The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

2 jurors dismissed as prosecutor­s seek to hold Trump in contempt

- By Michael R. Sisak, Jennifer Peltz, Eric Tucker, and Jake Offenhartz

NEW YORK — Two jurors in former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial were dismissed Thursday, one after expressing doubt about her ability to be fair and impartial and the other over concerns that some of his answers in court may not have been accurate.

The dismissals reduced to five the number of jurors who have been seated for the first-ever criminal trial of a former president.

The setbacks in the selection process emerged during a frenetic morning in which prosecutor­s also asked for Trump to held in contempt over a series of social media posts this week, while the judge in the case barred reporters from identifyin­g jurors’ employers after expressing privacy concerns.

The seating of the full jury — whenever it comes — will be a seminal moment in the case, setting the stage for a trial that will place the former president’s legal jeopardy at the heart of the campaign against Democrat Joe Biden and for weeks of testimony about Trump’s private life before he became president.

The jury selection process picked up momentum Tuesday with the selection of seven jurors. But on Thursday, Judge Juan Merchan revealed in court that one of the seven, a cancer nurse, had “conveyed that after sleeping on it overnight she had concerns about her ability to be fair and impartial in this case.” And though jurors’ names are being kept confidenti­al, the woman said her family members and friends questioned her about being a juror.

A second seated juror was dismissed after prosecutor­s raised concerns that may not have been honest in answering a jury selection question by saying that he had never been accused or convicted of a crime.

The IT profession­al was summoned to court to answer questions after prosecutor­s said they found an article about a person with the same name who had been arrested in the 1990s for tearing down political posters pertaining to the political right in suburban Westcheste­r County.

A prosecutor had also disclosed that a relative of the man may have been involved in a deferred prosecutio­n agreement in the 1990s with the Manhattan district attorney’s office, which is prosecutin­g Trump’s case.

Because the juror was questioned Thursday at the judge’s bench, off-microphone and out of earshot of reports, it was not known whether the man confirmed or denied either instance was connected to him.

Twelve jurors and six alternates must be seated to hear the trial. Merchan said Tuesday that opening statements could begin as soon as Monday.

The process of picking a jury is a critical phase of any criminal trial but especially so when the defendant is a former president and the presumptiv­e Republican nominee. Prospectiv­e jurors have been grilled on their social media posts, personal lives and political views as the lawyers and judge search for biases that would prevent them from being impartial.

Inside the court, there’s broad acknowledg­ment of the futility in trying to find jurors without knowledge of Trump. A prosecutor this week said that lawyers were not looking for people who had been “living under a rock for the past eight years.”

But Thursday’s events laid bare the inherent challenges of selecting a jury for such a landmark, high-publicity case. More than half the members of a group of 96 prospectiv­e jurors brought into the courtroom were dismissed Thursday, most after saying they doubted their ability to be fair and impartial.

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