History in the making Trump's NY criminal trial set to begin
The Guardian|April 13, 2024
Washington e has been businessman, TV showman and president of the United States.
David Smith
History in the making Trump's NY criminal trial set to begin

On Monday morning, in the sobering surroundings of a New York courtroom, Donald Trump will play yet another role in American history when he becomes the first former White House occupant to stand trial in a criminal case.

The case, involving hush money paid to the adult film star Stormy Daniels, carries profound political and legal ramifications as he runs for election against Joe Biden in November. It is a jury trial not only of Trump but of the US, testing its checks and balances and sacred promise that no one - not even a president is above the law.

Trump will join the ranks of Silvio Berlusconi of Italy, Imran Khan of Pakistan and Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil as a world leader in the dock. For the US, this is uncharted territory: even Richard Nixon was not put on trial over his role in the Watergate scandal.

"The historic nature of the first-ever trial of a former president will only be matched by the outcome," Norm Eisen, a former White House ethics tsar, said at a briefing hosted by the Defend Democracy Project.

"The verdict is more likely than not to be one of guilt and the sentence more likely than not to be a sentence of imprisonment." Trump is accused of arranging a $130,000 (£104,000) payment made by his lawyer Michael Cohen to Daniels in the waning days of the 2016 presidential election campaign, buying her silence about an alleged sexual encounter at a hotel in 2006, and falsifying records to cover it up.

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