NEW YORK (AP) — A day after a New York jury delivered a historic guilty verdict in Donald Trump's criminal hush money trial, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee held a news conference Friday where he spoke publicly about the conviction and his White House bid.
Following his conviction on Thursday, Trump angrily denounced the trial as a “disgrace,” telling reporters he was an “innocent man.”
His supporters were quick to echo those sentiments while many of his critics — political and otherwise — applauded the verdict.
Trump was convicted of 34 felony charges in a scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election through a hush money payment to a porn actor who said the two had sex. The hush money trial and subsequent conviction mark the first time a former U.S. president has ever been tried or convicted in a criminal case.
He still faces three other felony indictments, but the New York case was the first to reach trial and likely the only one ahead of the November election.
Judge Juan M. Merchan scheduled Trump's sentencing for July 11. The charges are punishable by up to four years in prison, though the punishment would ultimately be up to Merchan. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg declined to say whether prosecutors would seek prison time.
Currently:
— What to know about the guilty verdict in Trump’s hush money trial
— Photos: A visual look at the past seven weeks at Donald Trump’s hush money trial
— How Trump's conviction affects the 2024 presidential race
— Trump could still vote for himself if he’s not in prison on Election Day
— Trump investigations: The status of the cases brought against him
Here's the latest:
Donald Trump said Friday that he thinks he broke a record in the history of politics by raising $39 million dollars since the guilty verdict in his criminal hush money trial was announced.
He said it happened over 10 hours with small money donors.
Earlier Friday morning, his campaign noted a different figure: $34.8 million.
Donald Trump incorrectly stated during a news conference that the New York prosecutors who charged him in his criminal trial were not allowed to look into alleged federal campaign finance violations.
Manhattan prosecutors didn’t charge Trump with federal violations — that’s not allowed — but they listed the allegations as one of three “unlawful acts” that jurors were asked to consider as they weighed the charges. To convict Trump, jurors had to find that not only did he falsify business records, but also that he did so to commit or conceal another crime.
Prosecutors said the other crime was a violation of a state election law barring conspiracies to promote or prevent an election by unlawful means. Jurors then had three alleged “unlawful means” to choose from.
One of them involved federal campaign finance violations.
During a news conference Friday morning, Donald Trump tested the limits of the order that prohibits him from publicly critiquing witnesses in his hush money case — including Michael Cohen.
Trump called his former fixer “a sleazebag,” adding, “everybody knows that.”
Cohen testified against Trump during the trial, saying his former boss directed him to handle the hush money payments and was aware of all that he was doing.
Trump didn’t use Cohen’s name, saying, “I’m not allowed to use his name because of the gag order.”
Calling Cohen “effective” as a lawyer, he said the former lawyer “got into trouble because of outside deals” involving taxi cabs.
Donald Trump on Friday called the witnesses who testified against him “salacious” and said their words against him demonstrated that the entire case was politically motivated.
“It had nothing to do with a case, but it had to do with politics,” Trump said.
Stormy Daniels, the porn actor at the center of the hush money case against Trump, gave several days worth of testimony that included intimate details of their alleged 2006 encounter.
Donald Trump insisted Friday that he wanted to testify in his criminal trial — and he could have, had he chosen to do so. All criminal defendants have a constitutional right to testify on their own behalf. By opting not to testify, Trump waived that right.
Trump said he wanted to testify but claimed the judge wanted to go into every detail of the case and that he feared being prosecuted for perjury if he made a verbal misstep.
“I would have liked to have testified,” he said. “But you would have said something out of whack like, ‘It was a beautiful sunny day, and it was actually raining out.’”
Donald Trump repeated unfounded claims Friday morning that President Joe Biden and the Justice Department influenced his New York hush money prosecution.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is a state-level prosecutor. His office, which prosecuted the hush money case, operates independently and is not under the direction of Biden or the federal government.
Donald Trump began his day-after-verdict news conference by launching into a critique of his general election opponent, as well as the “highly conflicted” judge who presided over his historic case.
From his namesake building in Manhattan, Trump argued that President Joe Biden and the “bunch of fascists” who back him are failing to secure the U.S.-Mexico border.
But he also marked the moment by, as he has done repeatedly, blaming Judge Juan M. Merchan for “a nasty gag order” that prevented Trump from levying public criticism against witnesses and many others affiliated with his case.
At the outset of a news conference held at Trump Tower on Friday morning, Donald Trump complained about his criminal trial and subsequent conviction.
“If they can do this to me they can do this to anyone,” he as he took to the podium.
He had notes with him, two pages written in black Sharpie.
