After two days of deliberation, a jury of 12 New Yorkers found Trump guilty of all 34 counts of falsifying business records to conceal a hush-money payment to a porn star, a conspiracy that prosecutors said deprived voters of vital information before the 2016 election.
WATCH: Donald Trump was found guilty in the first criminal trial of a former US President in the nation’s history. David Gura reports from outside the court house in New York. Source: Bloomberg
The verdict, delivered Thursday in a dingy courtroom in Lower Manhattan, followed five weeks of vivid testimony that riveted the nation with its tableau of sex, hush money and coverup. Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, now hopes to unseat
How voters will react to the verdict is uncertain. Opinion polls conducted during the trial suggested some might shun Trump if the jury of 12 New Yorkers convicted him. But Trump’s supporters – Republican leaders and tens of millions of ordinary Americans alike – instead have rallied around him.
Trump, 77, still faces three other criminal trials, including two accusing him of trying to overturn the 2020 election, and one involving his handling of classified national security documents. But the hush-money case – a salacious story that centered on a $130,000 payment to silence
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Trump faces as many as four years in prison when he is sentenced by Justice
“This was a rigged, disgraceful trial,” Trump told reporters in the hallway outside the courtroom. “The real verdict is going to be November 5th by the people. And they know what happened here.”
WATCH: Donald Trump spoke outside the courthouse Thursday after the verdict. Source: Bloomberg
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Trump, who didn’t testify at trial, is all but certain to appeal. If elected, Trump cannot pardon himself because he was convicted on state, not federal, charges.
“We’ll keep fighting,” he said, before leaving the courthouse to return to Trump Tower. “We’ll fight to the end and we’ll win.”
Merchan could sentence Trump to prison or impose a probationary term, citing his age and status as a first-time offender. Merchan warned Trump during the trial he could put him behind bars for repeatedly violating a gag order. He also acknowledged the security hurdles of imprisoning a former president.
Read more: Keeping Up With the Trump Trials
Shares of
Prosecutors working for Manhattan District Attorney
“Everything Mr. Trump and his cohorts did in this case is cloaked in lies,” prosecutor Joshua Steinglass told jurors in his closing arguments. “The evidence is literally overwhelming.”
Incriminating Evidence
Much of the trial revolved around
“This is a disaster, total disaster,” Trump said about the tape, according to Cohen. “Women will hate me. Guys may think it’s cool, but this is going to be a disaster for the campaign.”
Cohen testified he repeatedly discussed Daniels with Trump, who blessed the repayment scheme. He said Trump authorized a plan to reimburse Cohen a total of $420,000, covering the Daniels check, payments for another vendor, an allotment for taxes and a bonus.
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Cohen told jurors he submitted invoices that falsely billed for legal fees, not a reimbursement. Prosecutors said the 34 false-business record counts spanned his 11 invoices as well as 11 checks to Cohen and 12 company vouchers.
The jury convicted Trump despite withering attacks on Cohen. Trump attorney
Cohen is “the human embodiment of reasonable doubt,” Blanche said. “Michael Cohen is the GLOAT. He’s literally the greatest liar of all time.”
Jurors also heard a secret recording that Cohen made of Trump, saw video clips of him, and read his tweets about Cohen and Daniels.
Trial Highlights
Prosecutors said the conspiracy began in August 2015 during a meeting at Trump Tower attended by Trump, Cohen and
Pecker explained why his firm,
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Jurors also heard from Daniels, who described in lurid detail the sexual encounter that she said took place in Trump’s hotel room after meeting him at a Lake Tahoe golf tournament.
Trump frequently commented about the trial on the campaign trail and to television cameras outside the courtroom. Merchan cited Trump for 10 violations of a gag order intended to bar him from commenting on jurors, witnesses and prosecutors.
The judge at one point threatened to jail Trump if he did it again. The former president did not.
(Updates with new lead paragraph and comments from Trump in the courthouse in paragraph seven.)
--With assistance from
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David Gillen
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