Trump trial: Full jury chosen for New York hush money case
Donald Trump is charged with falsifying business records in a scheme to silence porn star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 presidential election.
Former US President Donald Trump sits in the courtroom at Manhattan criminal court in New York, US, on Thursday, April 18, 2024.
Jeenah Moon | Reuters
A full jury of 12 people was seated Thursday at the New York criminal hush money trial of former President Donald Trump.
One alternate also was selected. Five alternates remain to be selected for the case when proceedings resume Friday morning.
Opening arguments in the trial could begin Monday.
"I'm hopeful we will finish tomorrow," Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan said Thursday afternoon.
Trump blasted the case after court adjourned.
"The whole world is watching this New York scam," Trump said.
He exited the courtroom carrying a ream of paper comprising dozens of news articles that were critical or skeptical of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's case. Trump spent minutes thumbing through the papers and reading headlines.
The presumptive Republican presidential nominee complained that he was forced to be in court for hours a day, preventing him from campaigning against President Joe Biden.
He even railed against the courtroom itself, saying he was stuck "in that freezing room, freezing."
Former U.S. President Donald Trump holds news clippings, as his trial continues over charges that he falsified business records to conceal money paid to silence porn star Stormy Daniels in 2016, in Manhattan state court in New York City, U.S. April 18, 2024.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters
Earlier in the day, Merchan dismissed two jurors who had initially been seated Tuesday.
The first juror had raised concerns about her identity being made public, and her ability to be impartial. The second juror was excused after prosecutors questioned whether he had had been truthful in an answer about his criminal history.
The dismissal of the two jurors seemed to threaten the quick pace of jury selection, which looked to be on track to finish a week before some legal experts anticipated. But those seats, and the rest of the 12-person panel, were filled by Thursday afternoon.
The 13 jurors and alternate picked on Tuesday and Thursday were selected from a pool of 192 people.
Prosecutors earlier Thursday accused Trump of violating his gag order in the case seven more times on social media since Monday. The gag order bars him making certain statements about jurors and witnesses, as well as the family members of the judge and Trump's prosecutors.
"It's ridiculous, it has to stop," assistant District Attorney Chris Conroy told Merchan.
Conroy said that the "most disturbing post" by Trump echoed a claim by Fox News host Jesse Watters that the pool of potential jurors includes "undercover Liberal Activists lying to the Judge."
In this courtroom sketch, former President Donald Trump far right, turns around and looks at prospective jurors who raised their hands requesting to be excused from the jury panel in Manhattan Criminal Court, Thursday, April 18, 2024, in New York.
Elizabeth Williams | Via Reuters
Conroy said prosecutors would decide later what sanctions to ask for against Trump. A hearing on Trump's alleged gag order violations is set for next week.
The dismissed female juror said that on Wednesday, she received multiple calls from people asking whether she had been picked. Watters in a Tuesday night broadcast listed a number of details about the juror, including her marital status and news diet, and said, "I'm not so sure about" her.
That juror on Thursday morning told Merchan, "I don't believe I can be fair and unbiased and let the outside influences not affect me in the courtroom."
The judge apologized and promptly excused her from the trial. He admonished journalists covering the trial to "apply common sense" and refrain from publishing identifiable information about jurors who are supposed to be anonymous.
Merchan also ordered the press not to report the answers to a question on the jury questionnaire about past and current employers.
The parties were tasked Thursday with questioning a group of 96 prospective jurors to fill the remaining seats on the jury. But half of that group was quickly excused after they signaled to Merchan that they could not be fair and impartial.
Among the would-be jurors who remained, one person, who said he was born and raised in Italy, was dismissed after comparing Trump to the late former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. Berlusconi, who died last June, was a scandal-plagued billionaire who in 2012 was convicted of tax fraud.
Trump is charged with falsifying business records in a scheme to silence porn star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 presidential election.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump, seated far left, looks on with Judge Juan Merchan presiding as members of the jury panel answer questions from the jury questionnaire in Manhattan criminal court Thursday, April 18, 2024, in New York.
Elizabeth Williams | Via Reuters
Trump is required to sit in court throughout the trial, which convenes on all weekdays, except Wednesday, and is expected to last around six weeks.
Trump has denounced the trial as a political "witch hunt" and complained that it keeps him off the campaign trail.
Read more about Trump's hush money trial
But Trump has also used the media frenzy surrounding his trial — and his three other pending criminal cases — as an opportunity to spread campaign messages and attack his political foes. On Tuesday afternoon, Trump accused Judge Juan Merchan of "rushing" the trial.
Former President Donald Trump visits a bodega in the Harlem neighborhood of upper Manhattan where a worker killed a man who had assaulted him in 2022, on April 16, 2024 in New York City.
Spencer Platt | Getty Images
He then traveled to a north Harlem bodega for a campaign stop aiming to suggest that Bragg is failing to stop crime in New York City because of his focus on the trial.
On Wednesday, Trump complained that his legal team was given "not nearly enough" chances to reject potential jurors. In fact, he received the exact number of strikes allotted under New York law.