The Morning: 34 felony charges

What we learned from Donald Trump's court arraignment.

Good morning. The case against Trump is about more than Stormy Daniels.

Donald Trump at the Manhattan Criminal Courts Building yesterday.Dave Sanders for The New York Times

Trump's day in court

Yesterday, Donald Trump became the first president, current or former, to be charged with a crime.

Prosecutors accused him of coordinating a scheme during the 2016 presidential campaign to cover up potential sex scandals and of committing fraud to keep them quiet. Trump pleaded not guilty to 34 felony charges in a Manhattan court.

Court filings detailed several instances in which Trump allegedly bought the silence of others during the campaign to bury damaging stories. By pointing to those examples, prosecutors described a pattern of behavior that could help convince a judge and jury that Trump is guilty.

You might be wondering why Trump's sex life, falsehoods and campaign dealings from years ago are worthy of criminal charges. After all, most of us are used to politicians, particularly Trump, misleading the public. And Trump routinely bragged about his sexual endeavors when he was a celebrity real estate developer.

The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, argued that Trump had gone above embellishing or misleading the public and, through the hush money scheme, had violated a number of laws to deceive voters. "That payment was to hide damaging information from the voting public," Bragg said.

Trump continued to portray the charges against him as politically motivated and unfair when he spoke last night at his home in Florida, where he flew after he appeared in court in New York. "This fake case was brought only to interfere with the upcoming 2024 election, and it should be dropped immediately," he said.

Trump's unhappiness about the indictment came through in his speech. "He's angry and vengeful, soaked in grievance," my colleague Jonathan Swan wrote. "Nothing boisterous or celebratory about it, as some predicted."

Today's newsletter will explain the charges, the scandals behind the case and other details we learned from Trump's arraignment.

Three scandals

All of the criminal charges are related to a $130,000 hush payment to a porn star, Stormy Daniels, who says she had an affair with Trump. Bragg suggested that he would try to demonstrate in court that the payout to her was how Trump did business, not a one-off mistake. "It's not just about one payment," he said.

Court documents laid out three instances in which prosecutors said Trump had suppressed information during the presidential race. All were already public. "It is still extraordinary to hear the district attorney telling this story in the context of a criminal arraignment," my colleague Jonah Bromwich wrote.

First, Daniels. During the final weeks of the 2016 campaign, she tried to sell her story of a decade-old affair with Trump, which he denies. Daniels's representatives approached The National Enquirer. But its publisher, David Pecker, was a longtime ally of Trump's who had agreed to look out for potentially damaging stories about him. Eventually, he helped arrange a deal in which Trump's lawyer at the time, Michael Cohen, paid Daniels $130,000 to stay quiet about the affair.

Later, when he was president, Trump reimbursed Cohen, and prosecutors say that's where the fraud began. Trump's company classified the repayment as legal expenses, citing a retainer agreement. Prosecutors say there were no such expenses, and that the retainer was nonexistent. The felony counts related to invoices Cohen submitted, checks Trump wrote to reimburse Cohen and Trump Organization ledger entries that recorded the reimbursements.

Prosecutors also raised the account of another woman, Karen McDougal, who says she had an affair with Trump, which he denies as well. McDougal, a former Playboy playmate of the year, had similarly tried to sell her story during the campaign and reached a $150,000 agreement with The National Enquirer. Rather than publish her account, the tabloid suppressed it in cooperation with Trump and Cohen, prosecutors say.

Finally, prosecutors invoked a payment to a former Trump Tower doorman. He claimed that Trump had fathered a child out of wedlock. The National Enquirer paid $30,000 for the rights to his story, although it eventually concluded that his claim was false.

The charges

The charges against Trump are all counts of falsifying business records. Typically, those charges are misdemeanors in New York; prosecutors elevated them to felonies by alleging they were linked to violations of election and tax laws. They suggested that the Daniels payment amounted to an illegal campaign contribution, as covering up Trump's affairs might have benefited his 2016 campaign. And by disguising the payments as legal expenses, Trump also tried to misrepresent the payments to the tax authorities, Bragg said.

New York prosecutors have never brought an election-law case involving a federal election before. The unique charges and circumstances of charging a former president could make the case harder to win, because courts often rely on past cases to issue rulings, as this newsletter has explained.

But the connection between falsifying business records and potential tax law violations could put the case on firmer ground, as my colleague Charlie Savage wrote. Compared with the election-related allegations, the tax claim is "a much simpler charge that avoids the potential pitfalls," said Rebecca Roiphe, a New York Law School professor and former prosecutor.

Trump's supporters, and even some of his critics, have argued that the charges stretch the limits of the law. They point out that other prosecutors didn't file charges over the hush payments and claim that Bragg himself at one point gave up on the case. "Alvin Bragg is picking up the trash that the U.S. attorney's office wouldn't touch, that his predecessor wouldn't touch, that he wouldn't even touch the first time," said Jim Trusty, a lawyer who is representing Trump for federal investigations.

What's next? The case is expected to last awhile. The next in-person hearing is scheduled for Dec. 4. By then, the 2024 Republican primary campaign will be in full swing.

More Trump news

Commentary

  • Karen Friedman Agnifilo and Norman Eisen, Times Opinion: "There's nothing novel or weak about this case. The charge of creating false financial records is constantly brought by Mr. Bragg and other New York D.A.s."
  • Harry Litman, The Los Angeles Times: "Bragg chose both to lay out the extent and gravity of Trump's offenses while also maintaining maximum flexibility to alter legal course."
  • Richard Hasen, Slate: "It is far from clear that Trump could be liable for state campaign finance crimes as a federal candidate."
  • National Review's editors: "If Bragg had evidence that Trump committed state tax or election-law crimes, he wouldn't hesitate to charge them."

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"The Daily" is about Trump's arraignment.

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