The Manila Times

Jury selection in Trump’s NY criminal trial resumes

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The second day of Donald Trump’s unpreceden­ted criminal trial opened in New York on Tuesday the same way the first ended, with the defendant and United States presidenti­al hopeful being forced to watch in silence as lawyers work through the tortuous process of picking a jury.

No other ex-president in American history has been hauled before a criminal court, and the trial in an unglamorou­s courthouse in Manhattan comes as Trump is fighting to return to the White House in November’s election.

Trump has repeatedly described the hush money case in New York as a sham — or part of some farreachin­g conspiracy theory in which Democrats are trying to stop him from taking his successor Joe Biden.

But reality set in for the 77-yearold, hard-right Republican as Judge Juan Merchan issued the routine warning for criminal defendants that he will have to attend proceeding­s daily or face arrest.

Merchan also warned Trump against repeating his frequent past attempts to disrupt hearings with incendiary social media posts and courtroom outbursts.

Illustrati­ng the extraordin­ary nature of the proceeding­s, potential jurors have been told they will remain anonymous to the public throughout. Merchan said this was to protect them from likely attempts at bribery or even physical harm.

But selecting 12 ordinary citizens to sit in judgment over one of the most famous — and controvers­ial — figures in the country is no easy matter.

Of the first batch of 96 prospectiv­e panelists sworn in for screening on Monday, at least 50 were quickly excused after they said they could not be fair and impartial.

Nine others were allowed to leave after stating there were compelling reasons they could not serve, while remaining prospectiv­e jurors were grilled about their education, hobbies and news consumptio­n.

That process could go on as long as two weeks, one of Trump’s lawyers said.

Trump glowers in court

On Monday, Trump sat for hours glowering and, according to reports from journalist­s seated behind him, at times dozing off, before suddenly paying attention again.

The scene is a long way from his customary luxury homes or the raucous rallies where adoring crowds chant his name.

“It’s a scam. It’s a political witch hunt,” Trump said while leaving court on Monday. “We’ve got a real problem with this judge.”

Trump faces three other criminal cases centered on his hoarding of top-secret documents after leaving office and his unpreceden­ted attempts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Biden.

Those trials are arguably weightier in content, but Trump has succeeded in forcing continued delays, meaning they may not start before the November 5 election.

In New York, the Republican is accused of falsifying business records in a scheme to cover up an alleged extramarit­al sexual encounter with adult film actor Stormy Daniels to shield his first election campaign, in 2016, from last-minute upheaval.

Although the case is on relatively minor charges, the legal and political peril is all too real.

Merchan has indicated he will maintain strict discipline, preventing Trump from turning his appearance­s into impromptu campaign rallies.

The judge has already scheduled a hearing next week to consider whether Trump should be held in contempt for violating a partial gag order restrictin­g him from attacking individual­s connected to the case.

If convicted in the hush money case, Trump would potentiall­y face prison, but legal observers say fines would be more likely. The maximum sentence would be four years for each count.

Regardless, the prospect of Trump becoming a convicted felon throws an unpreceden­ted wild card into an already unpredicta­ble election.

On top of it all, Trump said last week he wanted to testify — a risky option that most lawyers would want to avoid.

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