A 12-man jury issued a conviction after a six-week trial in which prosecutors accused Trump of organizing an illegal conspiracy to influence the 2016 presidential election. Trump was found guilty of all 34 charges made by the D.A. The verdict came after little than 2 days of the jury's sitting and over a period of trial.
Judge Juan Merchan must find the conviction for Trump. A court gathering on this substance was scheduled for 11 July, 4 days before the Republican Party's electoral convention began. The erstwhile president is facing a maximum of 1 year in prison. Most commentators, however, do not anticipate Trump to go to jail. However, another scenarios are possible, specified as home arrest or supervision. After the verdict, Trump will be able to appeal him and in the meantime stay free.
The prosecution accused Trump of attempting to illegally influence the elections by concealing the payment of $130,000 for Daniels' silence on their alleged affair. The jury agreed with investigators that Trump had broken the law, classifying invoices for Michael Cohen's then lawyer who mediated the transaction as payment for legal services. The erstwhile president committed a number of crimes in this way, including breaking the rules on the financing of election campaigns.
Donald Tusk on Law
Guilty and punishment is decided by law, whether the perpetrator is president or minister. This American lesson Polish politicians must memorize. Everybody – wrote Donald Tusk on platform X this morning, referring to Trump's case.
The Prime Minister's post was harshly criticized by Tobias Bocheński, a candidate for the European Parliament, who previously ran for the position of president of Warsaw for the Law and Justice.
You yourself said that the law will apply “as you realize it”, so the lesson is only to be done. Time to go cramming, Mr. Prime Minister, due to the fact that you have no title to teach others. - We read.
These are frequently cited by the opposition as Donald Tusk. The Prime Minister utilized them formerly in his speech on public media.












