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TRUMP PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO 34 COUNTS OF FALSIFYING BUSINESS RECORDS


LATEST UPDATES

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 * Trump goes on baseless rant against classified documents investigation
   
   9:32 p.m.
   

 * Trump gives grievance-filled stump speech on historic night
   
   9:23 p.m.
   

 * Donald Trump referred to New York Supreme Court...
   
   9:07 p.m.
   

 * Former president Donald Trump targeted not only the...
   
   8:43 p.m.
   

 * Former president Donald Trump is greeting the crowd...
   
   8:37 p.m.
   

 * No mug shot of former president Donald Trump...
   
   7:35 p.m.
   

 * Trump supporters gather to show support ahead of his arrival at Mar-a-Lago
   
   7:31 p.m.
   

 * Indictment describes Oval Office discussion between Trump, Cohen
   
   6:58 p.m.
   

 * Takeaways from the Trump indictment in New York
   
   6:50 p.m.
   

 * On ‘historic’ day, news media scrambled to find something to show us
   
   6:34 p.m.
   

 * Analysis: A tawdry case and a nation left wondering how it came to this
   
   6:23 p.m.
   

 * ‘There was nothing done illegally,’ Trump says
   
   6:21 p.m.
   

 * During the arraignment hearing, New York Supreme Court...
   
   5:52 p.m.
   

 * McCarthy baselessly accuses Bragg of ‘attempting to interfere’ in the
   democratic process
   
   5:44 p.m.
   

 * Judge calls on parties to agree on terms of a protective order
   
   5:37 p.m.

 * Trump goes on baseless rant against classified documents investigation
   
   9:32 p.m.
   

 * Trump gives grievance-filled stump speech on historic night
   
   9:23 p.m.
   

 * Donald Trump referred to New York Supreme Court...
   
   9:07 p.m.
   

 * Former president Donald Trump targeted not only the...
   
   8:43 p.m.
   

 * Former president Donald Trump is greeting the crowd...
   
   8:37 p.m.
   

 * No mug shot of former president Donald Trump...
   
   7:35 p.m.
   

 * Trump supporters gather to show support ahead of his arrival at Mar-a-Lago
   
   7:31 p.m.
   

 * Indictment describes Oval Office discussion between Trump, Cohen
   
   6:58 p.m.
   

 * Takeaways from the Trump indictment in New York
   
   6:50 p.m.
   

 * On ‘historic’ day, news media scrambled to find something to show us
   
   6:34 p.m.
   

 * Analysis: A tawdry case and a nation left wondering how it came to this
   
   6:23 p.m.
   

 * ‘There was nothing done illegally,’ Trump says
   
   6:21 p.m.
   

 * During the arraignment hearing, New York Supreme Court...
   
   5:52 p.m.
   

 * McCarthy baselessly accuses Bragg of ‘attempting to interfere’ in the
   democratic process
   
   5:44 p.m.
   

 * Judge calls on parties to agree on terms of a protective order
   
   5:37 p.m.

Key updates
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Takeaways from the Trump indictment in New York
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Manhattan DA’s office has history of ‘enforcing white-collar crime,’ Bragg says
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Read the Trump indictment documents
Analyzing Trump’s post-arraignment Mar-a-Lago speech
1:23

President Trump delivered a speech on April 4 at Mar-a-Lago after he was
arraigned and charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in
New York. (Video: The Washington Post)
By Washington Post Staff
Updated April 4, 2023 at 9:32 p.m. EDT|Published April 4, 2023 at 6:37 a.m. EDT

Listen
1 min
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Former president Donald Trump on Tuesday pleaded not guilty in a Manhattan
courtroom to 34 counts stemming from 2016 hush money payments, the first
criminal charges for any former U.S. president. The case involves payoffs
through an intermediary to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels to conceal an
alleged affair ahead of the 2016 election. Trump, who is seeking the 2024
Republican presidential nomination, is a focus of three other criminal
investigations, involving efforts to overturn the 2020 election results and
Trump’s handling of classified documents after leaving the White House.



