BSS
  22 Apr 2024, 09:14

Sensational Trump trial moves to opening statements

  NEW YORK, April 22, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - The unprecedented trial of Donald

Trump moves to opening statements Monday, kickstarting weeks of embarrassing
evidence centered on a porn star and alleged fraud that will overshadow the
Republican presidential candidate's attempt to retake the White House.

The Manhattan trial poses a big risk for Trump less than seven months before
election day.

Prosecution witnesses are expected to include porn performer and director
Stormy Daniels and Trump's disgraced, longtime former lawyer and fixer
Michael Cohen, guaranteeing a less-than-savory look at the 77-year-old
tycoon's personal and business habits.

In a practice reminiscent of mafia boss or terrorist trials, the identities
of the five women and seven men on the jury are being kept secret for their
own protection.

Security will likely be exceptionally tight Monday -- three days after a man
set himself on fire outside the courthouse in an unrelated but gruesome
incident.

Trump faces 34 counts of business fraud in a scheme to pay off Daniels to
make sure an account of his alleged extramarital sexual encounter with her
did not get published on the eve of the 2016 presidential election,
threatening his ultimately narrow victory over Hillary Clinton.

The alleged crime is less significant than the indictments in three other
investigations revolving around Trump's attack on the 2020 election, which he
lost to Joe Biden, and his hoarding of secret documents. Trump could face
jail time, although a fine or probation is more likely, analysts say.

But the trial in a dingy courtroom under massive media scrutiny will keep
Trump off the campaign trail for four days a week over a possibly six-to-
eight-week period, while Biden hammers him from the White House and around
the country.

Monday is expected to see opening statements -- a chance for each camp to lay
out their case to jurors and mount preemptive attacks on the opposing side's
witnesses.

"This is going to be the beginning of probably the most sensational trial in
American history," former prosecutor Bennett Gershman, now a lecturer at Pace
University, told AFP.

"The stakes are almost infinite in terms of what the consequences could
be.... Every day we're going to be hearing testimony that's going to be
damaging to Mr Trump."

- Contempt hearing -

Trump has railed against the case, particularly what he calls the "very
unfair" partial gag order imposed by the judge to prevent him from using his
powerful media presence to attack witnesses, prosecutors and relatives of
court staff.

A hearing will be held Tuesday at which the Judge Juan Merchan will decide if
Trump is already in contempt of court due to his outbursts during the jury
selection process.

"We are still considering our options... as far as what sanctions we will be
asking for," prosecutor Josh Steinglass said Thursday, raising the prospect
they will seek Trump's imprisonment.

Merchan chastised Trump for apparently muttering and gesturing within earshot
of prospective jurors last week.

"I will not have any jurors intimidated in this courtroom," he said.

- 'Witch hunt'? -

Court hearings have already disrupted Trump's campaigning plans, forcing him
to sit silently in the chilly Manhattan courthouse for hours. However, he has
used the heavy media attention to amplify his claims of a "witch hunt" in
impromptu statements outside the courtroom.

He had planned to resume some semblance of normal campaigning with a rally in
North Carolina Saturday, but bad weather forced the outdoor gathering to be
called off.

"It's a pretty big storm. So if you don't mind, I think we're going to have
to just do a rain check. I'm so sad," Trump told attendees while en route, in
a call broadcast to the crowd.

The Republican's other three criminal cases have been repeatedly delayed due
to Trump's successful strategy of challenging every step.

However, Merchan has run the New York fraud trial on a tight schedule.

A huge pool of potential jurors was grilled last week by prosecutors and
defense attorneys about their media habits, political donations, education
and whether they have attended a pro- or anti-Trump rally.

Many potential panelists were excused after saying they could not be
impartial, before lawyers and the judge could whittle down the group to 12
jurors with six alternates.

Merchan has ruled the jurors must remain anonymous for their own security,
although so many personal details emerged during the selection process that
the measure was quickly weakened. The judge later asked reporters to stop
providing physical descriptions of jurors and not to identify where they work
.

A unanimous verdict will be required to convict Trump, who has been ordered
by the judge to attend each day of the trial.