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Former President Donald Trump is now criminal defendant Donald Trump.
For at least several moments on Tuesday, Trump was placed under arrest.
His Miranda rights were read and fingerprints taken, but authorities spared him a mugshot and customary perp walk.
Still, as he headed to the 15th-floor courtroom at 100 Centre Street in downtown New York, Trump joined nearly 8,000 others who have been arraigned in Manhattan for nonviolent felonies so far in 2023.
Shortly before 2 p.m. EST, Trump became the first former U.S. president arrested and criminally charged. This is after becoming the first to have been impeached twice.
“Can’t believe this is happening,” Trump posted as he headed into a courtroom where he found, perhaps for the first time in his adult life, that he wasn’t in control of the proceedings in front of him.
Trump being placed under arrest comes some six years after his 2016 campaign, in which he led chants of “lock her up” against Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.
And as unprecedented and surreal was the arrest, the charges leveled against the bombastic MAGA leader reveal, what prosecutors claim, is a man who operated as if he were above the law for a long time — including when he ruled the Oval Office.
Indeed, the freshly unsealed indictment brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg included 34 criminal charges — all felonies related to falsifying business records, including several relating to allegedly making hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal.
Judge Juan Merchan, a former prosecutor with 16 years on the bench, unsealed Indictment No. 71543-23, after Trump’s team reviewed them.
Bragg alleged that Trump falsified business records to hide other crimes, including illegally pumping up his presidential campaign with ill-gotten cash.
Specifically, the indictment alleges that Trump conspired with others to undermine the integrity of the 2016 election, a contest in which Trump defeated Clinton.
Prosecutors alleged that Trump took part in an unlawful “catch and kill” scheme that included an illegal $130,000 payment he ordered to suppress information that would hurt his presidential campaign.
Trump violated state and local election laws, making the charges a felony.
The charges potentially carry a four-year prison sentence, which could mean that Trump, the current GOP 2024 presidential front-runner, has entered a race that could end with him either in the White House or prison.
Despite the apparent somber mood displayed by Trump that signaled just how weighty the proceedings were, his campaign released a fundraising email seeking contributions of at least $47 for a T-shirt that contained a fake mugshot of the ex-president emblazoned with the words “Not Guilty.”
Reportedly, Trump has raised more than $8 million since word of an indictment spread.
With security a big issue in the ex-president’s arraignment, the prosecutors in Atlanta and Washington investigating Trump were provided the ability of witnessing how New York handles a case involving a former commander in chief in a safe and drama-free way. The potential cases against Trump in Atlanta and Washington relate to the former president’s interference in the 2020 presidential election in Georgia and the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol that left several people dead.
Many top Republicans, including some of Trump’s potential rivals in next year’s GOP presidential primary, have criticized the case against him.
However, Biden has yet to announce that he’s seeking reelection next year, and other leading Democrats have primarily had little to say about it.
Prosecutors insist their case against Trump has nothing to do with politics.
“Manhattan is home to the country’s most significant business market,” Bragg stated. “We cannot allow New York businesses to manipulate their records to cover up criminal conduct. As this office has done time and time again, we today uphold our solemn responsibility to ensure that everyone stands equal before the law.”