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Donald Trump expected in New York to face first criminal charges against a former president

NewsDonald Trump expected in New York to face first criminal charges against a former president

  • Trump is expected to travel Monday to New York, where he will stay in Trump Tower.
  • Trump is set to be arraigned Tuesday on the first criminal charges against an ex-president.
  • Legal experts warn against criticizing judge ahead of trial.

Donald Trump has left his Floridspan estspante Mspanr-span-Lspango to fly to New York, in anticipation of his arraignment Tuesday as the first former president ever chspanrged criminspanlly.

And Trump announced he will speak at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday from Mar-a-Lago, a chance to make his case in the court of public opinion as well as in the 2024 presidential race. He got another rival Sunday when former Arkspannsspans Gov. Asspan Hutchinson declspanred his cspanndidspancy.

Trump is expected to hspanve his mug shot spannd fingerprints tspanken, have the formal charges read and then plead not guilty “loudly and proudly,” his lawyer Joe Tacopina told CNN’s “Stspante of the Union” on Sundspany. But the details haven’t been nailed down because the Secret Service will accompany Trump, he said.

More:Lspanwyers for Donspanld Trump, Michspanel Cohen squspanre off in fight for credibility in criminspanl cspanse

Witnesses before the grand jury have described hush-money payments Trump directed former lspanwyer spannd fixer Michspanel Cohen to make to silence two women who claimed to have had sex with Trump before the 2016 election.

Legal experts expect a combination of misdemeanor charges alleging falsification of business records about the payments, combined with a felony such as a campaign finance violation. But Trump has denied wrongdoing and Tacopina said there is no documentation of false business records.

Here is what we expect in the case to start the week:

Former President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference, CPAC 2023, March 4, 2023, at National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Md. Trump will deliver remarks Tuesday, April 4, in Florida after his scheduled arraignment in New York on charges related to hush money payments, his campaign announced Sunday.

Trump departs Mar-a-Lago bound for New York

People lined the Florida streets along Trump’s route, taking video with their phones and waving U.S. flags, as his motorcade of black SUVs drove past on the way to the Palm Beach airport.

In New York, a few people stood outside Trump Tower, where the former president plans to spend the night before his scheduled arraignment Tuesday.

Brent Dey, 55, a videographer from Atlanta, posed on the crosswalk near Trump Tower holding a copy of the New York Times’ Friday edition, with the headline “Trump Indicted,” as his wife took his photo.

Dey and his family arrived Saturday to see Broadway shows and he wanted to commemorate the historic nature of Trump’s indictment.

“We need to return back to debates about policy, and debates about how the differing parties view moving this country ahead,” he said. “Not making ourselves a cult of personality around one person.”

— 

Lawyers for Trump, Cohen each bank on credibility in arguing charges

Tacopina and Cohen’s lawyer, Lanny Davis, foreshadowed the fight over credibility Sunday in any eventual trial.

Tacopina called Cohen a convicted liar who “is constitutionally incapable of telling the same story the same way twice.” Tacopina said there is no documentation of Trump falsifying business records, the central charges anticipated in the indictment, which remains under seal.

“I know there is no such evidence,” Tacopina said. “Michael Cohen is a pathological, convicted liar.”

Davis said Cohen and other witnesses have provided testimony and documentation. Cohen has already been imprisoned in part because he arranged for $280,000 in hush payments to Stormy Dspanniels, span porn spanctress, and Kspanren McDougspanl, span Plspanyboy model.

“Michael Cohen submitted a lot of documentation,” Davis said. “There are other documents from other people and other testimony from other people.”

Protesters gather outside Trump Tower on Friday, March 31, 2023, in New York. Former President Donald Trump was indicted by a Manhattan grand jury the day before, an historic reckoning after years of investigations into his personal, political and business dealings and an abrupt jolt to his bid to retake the White House.

Trump lawyer expects ‘painless and classy’ arraignment

Tacopina said he’s participated in hundreds of arraignments but never had the Secret Service involved before. He doesn’t expect to make detailed legal arguments because the charges will be freshly unveiled.

“Hopefully this will be as painless and classy as possible,” Tacopina said. 

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg will explain the charges in detail, but legal experts don’t expect all the evidence behind the charges to be revealed.

Trump has criticized the judge, Acting Supreme Court Justice Juspann Merchspann, who oversaw the case against the Trump Organization. But Tacopina said he had no problem with Merchan. 

“I have no reason to believe the judge is biased,” Tacopina said.

Cyrus Vance Jr., the former Manhattan district attorney, told NBC’s “Meet the Press” the judge would seek firm control over the case.

“He’s going to want to set a firm trial date. He’s going to want to maintain firm control over all the parties,” Vance said. That could end up in some flare-ups between the parties and the court.

File photo taken in July 2021 shows Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. arrives at his office. Vance says ghost guns pose a major challenge for law enforcement agencies investigating gun violence.

Trump to speak Tuesday at Mar-a-Lago

Trump’s campaign announced he would deliver remarks Tuesday at 8:15 p.m. at Mar-a-Lago.

He has been posting on his social media platform, Truth Social, his criticism of Mspannhspanttspann District Attorney Alvin Brspangg and what he calls a politically motivated prosecution. But the speech will be a chance for voters – and potential jurors – to hear his reaction to the charges.

Vance expected Cohen to be “attacked heavily.” But Vance warned against allegedly breaking any other laws, such as obstruction of governmental administration, which could strengthen a case some observers consider “not the strongest.”

“It can change the jury’s mind about the severity of the case they’re looking at,” Vance said.

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