Every day, hundreds of people are taken into police custody in New York City. It is expected that the former president donald trump become one of them next week. Trump has been indicted by a grand jury for Manhattan for alleged payments made during his 2016 presidential campaign to silence allegations of an extramarital sexual encounter with a porn film actress Stormy Daniels. The indictment itself remains classified for now in the first criminal case brought against a former president of the USA.
The process that is opened can take several months and even two years. Trump is expected to turn himself in to authorities next week, according to a person familiar with the matter but not authorized to speak about it publicly. The person said details of a delivery are still being worked out. The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, Alvin Braggsaid he had contacted Trump’s attorney to coordinate his delivery and arraignment.
For any New York defendant, poor or powerful, answering criminal charges means being fingerprinted and photographed, answering basic questions like name and date of birth, and being prosecuted. Total, defendants are usually detained for at least several hours. There may be differences as to where the different steps occur, how long they take, whether the handcuffs come out, and other details. Much depends on the severity of the case and whether the defendants manage to turn themselves in.
“This would be a unique outlier“, said Jeremy Saland, defense attorney and former prosecutor in Manhattan. If Trump does turn himself in, there will be a carefully choreographed and relatively quick process and release without bail (as is common in New York). A former president is unlikely to parade handcuffed down a sidewalk or down a crowded courtroom aisle, Saland predicts. “It’s a public forum, but security is also paramount,” he says.
If defendants are notified of an impending indictment or arrest, they often make moves to turn themselves in. Doing so can smooth the process and strengthen the arguments for bail by showing that you are not evading the case.
{ “@context”:”https://schema.org”, “@type”:”ImageObject”, “url”:”https://fotografias.larazon.es/clipping/cmsimages01/2023/03/22/ 7D7C9BF4-3F49-49C4-A87A-8CDFA7B9AAC8/create-hilo-viral-imagenes-donald-trump-being-arrested-ousted-midjourney_58.jpg?crop=656,372,x3,y0&width=1000&height=567&optimize=high&format=webply”, ” uploadDate”: “2023-03-22T23:27:13.416+01:00”, “width”: “1000”, “height”: “567”}
Eliot Higgins.
Midjourney.
For example, when the former chief of finance for Trump’s company, Allen Weisselberg, was indicted in Manhattan on tax fraud charges in 2021, he was able to turn himself in at a courthouse side door before normal business hours. The goal was to “reduce the likelihood that the rendition would turn into a media frenzy,” his lawyers wrote in a subsequent court filing.
The movie mogul Harvey Weinstein turned herself in at a Manhattan police station in 2018 to face charges of rape and a criminal sex act. He was briefly in a cell at the police station, leafing through a biography of famous film director Elia Kazan, before he was led out in handcuffs and taken to court under the gaze of journalists on the sidewalk, and other suspects in a search area. from the court, where some screamed. , “Hey Harvey!”
About three hours after his surrender, Weinstein was arraigned and released under electronic surveillance and on $1 million bail. Weinstein was ultimately convicted; his appeal is now before the New York Supreme Court. He has also been convicted of similar charges in Los Angeles.
But even a scheduled arrest is still an arrest. Defendants have to hand over mobile phones and some other personal items for safekeeping (and, in some cases, potential evidence), and lawyers are generally not allowed to accompany their clients through the process. Lawyers often advise traveling light and keeping quiet.
))>
Discussion about this post