All that happened during Trump's trial and after him

Former President Donald Trump was acquitted of 34 criminal charges for falsification of business data at the Manhattan Criminal Court on Tuesday afternoon. Trump surrendered and was arrested Tuesday before being tried in a historic and unprecedented presentation to the court, in which the former president heard the charges against him [...]
Trump surrendered and was arrested Tuesday before being tried in a historic and unprecedented presentation to the court, in which the former president heard the charges against him for the first time. While the prosecution was routine, the issue is now ready to last for Trump's candidacy in 2024, while he fights charges in both court and public, CNN writes.
What prosecutors are claiming: Prosecutors claimed Trump tried to undermine the integrity of the 2016 election through a scheme of silent money paid for women claiming to have extramarital ties with Trump. He has denied the charges.
Trump is accused of being part of an illegal plan to hide negative information, including an illegal fee of $130,000 that was ordered by the defendant to suppress negative information that would damage his campaign, prosecutors claimed.
According to the prosecution documents, Trump “repeatedly and falsely falsified New York's business data to conceal criminal behavior that conceal harmful information from the voting public during the 2016 presidential election”.
After the trial, Trump returned to Florida immediately. He held an event with his supporters Tuesday evening at his resort in Mar-a-Lago, where Trump made his public case against the indictment and predicted how he intends to fight against the charges politically while running back for the White House in 2024.
As he was warned by Judge Juan Merchan during Tuesday's trial not to make comments that could endanger the rule of law” or create civil unrest, Trump criticised later that evening against Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and the judge himself.
I never thought something like that could happen in America, I never thought it could happen. The only crime I've committed is to fearlessly protect our nation from those who seek to destroy it”, Trump said.
“is an insult to our country,” he added.
Trump's team has until 8 August to submit any motion, and the prosecution will respond by 19 September. Judge Juan Merchan said he would decide on the motions at the next hearing scheduled for December 4th.