Key updates
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Takeaways from the Trump indictment in New York
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Manhattan DA’s office has history of ‘enforcing white-collar crime,’ Bragg says
Bullet
Read the Trump indictment documents

Here’s what to know

 * Read the indictment in People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump.
   Read the statement of facts in the case.
 * Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, in outlining the charges against
   Trump, told reporters: “Everyone stands equal before the law. No amount of
   money and no amount of power changes that enduring American principle.”
 * Trump returned to Florida and made public remarks from his Mar-a-Lago estate
   in Palm Beach on Tuesday night.

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HERE'S WHAT TO KNOW:

Carousel - $Here's what to know:: use tab or arrows to navigate
Read the indictment in People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump. Read
the statement of facts in the case.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, in outlining the charges against Trump,
told reporters: “Everyone stands equal before the law. No amount of money and no
amount of power changes that enduring American principle.”
Trump returned to Florida and made public remarks from his Mar-a-Lago estate in
Palm Beach on Tuesday night.

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TAKEAWAYS FROM THE TRUMP INDICTMENT IN NEW YORK

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By Philip Bump

Former president Donald Trump appeared in a courtroom in Lower Manhattan on
Tuesday where he pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts brought by a grand jury
last week.

The appearance was the culmination of enormous speculation and media attention
that followed him from his home in Mar-a-Lago to Trump Tower in New York and
then to the courtroom. In the end, the new revelations that emerged from the
release of the charges were incremental, but important.

1. THE 34 CHARGES CENTER ON HOW PAYMENTS TO ATTORNEY MICHAEL COHEN WERE RECORDED
— AT 34 DIFFERENT TIMES.

The indictment centers on the previously reported effort in 2016 to bury a story
alleging an extramarital relationship between Trump and adult-film actress
Stormy Daniels. That effort involved a payment of $130,000 to Daniels paid by
Michael Cohen, then Trump’s attorney.

This is an excerpt from a full story.

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6:34 p.m. EDT
6:34 p.m. EDT
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ON ‘HISTORIC’ DAY, NEWS MEDIA SCRAMBLED TO FIND SOMETHING TO SHOW US

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By Paul Farhi

On a day the news media constantly described as “historic,” it didn’t actually
look like much.

With hundreds of journalists on hand, and TV cameras in the air and on the
ground, former president Donald Trump’s arraignment Tuesday on felony charges in
a Manhattan court produced more anticipation than visual fireworks. If you
weren’t in the courthouse, you didn’t see it.

Try as they might for a glimpse of the former president, the media horde didn’t
get many. Trump briefly stopped outside Trump Tower to give a defiant (and
widely recorded) fist pump before taking off for court. But then, for hours, the
former president, the first ever indicted on criminal charges, was almost always
out of the picture.

This is an excerpt from a full story.

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6:23 p.m. EDT
6:23 p.m. EDT
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ANALYSIS: A TAWDRY CASE AND A NATION LEFT WONDERING HOW IT CAME TO THIS

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By Dan Balz

From the moment he walked down the golden escalator at Trump Tower on June 16,
2015, Donald Trump has been the man the world could not stop watching. So he was
again Tuesday, a day that epitomized the perverse fascination with the former
president and the degree to which he has debased the high office he once held.

Tuesday was a day of spectacle, a word so often associated with the name Donald
Trump. Television cameras followed every move by the former president and his
motorcade through the streets of Manhattan. Pro- and anti-Trump forces gathered
near the courthouse. Nonstop commentary on cable television detailed each step
along the way. And yet it had a sad, almost pathetic quality to it.

This is an excerpt from a full story.

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6:21 p.m. EDT
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‘THERE WAS NOTHING DONE ILLEGALLY,’ TRUMP SAYS

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By Anumita Kaur

Donald Trump went on Truth Social just two hours after leaving his arraignment,
telling his followers that “there was nothing done illegally!”

“The hearing was shocking to many in that they had no ‘surprises,’ and
therefore, no case. Virtually every legal pundit has said that there is no case
here. There was nothing done illegally!” Trump posted on his social media
platform. He’s on a flight to Palm Beach, Fla., where he is scheduled to deliver
remarks from his Mar-a-Lago estate at 8:15 p.m., he said.

