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Trump gets financial lifeline in 1 case, start date in other

GreenWatch Desk World News 2024-03-25, 11:40pm

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Businessman-politician Donald J. Trump returned to New York on Monday to appear before judges overseeing two of his four ongoing legal trials.

Monday's cases pertained to the start of a jury trial for campaign finance violations in the so-called Stormy Daniels hush-money case, and a looming deadline to pay a massive $457 million (€422 million) financial penalty in a New York civil business fraud case.
Trump and his lawyers were seeking a further delay in the start of the Daniels case, which has already been pushed back until April due to the arrival of troves of federal documents just prior to the start of the trial originally set to start on Monday, reports DW.
In the second case, Trump was informed of the state of New York's stance on the collection of the fraud fine. He was told the judgement would be paused as his legal team had requested, if he paid a smaller sum of $175 million within 10 days.
Stormy Daniels case date set for April 15
"This is a witch hunt. This is a hoax," Trump told reporters outside the courtroom at Manhattan Criminal Court for a hearing on the start of the hush-money case.
Trump's legal team has accused the prosecution of deliberately withholding evidence, seeking delays and even a dismissal of the trial. On Monday, presiding Justice Juan Merchan began the hearing by reading the motion submitted by the Trump legal team.
The prosecution flatly denied the allegation, with prosecutor Matthew Colangelo telling Justice Merchan, "We are not actively suppressing or suppressing in any way discoverable or otherwise impeachable materials."
Justice Merchan was not convinced by the defendant's arguments and ordered the trial to begin on April 15, meaning that barring further delays, Trump will become the first former US president ever to stand trial in a criminal court.
What is the Stormy Daniels case about?
At issue in the case is whether Trump violated federal campaign finance laws by ordering his lawyer to pay porn star Stormy Daniels $130,000 to stay quiet about a sexual encounter, as well as falsifying account ledgers to hide the payment.
Though the encounter was said to have happened a decade prior, Trump was vying for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination at the time the payment was made.
Trump's lawyers argue the payment was not made for the benefit of his political campaign, but rather to spare his family embarrassment — his wife Melania was pregnant with their son Barron at the time the affair took place.
Trump has denied both the affair and the payment but in 2018, his then lawyer, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty to federal campaign finance violations for making the payment on Trump's behalf. Cohen was sent to prison for his role in the scheme.
Trump turned against his former "fixer" when Cohen decided to testify against his former boss under oath. Trump's legal team has routinely characterized Cohen as untrustworthy. This is what prompted the request for more documents — which the defense argued could corroborate their questioning of Cohen's credibility.  
Though Justice Merchan granted a 30-day delay on March 15, the jury trial will now get underway on April 15. Thus, Trump will likely have been cleared or convicted of the charges before the November 5, 2024 presidential election.