Cameras Will Be Allowed To Cover Georgia Indictment
- The next criminal indictment against former President Donald Trump is expected to come soon and may be televised. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is presenting her case to a grand jury, and if they decide to indict, the indictment will be made public and filmed in the courtroom.
- Trump has stated that he will not accept any plea deal and believes he did nothing wrong in relation to the indictments. He criticized President Joe Biden and accused him of using the attorney general to target him.
- Trump is facing multiple indictments, including charges related to falsifying business records and the alleged mishandling of classified documents.
6 Articles
6 Articles
Georgia Judge Says Cameras Will Be Allowed To Cover Indictment As Media Awaits New Charges Against Donald Trump
If Donald Trump is indicted this week, viewers may see something they haven’t in his three previous cases: Televised proceedings. A judge who is presiding over grand jury deliberations in Fulton County, GA on Monday said that media will be allowed to film and photograph the moment when an indictment is handed down, according to The Messenger. “If a grand jury presents an indictment, that’s usually in the afternoon, and you can film and phot…
Georgia Judge Delivers Ruling on Whether Cameras Will Be Allowed in Courtroom
The next criminal indictment against former President Donald Trump appears to be coming soon, and it might even be televised in full. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney ran through some important logistics during a routine Monday morning in the local courthouse while overseeing the grand jury proceedings. “If a grand jury presents an indictment, that’s usually in the afternoon, and you can film and photograph that,” McBurney told…
Georgia Judge Rules Cameras Will Be Allowed in Courtroom if Trump Indicted
AP Photo/Seth Wenig. America might finally be able to watch the spectacle of a former president being criminally indicted live on their television and phone screens. A judge in Fulton County, Georgia — where a grand jury is contemplating that exact indictment — ruled Monday morning to allow cameras in the courtroom if and when such an indictment occurs. Former President Donald Trump has already been arrested and indicted three times this year, o…
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