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5:52 p.m. EDT
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By Shayna Jacobs
Courts, law enforcement and criminal justice

During the arraignment hearing, New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan read
Donald Trump legal warnings about his absolute right to attend proceedings in
his criminal case. Trump acknowledged, among other things, that he could be
removed from the courtroom during any court conference, hearing or trial if he
were to “become disruptive.”

“I don’t have any reason to believe that’s going to happen,” Merchan said. “Do
you understand that?” Trump said that he did.

5:44 p.m. EDT
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MCCARTHY BASELESSLY ACCUSES BRAGG OF ‘ATTEMPTING TO INTERFERE’ IN THE DEMOCRATIC
PROCESS

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By Mariana Alfaro

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) baselessly accused Manhattan District
Attorney Alvin Bragg of “attempting to interfere” in the democratic process.

Bragg, McCarthy said on Twitter, is “invoking federal law to bring politicized
charges against President Trump.”

“Bragg’s weaponization of the federal justice process will be held accountable
by Congress,” McCarthy said.

While the speaker has long criticized investigations into the former president,
on Tuesday he and other Republicans doubled down on their baseless claims that
Bragg’s indictment of Trump is an attempt to affect the former president’s 2024
presidential bid.

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5:37 p.m. EDT
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JUDGE CALLS ON PARTIES TO AGREE ON TERMS OF A PROTECTIVE ORDER

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By Shayna Jacobs

Prosecutors said they wanted to bar former president Donald Trump and his
attorneys from publicly releasing any of the evidence they would be receiving
through the discovery process.

It is not uncommon for a protective order to be imposed by a judge in sensitive
cases. New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan asked the parties to agree on
the terms of an order and submit a joint recommendation.

The protective order proposed by the district attorney’s office would prohibit
revealing confidential elements of evidence on social media, with violations
resulting in contempt-of-court findings.

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5:27 p.m. EDT
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TRUMP LAWYER SAYS EX-PRESIDENT IS ‘ABSOLUTELY FRUSTRATED’

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By Shayna Jacobs

During the court proceedings, Trump lawyer Todd Blanche said the former
president “is absolutely frustrated, upset and believes there’s a grave
injustice with him being in the courtroom today.”

In response to discussion of Trump’s social media posts, Blanche argued the
former president’s reactions are warranted given what has been leaked about the
case and what was disclosed in a memoir recently released by former prosecutor
Mark Pomerantz. He also contended that former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, who is
believed to be a key prosecution witness, has been engaged in an ongoing
publicity blitz over his cooperation with the district attorney’s office.

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5:25 p.m. EDT
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By Josh Dawsey
Political investigations and enterprise reporter

Rob Kelner, a Republican lawyer and Trump critic, wasn’t impressed by the
indictment.

“If you’re going to indict a former president, especially this one, you ought to
have a crisp, clear distillation of the crime,” Kelner said. “This is certainly
not that. … the prosecutors have to be able to persuade the trial judge and
ultimately appellate judges that there’s a sound basis for the conviction.”

5:15 p.m. EDT
5:15 p.m. EDT
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DOORMAN WHO ALLEGED TRUMP HAD OUT-OF-WEDLOCK CHILD WAS PAID $30,000, PROSECUTORS
SAY

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By Mariana Alfaro

The indictment against Donald Trump includes reports of a $30,000 payment made
to a former Trump Tower doorman who alleged that the former president had
fathered a child out of wedlock.

Trump attorney Michael Cohen, working with David Pecker, then the CEO of
American Media, Inc., attempted to keep the story the doorman was attempting to
sell a secret until after the 2016 election, according to Manhattan District
Attorney Alvin Bragg’s statement of facts.

According to court documents, Pecker learned in the fall of 2015 that the
doorman “was trying to sell information” regarding the alleged child.

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4:56 p.m. EDT
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By Missy Khamvongsa
Deputy editor of National Politics breaking news team

Donald Trump’s next court date in the New York case is Dec. 4, but New York
Supreme Court Justice Juan Manuel Merchan could entertain a request by Trump to
waive his appearance. The defense team has not filed a motion on it.

4:54 p.m. EDT
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TRUMP PARTICIPATED IN A ‘CATCH-AND-KILL’ SCHEME, BRAGG SAYS

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By Mariana Alfaro

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said former president Donald Trump
participated in a “catch-and-kill” scheme to buy and suppress negative
information about him ahead of the 2016 election.

