NY vs. Trump: My experience as an NYC juror leads me to believe the unthinkable could happen

Having served on three Manhattan juries, I would not be surprised if the 12 men and women hearingNew York vs. Donald J. Trumpacquitted him of all charges.

During two civil actions and one criminal case, my fellow jurorswere serious, professional and movingly civic-minded. A quiet, solemn patriotism infused our deliberations. Several jurors said that we should respect the justice system because, someday, we might needit to respect us.

My first case was a medical-malpractice lawsuit involving a botched abortion. We empathized with a woman wounded by her doctors, but her lawyer did not prove negligence. So, we backed her physicians.

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“But we’ve got to give her something,” one juror insisted.

In this courtroom sketch, prosecutor Matthew Colangelo makes opening statements during former President Trump’s criminal trial in Manhattan state court in New York City on April 22. (Reuters/Jane Rosenberg)

Others instantlyrebuked him.

“That’s not how it works!” one said. “I feel sorry for her, too,” another admitted. “But her lawyernevermadeher case.”

So,we sent the plaintiff home without a penny.

Next, we deliberated intensely for almost three days before concluding that a Harlem drug counselor neverdemonstrated his defamation-of-character claim against his employers. Mysympatheticpleas went unheeded, and he leftempty-handed.

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Finally, in her closing argument,a criminal prosecutordisplayeda CD-ROM of a police dispatcher’s “Be on the lookout” announcement after an armed robbery. When we asked the judge toplaythat recording, hetold us that it was not in evidence.

Disgusted by this prosecutorial deception, we instantly and angrilyacquitted the defendants. Minutes later, as foreman, I proudly announced our verdict in court.

These three cases confirm that Manhattan juries are sober and perfectly capable of fairness.

This is good news for Trump.

Former President Trump leaves Trump Tower in New York City to attend his trial on April 22. (Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images)

A jury oflevel-headedManhattanites would appreciate these facts that verify the profound vacuity and fundamental unfairness of District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s “case” against Trump:

An April 25, 2023, US Justice Department Memorandum of Understanding with the Federal Election Commission leaves Bragg powerless to prosecute this matter. “The Department has exclusive jurisdiction over criminal enforcement of the federal campaign finance laws,” the memorandum states. “The Commission has exclusive jurisdiction over civil enforcement,” the memo also says. Nowhere does this federal rule grant local prosecutors authority to enforce federal election laws. Thus, Bragg’s case is a shack built atop a cloud of helium.Bragg indicted Trump on April 4, 2023, four months after the statute of limitations expired on the corresponding Class E felonies.Bragg skirted the statute of limitations by claiming that Trump falsified business records to commit a second violation. After three weeks of this trial, that second crime remains a mystery.Fareed Zakaria admits ‘doubt’ that New York charges would have been brought against anyone but ‘Donald Trump’ VideoProsecutors described a “catch-and-kill scheme” through which the National Enquirer bought the rights to stories that might embarrass Trump and then buried them. Rather than a plot to influence the 2020 election, the Enquirer routinely caught and killed stories about Trump and other newsmakers, including former Obama Chief of Staff and current Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel, actors Arnold Schwarzenegger and Mark Wahlberg, and golf star Tiger Woods. More important, “catch and kill” might be dodgy, but it is not illegal.Former nude thespian Stormy Daniels signed a non-disclosure agreement promising quietude about consensual sex that Trump and, at various times, Daniels deny ever sharing. NDAs are perfectly legal. I have signed at least three (while dressed), and non-disclosure language has appeared in numerous contracts I have endorsed. Confidential out-of-court settlements operate similarly and legally.

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Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen paid Daniels to clam up about her alleged intimacy with Trump. Again, sex or no sex, it is legal to pay people to ignore journalists (although buying silence before law enforcement is obstruction of justice).Trump’s checks allegedly reimbursed Cohen for payments to Daniels. It is perfectly legal for a client to repay his attorney funds advanced in a lawful transaction.

In this courtroom sketch, Stormy Daniels testifies during former President Trump’s criminal trial in Manhattan state court in New York City on Thursday. (Reuters/Jane Rosenberg)

Bragg claims that Trump should have paid for this private matter with campaign cash. That would have been illegal. Instead, Trump legally used his own money. Trump faces 34 counts of alleged falsification of business records because his bookkeepers posted ledger entries for checks to Cohen as “legal expenses.” Would Bragg prefer false descriptions like “plumbing supplies” or “marble tiles?” Trump faces prison for reporting legal expenses as “legal expenses,” which is legal.

With 48% of registered voters telling Reuters-Ipsos last month that Trump’s Kafkaesque cases are “excessive and politically motivated” (41% disagree), even a Manhattan jury could scrap Bragg’s contraption.

My memories of jury duty, including within the Stalinesque building in which Trump is being persecuted, tell me that deliberating jurors could think, “I won’t vote for Trump. But I cannot convict him beyond a reasonable doubt in a shaky case about actions that arelurid,but legal.

If just one juror agrees, this case will end with a hung jury. A second trial would be unlikely before Election Day.

And if “lurid, but legal” reflects the opinions of 12 of my fellow Manhattanites — who tend to be tough, but fair — then former President Donald J. Trump will be acquitted on all charges and go back where he belongs: the campaign trail.

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Manhattan-based political commentor Deroy Murdock is a Fox News contributor.

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