Orlando Sentinel

1st Trump criminal trial set to start

Process opens with questionin­g people for jury to hear case

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NEW YORK — Former President Donald Trump’s history-making criminal trial is set to start Monday with a simple but extraordin­ary procedural step that is vital to American democracy. A group of regular citizens — Trump’s peers, in the eyes of the law — will be chosen to decide whether the former president of the United States is guilty of a crime.

The first trial of a former U.S. president will feature allegation­s that Trump falsified business records while compensati­ng one of his lawyers, Michael Cohen, when the payments were for orchestrat­ing payoffs to porn actor Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal to prevent them from going public with claims of extramarit­al sexual encounters with Trump.

Trump denies the accusation­s and says no crime was committed.

This is set to be the first of Trump’s four criminal prosecutio­ns.

The process of picking a jury could take days. Lawyers on both sides of the case will have limited opportunit­ies to try to shape the panel in their favor, but the court’s goal won’t be to ensure that it has a partisan balance between Democrats and Republican­s, or is made up of people oblivious to previous news coverage about the trial.

The idea is to get people who are willing to put their personal opinions aside and make a decision based on the evidence and the law.

Here are some of the

factors that will go into jury selection.

Who can sit on the jury?

This jury will be made up only of people who live in Manhattan, one of New York City’s five boroughs. All English-speaking, U.S. citizens over age 18 who have not been convicted of a felony are eligible for jury duty in New York.

Court officials identify potential jurors from lists of registered voters, taxpayers, driver’s license holders, public benefit recipients and other sources.

The pool of potential jurors for Trump’s trial will have been chosen at random. People can volunteer for jury duty, but they can’t pick what trial they serve on.

What if a juror doesn’t want to serve?

Jury duty is compulsory, but you can get excused for several reasons, such as a financial hardship.

How will the jury get picked?

Judge Juan M. Merchan will begin by bringing a large group of potential jurors into his courtroom. He will then give a brief outline of the case and introduce the defendant, Trump, to the jury.

The judge will then ask the potential jurors a critical question: Can they serve and be fair and impartial? Those who cannot will be asked to raise their hand. For this trial, jurors who indicate they cannot serve or be fair will be dismissed.

Those who remain will

be called in groups into the jury box, where they will be asked 42 questions, some with multiple parts.

The lawyers on each side will have a limited number of strikes they can use to exclude potential jurors who they don’t like, without giving a reason.

They can also argue that a particular juror should be excluded, but they have to get the judge to agree to dismiss that person.

The process continues until 12 jurors and six alternates have been picked. More large groups of potential jurors can be brought into the courtroom, if needed.

What questions will jurors be asked?

The judge won’t allow

the lawyers to ask whether potential jurors are Democrats or Republican­s, whom they voted for or whether they have given money to any political causes.

But there are multiple questions aimed at rooting out whether people are likely to be biased against, or in favor of, Trump. Among them:

“Do you have any political, moral, intellectu­al, or religious beliefs or opinions which might prevent you from following the court’s instructio­ns on the law or which might slant your approach to this case?”

“Have you, a relative, or a close friend ever worked or volunteere­d for a Trump presidenti­al campaign, the Trump presidenti­al administra­tion, or any other political entity affiliated with Mr. Trump?”

“Have you ever attended a rally or campaign event for Donald Trump?”

“Do you currently follow Donald Trump on any social media site or have you done so in the past?”

“Have you, a relative, or a close friend ever worked or volunteere­d for any antiTrump group or organizati­on?”

“Have you ever attended a rally or campaign event for any anti-Trump group or organizati­on?”

Jurors will be asked what podcasts and talk radio programs they listen to and where they get their news.

Will the public learn the identities of the jurors?

The judge has ordered that the jurors’ names be kept secret, an unusual but not unpreceden­ted step in trials where there is a potential that jurors might wind up being harassed or threatened during or after the trial.

There is nothing to stop jurors from talking about their experience­s after the trial is over. While it is pending, they aren’t supposed to talk about it with anyone.

What will this jury decide?

Jurors in this trial will listen to testimony and decide whether Trump is guilty of any of 34 counts of falsifying business records. Their decision to convict or acquit must be unanimous.

If they cannot agree on a verdict, the judge can declare a mistrial.

If jurors have a reasonable doubt that Trump is guilty, they must acquit him. If they convict him, the judge will be the one who decides the sentence, not the jurors.

 ?? SETH WENIG/POOL ?? Former President Donald Trump, center, appears in court for his arraignmen­t April 4, 2023, in New York.
SETH WENIG/POOL Former President Donald Trump, center, appears in court for his arraignmen­t April 4, 2023, in New York.

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