Trumpβs extraordinary luck expired in dramatic fashion on Thursday with 34 guilty counts β unlike in his three other criminal cases
Donald Trumpβs good fortune with his criminal cases ended in dramatic fashion on Thursday afternoon, when a New York jury convicted him of concealing a criminal hush-money scheme to influence the outcome of the 2016 election.
The former president for months had extraordinary luck with his legal problems: one by one, the other three criminal cases became bogged down with intermediate appeals, and none is currently set for trial before the election in November.
Calls, notes and witness testimony appear to fit with prosecutorsβ case that Trump falsified records as part of plot to influence 2016 election
As the jury began deliberations on Wednesday, Donald Trump appeared to have little room to extricate himself from the mass of evidence presented in the weeks-long case.
A recording of Trump directing hush money to be paid in cash. Handwritten notes by Trumpβs ex-chief financial officer about how to reimburse Cohen. A parade of witnesses who testified the Trump campaign was desperate to suppress the story of his affair with the adult film star Stormy Daniels.
by violating the Federal Election and Campaign Act, which in 2016 made it a crime for any person to make contributions to a campaign in excess of $2,700 per year, or for a corporation to make a contribution of any amount to any candidateβs campaign in a federal election.
by causing the falsification of other business records, including bank records for the shell companies that Cohen established on false pretenses to pay the hush money to Daniels.
by violating federal tax and New York state tax law 1801(a)3 and 1802 since Cohenβs reimbursement for the hush money was βgrossed upβ to compensate him for taxes he would have to pay on the $130,000 when he recorded it as income on his tax returns.