Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

SCRATCHES IN ‘TEFLON DON’ IMAGE

Trump indictment ends decades of perceived invincibil­ity

- BY JILL COLVIN

NEW YORK — When Donald Trump steps before a judge this coming week to be arraigned in a New York courtroom, it will not only mark the first time a former U.S. president has faced criminal charges. It will also be a reckoning for a man long nicknamed “Teflon Don,” who until now has managed to skirt serious legal jeopardy despite 40 years of legal scrutiny.

Trump, who is the early frontrunne­r for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, is expected to turn himself in Tuesday. He faces charges including at least one felony offense related to hush money payments to women during his 2016 campaign. Like any other person facing trial, he will be booked, fingerprin­ted and photograph­ed before being given the chance to enter a plea.

The spectacle that is sure to unfold will mark an unpreceden­ted moment in American history that will demonstrat­e once again how dramatical­ly Trump — who already held the distinctio­n of being the first president to be impeached twice — has upended democratic norms. But on a personal level, the indictment pierces the cloak of invincibil­ity that seemed to follow Trump through his decades in business and in politics, as he faced allegation­s of fraud, collusion and sexual misconduct.

“Boy, after all this time it’s a bit of a shock,” Trump biographer Michael D’Antonio said of the indictment. “You know I always thought of him as the Gingerbrea­d Man, shouting, ‘You can’t catch me!’ as he ran away.”

“Given his track record,” he said, “I had trouble imagining he would ever be held accountabl­e.”

“These are not things that Donald Trump ever thought in his entire life, nor I, for that matter, that he would ever be confronted with,” Michael Cohen, Trump’s longtime fixer and a key witness in the case who served jail time for the payments, told CNN.

Of course, some of the celebratio­n by Trump’s detractors may be premature. Trump could seek to have a judge quickly dismiss the case. Even if it moves forward, there’s no guarantee of conviction. Intensifyi­ng investigat­ions in Atlanta and Washington are seen as potentiall­y more serious legal threats.

Already, Trump and his team have tried to use the news to his advantage, hoping to energize his loyal base by painting the investigat­ion as part of a larger plot to derail his candidacy.

The charges have been a boon to his struggling fundraisin­g. The campaign announced Friday evening that it had raised over $4 million in the 24 hours after the indictment became public, far smashing its previous record after the FBI search of Trump’s Mar-aLago club.

Trump aides have been discussing other ideas to maximize the situation, including the possibilit­y of holding a press event either before or after the arraignmen­t. Trump is expected to travel from Florida to New York on Monday and stay overnight at Trump Tower in midtown Manhattan before heading to the courthouse early Tuesday. He will return to Florida after the arraignmen­t.

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