Trump pleaded not guilty Tuesday to the 34 charges brought against him.

Speaking to reporters after Trump’s arraignment, Bragg said the evidence his
investigation gathered will show that Trump participated in this scheme
alongside the publishing company American Media Inc. and his then-lawyer Michael
Cohen to “help Mr. Trump’s chance of winning the election.”

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4:51 p.m. EDT
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N.Y. REP. NADLER: ‘BRAGG WILL NOT BE DETERRED’ BY GOP BULLYING

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By Amy B Wang

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, whose district covers part of Manhattan and who is the
ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, said Tuesday that Donald
Trump’s indictment seemed “methodical and well-reasoned” on its face.

Emphasizing that defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in the
American justice system, Nadler said in a statement that the case will play out
in court “no matter how MAGA Republicans try to obstruct the process.”

“In a desperate attempt to protect Mr. Trump, the most extreme House Republicans
are already trying to bully the law enforcement officers involved,” Nadler
stated. “I do not know how this case will be decided, but I do know that DA
Bragg will not be deterred or intimidated by the political stunts Jim Jordan and
Kevin McCarthy throw at him.”

4:49 p.m. EDT
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ROMNEY SAYS PROSECUTOR PURSUING POLITICAL AGENDA

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By Anumita Kaur

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), who voted to convict President Donald Trump in two
impeachment trials, said that the Manhattan prosecutor “has stretched to reach
felony criminal charges in order to fit a political agenda.”

“I believe President Trump’s character and conduct make him unfit for office,”
Romney stated. “No one is above the law, not even former presidents, but
everyone is entitled to equal treatment under the law. The prosecutor’s
overreach sets a dangerous precedent for criminalizing political opponents and
damages the public’s faith in our justice system.”

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MANHATTAN DA’S OFFICE HAS HISTORY OF ‘ENFORCING WHITE-COLLAR CRIME,’ BRAGG SAYS

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By Amy B Wang

After describing the 34 charges against Donald Trump, Manhattan District
Attorney Alvin Bragg said his office has a history of “vigorously enforcing
white-collar crime.” Accurate business records are important everywhere, but
especially in Manhattan, the financial center of the world, he added.

“My office, including the talented prosecutors you saw at arraignment earlier
today, has charged hundreds of felony falsifying business records — this charge,
it can be said, is the bread and butter of our white-collar work,” Bragg said.

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Covering Donald Trump's arraignment
4:29 p.m. EDT
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By Marisa Iati
Staff Writer

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said his office brought the case against
former president Donald Trump when it was ready.

“I bring cases when they’re ready,” Bragg told reporters. “Having now conducted
a rigorous, thorough investigation, the case was ready to be brought, and it was
brought.”

4:28 p.m. EDT
4:28 p.m. EDT
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By Anumita Kaur
Staff writer, general assignment desk

Following Donald Trump’s arraignment, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg
(D) said that Trump held onto critical documents containing false statements for
almost a year.

“For nine straight months, the defendant held documents in his hand containing
this key lie: that he was paying Michael Cohen for legal services performed in
2017,” Bragg said, referring to Trump as the defendant rather than the former
president. “And he personally signed checks for payments to Michael Cohen for
each of these nine months.”

4:25 p.m. EDT
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READ THE TRUMP INDICTMENT DOCUMENTS

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By Washington Post Staff

Read the indictment in the People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump.
Read the statement of facts in the case.

4:17 p.m. EDT
4:17 p.m. EDT
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By Shayna Jacobs
Courts, law enforcement and criminal justice

Justice Juan Merchan said he would not have granted a gag order had District
Attorney Alvin Bragg asked Tuesday, but made it clear he would consider further
motions if necessary. The D.A.’s office submitted printouts of Donald Trump’s
problematic recent statements and posts, including one from Truth Social that
showed the former president holding a baseball bat next to a picture of the
district attorney.

4:17 p.m. EDT
4:17 p.m. EDT
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By Amy B Wang
National politics reporter

In his first public remarks after Donald Trump’s arraignment, Manhattan District
Attorney Alvin Bragg said Trump falsified business records “with intent to
defraud and an intent to conceal another crime.”

