Trump returns to court after first day of his hush money criminal trial ended with no jurors picked
- The first day of Trump's hush money trial in Manhattan ended with no jurors selected. Potential jurors were dismissed for bias, and many have yet to be questioned.
- Despite the trial's historical significance, the panel of 12 jurors and six alternates remains incomplete.
- Dozens were excused due to their inability to be fair, but more prospective jurors still need to undergo questioning.
100 Articles
100 Articles
First 7 jurors are chosen for Trump's hush money criminal trial, with 11 more still needed
The first seven jurors for Donald Trump’s New York hush money trial have been chosen after lawyers grilled members of the jury pool about their social media posts, political views and personal lives. The questioning Tuesday was designed to help…
The Latest | First 7 jurors seated at the end of the second day of Trump’s hush money trial
Following a protracted questionnaire phase and hours of questioning, seven jurors have been seated in Donald Trump's hush money trial. The court adjourned Tuesday shortly after the seventh juror was selected. Jury selection will resume Thursday morning. The jurors were…
Takeaways from the second day of jury selection in Trump’s hush money trial
By Jeremy Herb and Lauren del Valle, CNN (CNN) — Seven jurors were placed Tuesday on the panel that will decide former President Donald Trump’s guilt or innocence in the New York hush money case, a process that has highlighted how difficult – and often contentious – it will be to pick a full jury. Trump’s lawyers dug through prospective jurors’ social media posts to try to root out those with an anti-Trump bias from getting on the jury, even que…
Jury selection stalls and threatens to drag out Donald Trump’s first criminal trial
Donald Trump’s criminal trial in the Stormy Daniels case (the payment of a bribe to a porn actress to buy her silence about an extramarital affair) continued on Tuesday in the same way it proceeded the day before: stuck in jury selection. The defendant, who is now the first former U.S. president to face a criminal trial, spent the seven hours of the hearing looking at information on the monitor on his desk, taking the occasional nap, as on Monda…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 52% of the sources are Center
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium