The Mercury News

As trial looms, Trump plays to a jury of millions

- By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and William K. Rashbaum

>>The first criminal trial of Donald Trump will begin Monday, and the 45th president thinks he can win — no matter what the jury decides. Trump will aim to spin any outcome to his benefit and, if convicted, to become the first felon to win the White House.

Manhattan prosecutor­s, who have accused Trump of falsifying records to cover up a sex scandal, hold advantages that include a list of insider witnesses and a jury pool drawn from one of the country's most liberal counties. Trump and some aides and lawyers privately concede that a jury is unlikely to outright acquit him, according to people with knowledge of the discussion­s.

So Trump, the presumptiv­e 2024 Republican nominee, is seeking to write his own reality, telling a story that he believes could pave his return to the White House. He has framed his failed efforts to delay the case as evidence that he cannot receive a fair trial, casting himself as a political martyr under attack from the prosecutio­n and the judge.

To pull off an acquittal, he is considerin­g testifying to personally convince jurors of his innocence.

It would be a rare and risky move for most defendants. But Trump is putting his own stamp on the role, attacking the district attorney who brought the case, Alvin Bragg, with all the power of his bully pulpit. That behavior and its aftershock­s are expected to continue throughout a weekslong trial.

Trump, 77, is deploying the same tactics that made him the singular political figure of the past decade. Since announcing his first presidenti­al candidacy, he has bulldozed through American life, flattening political and cultural norms as he goes. He stunned the world as the insurgent victor in the 2016 election, twice was impeached as president and pushed democracy to the brink as the incumbent who refused to concede his 2020 election loss.

Now, with jury selection starting Monday, Trump will become the first former U.S. president to stand trial on criminal charges. Win or lose, he will be the first presidenti­al candidate whose political fate, before being decided by millions of voters, will be shaped by 12 people in a jury box.

The 34 felonies Trump is facing, which could carry a four-year prison sentence, have struck a nerve with the former president. Though Trump has spent years reveling in the glow of the White House and his sunny South Florida estate, the trial will be held in a dingy county courtroom. When the former president is there — he is required to be in court but can ask to be excused — he will be transporte­d back to the borough and tabloid atmosphere where he made his name.

He establishe­d himself as one of the loudest voices in a loud city, gossiping about his love affairs and broadcasti­ng his political opinions. That bombastic style, and his time on “The Apprentice” television show, gave him an immediate following when he became a candidate in 2015. He repeatedly condemned Muslims, insulted a prominent female journalist and a reporter with a physical disability and glorified political violence by saying he would pay the legal fees of supporters who assaulted protesters at his rallies.

The age of Trump

“He's been able to create the age of Trump by becoming the fist smashing into America's sacred institutio­ns,” historian Douglas Brinkley said.

He added that while many Democrats hoped the trial would put an end to that, “Trump understand­s media culture well enough to really believe that `as long as other people are talking about me, I win.' ”

In the courtroom, however, it has been quite some time since Trump won a major victory. In this year's first two months, he lost a pair of civil trials in spectacula­r fashion, leading to an $83 million defamation judgment and a $454 million fraud penalty. In both cases, he took the stand. Both times it went poorly.

The losses hit his wallet and his ego. But they never threatened his freedom, unlike his four criminal cases unfolding in cities up and down the East Coast.

Whether those cases could imperil or aid his presidenti­al campaign is an open question. Of the four, which include charges that he mishandled classified documents and tried to subvert democracy, the sex scandal cover-up case in Manhattan is viewed within Trump's campaign as the least damaging. A conviction in any case would not prevent him from taking office.

Case has distinctiv­e threats

Still, the Manhattan prosecutio­n presents distinctiv­e threats: For now, it is the only case on track to conclude before Election Day, as Trump has managed to bog down the others in delays and appeals. And even if he wins back the White House, he could not pardon himself for the Manhattan charges, as he could in the two federal cases he's facing. The Manhattan case is also replete with mortifying personal details for Trump and his family: There's the adult film actor who said she had sex with him, the former Trump fixer who paid her off and the tabloid publisher who helped him bury all manner of scurrilous stories.

To adapt his candidacy to the trial, he essentiall­y will bring his presidenti­al campaign to the courthouse. One person familiar with his preliminar­y plans described weekend events held in strategica­lly important states near New York, including Pennsylvan­ia, where he is holding a rally this weekend. He will conduct radio and television interviews from Trump Tower, where he is expected to stay during the trial, which will be in session every weekday except Wednesday.

Trump and the Republican Party have made the trial a staple of his campaign fundraisin­g. One email sent Friday had the subject line “72 hours until all hell breaks loose!” — ominous language evocative of his social media posts before a pro-Trump mob swarmed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Trump has not since summoned a similar uprising. But the spectacle of the trial is expected to spill into the streets of lower Manhattan, where protesters, both those who love and defend Trump and those who hate him and want him convicted, will gather behind police barricades as traffic grinds to a halt.

The atmosphere will be less raucous and more tense inside the courtroom, under the watchful eye of the presiding trial judge, Juan M. Merchan, who is known for his strict control of proceeding­s. There, while the Secret Service and much of the press corps remain glued to Trump's every move, prosecutor­s from the Manhattan district attorney's office will tell the story that they hope will lead the jury to convict Trump.

Bragg, the district attorney who has bet his career on the case's outcome, argues that the payment was Trump's original act of election interferen­ce. His prosecutor­s will tell jurors that during the 2016 campaign, Trump repeatedly tried to kill damaging stories, regardless of whether they were true, and coordinate­d hush-money payments to three people who were hawking embarrassi­ng informatio­n.

The 34 felony charges of falsifying business records, though, directly relate to only one of those episodes, involving adult film actor Stormy Daniels, who said she and Trump had sex in 2006. When Daniels looked to sell her story a decade later, Trump sought to keep it under wraps.

At Trump's direction, prosecutor­s will say, the former fixer, Michael Cohen, paid Daniels $130,000 to keep quiet. After Trump won the election, the new president reimbursed Cohen, and his company disguised the purpose of the payments in corporate records, stating they were for a “legal expense.”

In response, the former president has falsely claimed that Bragg is following orders from President Joe Biden to prosecute Trump. He has assailed Bragg, who is Black and a Democrat, as a “racist” and sought to change the conversati­on by blaming the district attorney for violent crime in New York City — even though murders and shootings have gone down during Bragg's tenure.

The former president also has taken aim at some of Bragg's key witnesses, hurling threats and social media screeds in their direction. Cohen, in particular, has felt the brunt of the attacks from Trump, who has sued him, called him a “rat” and referred to him as “death.” Their confrontat­ion in the courtroom, where Cohen will be the star witness, is expected to be the climactic moment of the trial.

 ?? JEFFERSON SIEGEL — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Former President Donald Trump arrives for a hearing at State Supreme Court in lower Manhattan in February. His hush-money trial begins Monday.
JEFFERSON SIEGEL — THE NEW YORK TIMES Former President Donald Trump arrives for a hearing at State Supreme Court in lower Manhattan in February. His hush-money trial begins Monday.

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