. president to be indicted, pleaded not guilty when ...

About a dozen or so of the former president’s supporters began to chant, “Lock up Bragg!” referring to Manhattan Dist. “They wouldn’t bring the charges if they didn’t have the evidence,” Fisher, 63, who lives in Manhattan and is retired, said. He was critical of the indictment and said he would be, even if it Trump were a Democrat. Here’s a guide to the latest developments. Two counterprotesters wearing “Arrest Trump” sweatshirts were involved in the fracas. He criticized the indictment against Trump, saying there’s “real crime” happening in his neighborhood. One side cheered to “lock him up,” echoing the similar cheers that Trump once led at his own rallies of his political opponents. Anti-Trump protesters at one point rolled out a huge banner that read, “Trump Lies All The Time,” prompting a scuffle between opposing sides. Trump supporters and critics filled a park across the street from the courthouse, in a gathering that was mostly peaceful but included a few, brief scuffles and face-offs between protesters. The former president has been accused of hiding his reimbursement to Cohen by funneling it through his business and recording the payments as legal services. The former president then walked into the courthouse to be fingerprinted and processed for arrest. The indictment will be unsealed Tuesday, revealing the exact charges a New York grand jury voted to bring against Trump.

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Image courtesy of "NPR"

What Trump's arraignment means for his 2024 election bid (NPR)

Fresh off a historic arraignment, former President Donald Trump is still very much running to regain office in 2024. This is the lay of the land for the ...

[Follow the live blog for the blow-by-blow of the historic da](https://www.npr.org/live-updates/trump-indictment-arraignment-arrest-new-york)y [Even if Trump gets a mug shot, we may not see it. [plenty to say](https://www.npr.org/2023/04/02/1167665444/conservative-coverage-of-trump-indictment-goes-apocalyptic) about the significance of a former U.S. There are three entities conducting four investigations — this one in New York, two by the federal government, one in Georgia related to Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election. [Speaking to Morning Edition](https://www.npr.org/2023/04/04/1167881002/former-president-donald-trump-will-surrender-to-face-criminal-charges), NPR's senior political correspondent Domenico Montanaro has some analysis on the politics of it all: president [facing criminal ](https://www.npr.org/2023/03/23/1164985436/trump-criminal-investigations)charges. president, a famed businessman, and someone currently facing trial for criminal charges (you know the story by now).

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Image courtesy of "Main Line"

Live updates: Trump pleads not guilty to 34 felony counts in Manhattan (Main Line)

Former U.S. President Donald Trump sits at the defense table with his defense team in a Manhattan court during his arraignment on April 4, 2023, in New York ...

The event is being billed as an “Emergency Noise Demonstration” that will drown out Greene’s protest. An NYPD police cruiser led him down the street as a black SUV covered the rear. Santos chatted with a few protesters before disappearing into the crowd. “Every day there’s something happening on the streets of New York City and he’s (either) A, lowering charges or B, just letting them off.” “One of the things I’ve learned is that Trump supporters and the religious right and the Proud Boys don’t believe in statistics, they don’t believe in polls,” said Karen Irwin, a Hell’s Kitchen resident on the anti-Trump side who was waving a large anti-Trump flag. “She was someone that incited the violence that took place at the Capitol on Jan. The Associated Press reported late Friday that Trump faces a number of charges involving falsifying business records. Trump repeatedly and fraudulently falsified New York business records to conceal crimes that hid damaging information from the voting public during the 2016 presidential election,” Bragg said afterward in a statement. The indictment of Donald Trump was unsealed on Tuesday. almost 30 hours after he departed PBIA for the trip to New York for his first appearance in court after last week’s indictment by a Manhattan grand jury. Trump, in his trademark blue suit, white shirt and red tie, remained uncharacteristically quiet inside the courtroom and out, uttering just two words. Trump entered the plea Tuesday in New York during an unprecedented and extraordinary court proceeding.

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Image courtesy of "ABC News"

As Republicans slam 'travesty' of Trump's arraignment, Dems say ... (ABC News)

Lawmakers and political leaders are reacting to Tuesday's historic arraignment of and unveiled indictment against former President Donald Trump, ...

“This is not something that is a focus for him," Jean-Pierre said, referring to Trump. “The American voters will ultimately render their own judgment on the former President’s political future.” This is the city focused on hard work and love for all people,” said Bowman, a former middle school principal. But this is not his focus for today," Jean-Pierre said. He hadn't been present on Capitol Hill to be peppered with questions about the looming indictment because he was in his home state of Kentucky recovering from a fall. "We will never accept hateful rhetoric in our city. Earlier in the day, Democratic Rep. Swarmed by an outsized number of press and some protesters in New York City, Georgia Rep. Justice benefits all of us,” Rep. Every American should take a stand. “I am here to protest and use my voice and take a stand. As the trial proceeds, protest is an American right but all protests must be peaceful,” Schumer said.

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Image courtesy of "ABC News"

Read the full transcript from Trump's arraignment (ABC News)

The former president's court hearing lasted 57 minutes. ... Former President Donald Trump was arraigned on 34 felony counts in federal court Tuesday.

