Jury selection began Monday in the first of former President Donald Trump’s criminal cases to go to trial, a case legal experts say is the Read More
New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman claimed that Donald Trump appeared to "doze off" during his hush money criminal trial.
Magazine publisher David Pecker is slated to be the first witness in former President Trump’s criminal hush money trial, The New York Times reported Sunday, setting the stage as the first criminal trial of a former president gets underway Monday. The case against Trump centers on payments made to adult film star Stormy Daniels, with
The seven jurors selected so far largely get their news from the same left-wing media that have spent years disparaging Trump.
CFO Phillip Juhan was issued $4.9 million in promissory notes from Trump Media & Technology Group, vs. Nunes’s $1.2 million.
In a singular moment for American history, the hush money trial of former President Donald Trump begins Monday with jury selection.
Case knocking him off balance (First column, 14th story, link) Related stories:Hillary Clinton warns Trump wants to 'KILL his opposition' like Putin and Kim Jong UnResidents in fierce battle to remove Don's name from luxury aptsJudge Orders Him to Sit Like a DogWill a Mountain of Evidence Be Enough to Convict?Melania launches $245 Mother's Day necklaceHush money and the increasingly quaint notion of embarrassment
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Opening statements are set to begin in New York in the hush money criminal trial involving former President Donald Trump. The 12-person jury is now set and will hear from prosecutors
Former Trump White House attorney Jim Schultz says that Trump's post about
MORNING NEWSBREAK | In the first-ever criminal trial of a former U.S. president, a jury pool will convene today to start a case in which Donald Trump is accused of falsifying documents in paying hush-money to hide a sex scandal. Testimony may not begin for days as lawyers work to pick an impartial jury.
The twice-impeached former president of the United States, Donald Trump, begins the first of his four criminal trials on Monday. He faces 34 class E felony counts of falsification of business records in the first degree, and if convicted of one of those felonies, he could be looking at a maximum sentence of four years in state prison. Approximately 6,000 jurors have been subpoenaed to appear for jury duty this week in the Manhattan Criminal Courts, with about 1,500 being called to appear Monday...
The judge overseeing Mr Trump’s case ran the trial which convicted the Trump Organization last year