Shares of Trump Media & Technology Group swung wildly at the opening bell Friday, falling rapidly after it appeared that the owner of social networking site Truth Social would bounce back despite Donald Trump's hush money conviction a day before.
After rising more than 2% at the opening of trade, shares slid 7% — about the levels they were trading at immediately after the conviction was announced during off-hours trading Thursday evening.
Donald Trump's hush money case, though criticized by some legal experts who called it the weakest of the four prosecutions against him, takes on added importance not only because it proceeded to trial first but also because it could be the only one to reach a jury before the election.
The other three — local and federal cases in Atlanta and Washington that accuse him of conspiring to undo the 2020 election, as well as a federal indictment in Florida charging him with illegally hoarding top-secret records — are bogged down by delays or appeals.
Donald Trump supporters and right-wing pundits have flown and shared images of upside-down flags in protest of the former president’s conviction. At least one was spotted outside Trump Tower in Manhattan Friday morning and elected officials including Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene shared the image online Thursday.
The symbol, once a signal of distress for sailors, has come to represent the “Stop the Steal” movement, which falsely claimed the 2020 presidential election was stolen. The symbol was also spotted outside Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s home in Virginia, though Alito said it pertained to a dispute between his wife and his neighbors.
Other incendiary rhetoric on social media referred to the verdict as a declaration of “war” or a sign of the coming of a “civil war.” The words “RIP America” trended on X, formerly known as Twitter, immediately after the verdict.
Donald Trump’s campaign said it has raised a record $34.8 million in small-dollar online contributions off his hush money conviction — nearly double its previous largest haul.
“From just minutes after the sham trial verdict was announced, our digital fundraising system was overwhelmed with support, and despite temporary delays online because of the amount of traffic, President Trump raised $34.8 million dollars from small dollar donors,” said Trump campaign senior advisers Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles in a statement.
Fundraising emails have employed stark language, including “I am a Political Prisoner” and “JUSTICE IS DEAD IN AMERICA!”
The campaign advisors said nearly 30% of Thursday’s donors were new to the fundraising platform.
Dozens of reporters and TV news crews are huddled in the lobby of Trump Tower in Manhattan ahead of the former president’s planned postconviction remarks at 11 a.m.
It’s the same very 1980s brass-and-rose marble lobby where Donald Trump descended his golden escalator to announce his 2016 campaign nine years ago next month.
Five American flags have been set behind a small lectern where he’ll speak.
Donald Trump’s conviction in his New York hush money trial is a stunning development in an already unorthodox presidential election with profound implications for the justice system and perhaps U.S. democracy itself.
But in a deeply divided America, it’s unclear whether Trump’s status as someone with a felony conviction will have any impact at all on the 2024 election.
Trump remains in a competitive position against President Joe Biden this fall, even as the Republican former president now faces the prospect of a prison sentence in the run-up to the November election.
In the short term at least, there were immediate signs that the unanimous guilty verdict was helping to unify the Republican Party’s disparate factions as GOP officials in Congress and state capitals across the country rallied behind their presumptive presidential nominee, while his campaign expected to benefit from a flood of new fundraising dollars.
Several Republican lawmakers reacted with fury to Donald Trump’s felony conviction on Thursday and rushed to his defense — questioning the legitimacy of the trial and how it was conducted.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said it was a “shameful day in American history” and labeled the charges as “purely political.”
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who has been one of Trump’s most frequent allies, said, “This verdict says more about the system than the allegations.”
And while Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell refrained from attacking the judge or jury, he said the charges “never should have been brought in the first place.”
Many GOP lawmakers, including Johnson, visited the courthouse in New York to support Trump during his criminal trial.
Donald Trump may have been convicted of a felony and reside in Florida, a state notorious for restricting the voting rights of felons, but he can still vote as long as he stays out of prison in New York state.
That’s because Florida defers to other states’ disenfranchisement rules for residents convicted of out-of-state felonies. In Trump’s case, New York law only removes their right to vote when incarcerated. Once they’re out of prison, their rights are automatically restored — even if they’re on parole, per a 2021 law passed by the state’s Democratic legislature.
“If a Floridian’s voting rights are restored in the state of conviction, they are restored under Florida law,” Blair Bowie of the Campaign Legal Center wrote in a post explaining the state of law, noting that people without Trump’s legal resources are often confused by Florida’s complex rules.
Donald Trump’s conviction Thursday on 34 felony counts marked the end of the former president’s historic hush money trial.
Now comes the sentencing and the prospect of a prison sentence. A lengthy appellate process could follow, especially as Trump's legal team has already been laying the groundwork for an appeal.
And all the while, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee still faces three more criminal cases and a campaign that could see him return to the White House.
http://accesswdun.com/article/2024/5/1246010