Current:Home > InvestJudge declines to delay Trump’s NY hush money trial over complaints of pretrial publicity -FutureFinance
Judge declines to delay Trump’s NY hush money trial over complaints of pretrial publicity
View
Date:2025-04-23 23:20:25
NEW YORK (AP) — The judge in Donald Trump’s hush money criminal case on Friday turned down the former president’s request to postpone his trial because of publicity about the case.
It’s the latest in a string of delay denials that Trump has gotten from various courts this week as he fights to stave off the trial’s start Monday with jury selection.
Among other things, Trump’s lawyers had argued that the jury pool was deluged with what the defense saw as “exceptionally prejudicial” news coverage of the case. The defense maintained that was a reason to hold off the case indefinitely.
Judge Juan M. Merchan said that idea was “not tenable.”
Trump “appears to take the position that his situation and this case are unique and that the pre-trial publicity will never subside. However, this view does not align with reality,” the judge wrote.
Pointing to Trump’s two federal defamation trials and a state civil business fraud trial in Manhattan within the past year, Merchan wrote that the ex-president himself “was personally responsible for generating much, if not most, of the surrounding publicity with his public statements” outside those courtrooms and on social media.
“The situation Defendant finds himself in now is not new to him and at least in part, of his own doing,” the judge added. He said questioning of prospective jurors would address any concerns about their ability to be fair and impartial.
There was no immediate comment from Trump’s lawyers or from the Manhattan district attorney’s office, which is prosecuting the case.
In a court filing last month, Trump’s attorney Todd Blanche had argued that “potential jurors in Manhattan have been exposed to huge amounts of biased and unfair media coverage relating to this case.
“Many of the potential jurors already wrongfully believe that President Trump is guilty,” Blanche added, citing the defense’s review of media articles and other research it conducted.
Prosecutors contended that publicity wasn’t likely to wane and that Trump’s own comments generated a lot of it. Prosecutors also noted that there are over 1 million people in Manhattan, arguing that jury questioning could surely locate 12 who could be impartial.
Trump’s lawyers had lobbed other, sometimes similar, arguments for delays at an appeals court this week. One of those appeals sought to put the trial on hold until the appellate court could give full consideration to the defense’s argument that it needs to be moved elsewhere, on the grounds that the jury pool has been polluted by news coverage of Trump’s other recent cases.
Trump’s lawyers also maintain that the presumptive Republican presidential nominee faces “real potential prejudice” in heavily Democratic Manhattan.
All this week’s appeals were turned down by individual appellate judges, though the matters are headed to a panel of appeals judges for further consideration.
Trump’s hush money case is the first of his four criminal indictments slated to go to trial and would be the first criminal trial ever of a former president.
Trump is accused of doctoring his company’s records to hide the real reason for payments to his former lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen, who helped the candidate bury negative claims about him during his 2016 campaign. Cohen’s activities included paying porn actor Stormy Daniels $130,000 to suppress her story of an extramarital sexual encounter with Trump years earlier, which Trump denies.
Trump pleaded not guilty last year to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. His lawyers argue the payments to Cohen were legitimate legal expenses.
veryGood! (71)
Related
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Hidden audits reveal millions in overcharges by Medicare Advantage plans
- Today’s Climate: August 10, 2010
- Walmart offers to pay $3.1 billion to settle opioid lawsuits
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Victoria's Secret Model Josephine Skriver Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With Husband Alexander DeLeon
- Prospect of Chinese spy base in Cuba unsettles Washington
- Rhode Island Sues Oil Companies Over Climate Change, First State in Wave of Lawsuits
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Trump: America First on Fossil Fuels, Last on Climate Change
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Kendall Roy's Penthouse on Succession Is Just as Grand (and Expensive) as You'd Imagine
- Anger toward Gen. Milley may have led Trump to discuss documents, adding to indictment evidence
- As Amazon Fires Burn, Pope Convenes Meeting on the Rainforests and Moral Obligation to Protect Them
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Harry Potter's Miriam Margolyes Hospitalized With Chest Infection
- Hillary Clinton’s Choice of Kaine as VP Tilts Ticket Toward Political Center
- Oil Industry Satellite for Measuring Climate Pollution Set to Launch
Recommendation
Small twin
Surge in outbreaks tests China's easing of zero-COVID policy
Today’s Climate: August 7-8, 2010
Why China's 'zero COVID' policy is finally faltering
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
‘We Must Grow This Movement’: Youth Climate Activists Ramp Up the Pressure
He woke up from eye surgery with a gash on his forehead. What happened?
A crash course in organ transplants helps Ukraine's cash-strapped healthcare system