“Thirty-four false statements made to cover up other crimes,” Bragg said at a
news conference. “These are felony crimes in New York state. No matter who you
are, we will not normalize serious criminal conduct.”

4:16 p.m. EDT
4:16 p.m. EDT
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By Jacqueline Alemany
Congressional Investigations Reporter

New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan also asked that the lawyers ask
their witnesses to control their public statements.

4:14 p.m. EDT
4:14 p.m. EDT
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By Jacqueline Alemany
Congressional Investigations Reporter

Justice Juan Merchan explicitly told Donald Trump, “Please refrain from making
statements that are likely to incite violence or civil unrest ... making
comments that have potential to incite violence, create civil unrest [or]
jeopardize the state or well-being of any individuals.” He also asked Trump not
to engage in rhetoric that will “jeopardize the rule of law.”

He also asked that the people ask their witnesses to control their public
statements as well. Prosecutor Chris Connolly responded that they would try.

4:11 p.m. EDT
4:11 p.m. EDT
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DEFENSE ATTORNEYS AFTER TRUMP ARRAIGNMENT: ‘THERE IS NO DISUNITY HERE’

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By Amy B Wang

Members of the Trump legal team leave court after the arraignment. (Yuki
Iwamura/AP)

After Donald Trump was arraigned Tuesday, his defense attorneys spoke briefly to
reporters outside the Manhattan courthouse, claiming that the charges against
their client indicated that the rule of law was “dead” in the United States.

Trump attorney Joe Tacopina also defended a social media post — widely
interpreted as a threat — in which Trump was shown holding a baseball bat at
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s head, saying that Trump was simply
showing off an “American-made” baseball bat in the image.

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4:10 p.m. EDT
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CHARGES ARE NARROW, BUT PROSECUTORS OUTLINE BROAD SCHEME TO UNDERMINE 2016
ELECTION

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By Rosalind Helderman

Two documents were unsealed following Donald Trump’s arraignment — and they are
a study in contrasts.

One is a 13-page statement of facts — a narrative adopted by the grand jury
outlining what is described as a more than two-year-long “unlawful scheme” by
Trump to influence the 2016 presidential election by “identifying and purchasing
negative information about him to suppress its publication and benefit [his]
electoral prospects.”

The other is the 16-page indictment itself, which outlines the criminal charges
pending against Trump. This document describes a far more narrow range of
wrongdoing — 34 counts of falsifying business records related to how Trump and
his company falsely accounted for payments to his attorney Michael Cohen in 2017
to reimburse the attorney for a $130,000 payment to adult-film actress Stormy
Daniels before the election.

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4:06 p.m. EDT
4:06 p.m. EDT
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PROSECUTORS WANT TRIAL TO START IN JANUARY; DEFENSE ARGUES FOR NEXT SPRING

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By Jacqueline Alemany

During the proceeding for former president Donald Trump, both sides discussed a
potential schedule for the stages of the trial. Prosecutors asked for January
2024, while defense attorney Todd Blanche said he thought that was great but
could be too ambitious and aggressive. Blanche said that spring 2024 was a more
appropriate target.

Blanche also spoke on behalf of Trump. Blanche said that Michael Cohen and some
of the other witnesses had also done what Trump was doing by talking on the
courthouse steps and speaking to the public about what he was doing in the
courthouse, and that Trump was simply responding to Cohen.

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4:05 p.m. EDT
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By Marisa Iati
Staff Writer

Donald Trump has left court and is heading to the airport. He will return to
Mar-a-Lago in Florida, where he is scheduled to make remarks this evening.

4:04 p.m. EDT
4:04 p.m. EDT
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By Jacqueline Alemany
Congressional Investigations Reporter

Manhattan district attorney’s office prosecutors said they expect adult-film
actress Stormy Daniels to be a witness in the trial.

3:55 p.m. EDT
3:55 p.m. EDT
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By Missy Khamvongsa
Deputy editor of National Politics breaking news team

Read the statement of facts from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg (D).

3:51 p.m. EDT
3:51 p.m. EDT
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By Missy Khamvongsa
Deputy editor of National Politics breaking news team

Read the full indictment of former president Donald Trump here.

3:47 p.m. EDT
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