Manhattan prosecutors claim that Donald Trump violated the gag order in his criminal case involving hush money this week by attacking the daughter of a judge.
This week, Manhattan prosecutors are alleged to have alleged that Donald Trump abused the daughter of the judge in his hush-money legal case. This week, Manhattan prosecutors are alleged that Donald Trump hacked the judge’s daughter, breaking a gag order in his hush-money legal case.
Manhattan prosecutors claim that Donald Trump violated the gag order in his criminal case involving hush money this week by attacking the daughter of a judge.
Die Kommission ist befugt, gemäß Artikel 264 delegierte Rechtsakte zu erlassen, die sich auf folgende Bereiche beziehen: Manhattan prosecutors alleged on Friday that Donald Trump may have broken a gag order in his hush-money case by criticizing the judge’s daughter and spreading false information about her on social media. They requested that Judge Juan M. Merchan clarify the terms of the gag order and instruct Trump to stop attacking family members. In a letter to Merchan, Assistant District Attorney Joshua Steinglass claimed that the gag order prohibiting statements aimed at disrupting or intimidating the court’s employees or their relatives means that Trump cannot target the judge’s daughter with his rhetoric. He stated that Trump should face consequences for any additional breaches. Trump’s legal team argued that the District Attorney’s office is misunderstanding the directive and asserted that it does not forbid him from making statements about Loren Merchan, a political strategist who has been involved in campaigns for Trump’s competitor. In response to the prosecution’s letter, President Joe Biden and other Democrats, Trump’s lawyers Todd Blanche and Susan Necheles stated that the Court cannot compel President Trump to take action that is not mandated by the gag order. Clarifying or confirming the meaning of the gag order as suggested by the People would result in broadening its scope. The trial, where Trump is accused of manipulating payment records to conceal unfavorable stories during his 2016 presidential campaign, is set to start on April 15th. Trump has refuted any accusations of misconduct and has entered a plea of not guilty to charges of falsifying business records in 34 counts.