If there were a verdict and that verdict were to be guilty, we would be able to take that verdict without you. And most importantly, what has to happen here is I have to be in possession of information that is significantly harmful to the person in the matter. I think in the interest of transparency and assuring the rules of law evenhandedly, at this time I'm going to deny your application. JUDGE MERCHAN: A second way you can lose your right or waive your right is to become disruptive, and I do not have any reason to believe that will happen. You have the right to be present at every stage of the proceedings in your case. To the extent we do believe we need to file a motion in advance of that, we will alert the People and Court, and obviously your Honor can guide us. But if the Court would like to, we say at least six weeks after discovery has been concluded, and for other potential motions that we will reach out to the Court about, we would ask to have a month to file those motions or to at least inform the Court of what motions we intend to file. So, motions -- and we will communicate with the People and with the Court as we land on the specifics of which motions and the timing, but some of the motions potentially dismissing the indictment after we had a chance to review discovery. First, we are filing with the Court and handing to counsel, copies of the indictment and a statement of facts. said the review by the defendant would have to be in the attorney's office. Judge, I'm also handing over to counsel a copy of the fingerprint report, and I would note for the record that the indictment was actually unsealed at 1:30 today and given to counsel for the defendant so they could review that in advance of this appearance. But now that I have made the request, if I were to be handed something like this again in the future, I have to take a closer look at it.

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Image courtesy of "The Guardian"

Trump arraignment at a glance: what we know so far (The Guardian)

Trump pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records before flying to Florida to address his supporters.

Prosecutors said Trump made a series of social media posts, including one threatening “death and destruction” if he was charged. And it’s not going to slow him down. And it’s not going to stop him. At one point, the judge put his hand to his ear as if to prompt an answer. Prosecutors in Manhattan accused Trump, the first sitting or former US president to face criminal charges, of trying to conceal a violation of election laws during his successful 2016 campaign. “We today uphold our solemn responsibility to ensure that everyone stands equal before the law.

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Image courtesy of "Rolling Stone"

They Found Love in a Hopeless Place: Trump's Arraignment (Rolling Stone)

While Trump prepared for arraignment, down the block couples said "I do" during their unforgettable wedding days at the the Marriage Bureau.

In a chapel, the couple promise to have and to hold each other as long as they both shall live. They exchange identical gold rings and a kiss in front of the officiant, Ramirez, and this witness. In September, they moved in together in Mott Haven in the Bronx. “People at home were calling us and saying, ‘Just stay away from the area,’ and we said, ‘Ha ha, we are…” — Clausen, already her partner of 13 years, finishes her sentence: “In the center of it.” “We just took the subway and walked,” he says. They fell in love over the following months over food and travel. “We saw the press on Friday and we asked, just kidding, ‘Is he coming?’” says Thomsen, 52. Arzuaga wears a polka-dotted blazer and Crawford is in gray with a window-pane plaid pattern. As he reminisces about their meet-cute, a limo passes through the intersection, honking, and carrying a passenger in a Trump costume, who waves out the open window to the protesters on the corner, while other people on board whoop and shout. “I’d go to pick up the lunch and she’s looking at me like, ‘Hey,’” he says. Right now, though, it’s their day, and the couple have more important things to think about. Rivera met Saavedra — who is dressed in a simple white gown and holding a faux floral bouquet — when he was a regular at the restaurant where she worked.

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

Trump charged: One thing his day in court tells us (BBC News)

It was dramatic and historic, but will the details of the criminal charges he faces change minds?

While Mr Trump may be already be dismissing the case as terminally weak, his legal jeopardy, however, does not begin and end in New York. The months ahead promise to be a jarring mix of legal manoeuvrings, court appearances and campaign events, as the former president navigates these most unusual waters. Now the American public has both at the same time - with the prospect of more to come. His lawyers are also expected to file motions to get the charges dismissed before the case reaches trial. Mr Trump appeared stone-faced during his brief on-camera appearances at the courthouse, where he pleaded not guilty to the charges brought against him. The cards were already on the table when Mr Trump woke up in Manhattan on Tuesday.

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Image courtesy of "Daily Nebraskan"

BREAKING: Students share opinions regarding Trump's arraignment (Daily Nebraskan)

Today, former President Donald Trump is set to be arraigned after being indicted by a grand jury in Manhattan last week.

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Image courtesy of "WSWS"

Trump arraignment: A degraded political spectacle that covers up ... (WSWS)

The Democrats have engineered the indictment of Trump on a sex scandal while downplaying his real crimes against democratic rights and democracy itself.

He suggested that Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith, who oversees both the documents case and the January 6 investigation, had once had a “different name,” another appeal to xenophobia and bigotry. Every facet of capitalist corruption, falsification and outright robbery is concentrated in the borough of Manhattan. The sex scandal appeals to the identity-politics warriors, while the document retention case speaks to the concerns of the military-intelligence apparatus. It is quite possible that the Democrats or their media supporters will reprise the filthy methods of the Kenneth Starr “report” in the Clinton case, and produce a pornographic account of Trump’s relations with adult film actress Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal. posted a picture on social media of the daughter of Judge Juan Merchan. In the case of Trump, the Democratic Party, in the person of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, has now adopted the same methods, and they are no more progressive because their target is Trump rather than Clinton.

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