Everything You Need To Know About Donald Trump’s Hush Money Case

The prosecution and defence have rested their cases in Donald Trump’s first criminal trial, and jurors will begin deliberating soon.

 Trump, 77, is the first former US president to be tried for a crime, and is charged with 34 counts of fraud, related to hush-money that was paid to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels.

The Stormy Daniels hush money case against Donald Trump is very weak and an extremely difficult case for the prosecution to win.

Trump has been charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records which prosecutors claim he did to cover up the payment of $130,000 in hush money to Stormy Daniels, a former pornographic actress, ahead of the 2016 presidential election. The former president has pled not guilty to all charges and denies having sexual relations with Daniels, which she claims took place in 2006. Trump, the presumptive 2024 GOP presidential nominee, is set on Monday to become the first former president in the history of the United States to stand trial in a criminal case.

Falsification of business records is typically a misdemeanor under New York law but can count as a felony if done to cover up another crime, as Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is alleging in Trump’s case. The alleged payments were facilitated by Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer, who in 2018 pled guilty to eight counts of breaking campaign finance and other laws with the aim of impacting the 2016 presidential race.

This hush money case against Trump is very weak and full of reasonable doubt. It reeks of a desperate attempt to go after Trump by connecting a few dots. Trump has strong defense arguments to rely on, making this an extremely difficult case for the prosecution to win.

Trump has a very reasonable alibi motive; hiding the payment was for personal reasons to save his marriage and protect his family and had nothing to do with the election.

The lawyer also suggested the impact of Daniels’ claim, had it gone public, would have been limited compared to the publication of an Access Hollywood tape on October 7 2016 in which Trump was heard saying you can do anything with women when you’re a star, before adding: Grab ’em by the p****.

Hiding the affair followed the leak of the Access Hollywood tape, which was much more damaging in comparison. Any affair Trump might have had would pale in comparison with the political fallout from his demeaning characterization of women on the Access Hollywood tape.

This supports the argument that his reasons for the payment were personal and not related to his presidential campaign, because it would have had no effect on the election. At the very least, it amounts to reasonable doubt which equals acquittal.

 

It is evident that both legal teams are doing research on the prospective jurors’ social media accounts, their voting records, any prior criminal convictions, and credit histories—everything that can be searched in a database. But at the end of the day, if someone scrubbed their social media or their activity on internet forums, those online trails become very hard to find.

Trump is also facing criminal trials over accusations he mishandled classified documents then obstructed their return to the relevant authorities and broke the law attempting to overthrow the 2020 presidential election both across the nation and in the state of Georgia specifically. He has pled not guilty to all charges and insists the cases against him are politically motivated.

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