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cover of episode Live Coverage: New York v. Donald Trump

Live Coverage: New York v. Donald Trump

2024/4/16
logo of podcast Prosecuting Donald Trump

Prosecuting Donald Trump

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Alex Wagner
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Alvin Bragg
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Ari Melber
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Chris Hayes
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Joy Reid
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Lisa Rubin
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Nicole Wallace
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Rachel Maddow
Topics
Ari Melber: 本案是美国历史上首例针对前任总统的刑事审判,具有里程碑式的意义。特朗普及其律师多次试图推迟审判,但均未成功。首日庭审立即涉及到特朗普潜在的犯罪动机证据,检方试图引用臭名昭著的《好莱坞访问》录像带作为证据。本案的陪审团选择过程将占据大部分庭审时间,首日尚未选出任何陪审员。特朗普在庭审中表现得相对平静,这与他以往的公众形象形成对比。法律上,特朗普被推定无罪,举证责任完全在于检方。特朗普面临四项指控,其中三项与选举犯罪有关;本案是首个进入审判程序的案件,其结果可能对今年的大选产生重大影响。 Rachel Maddow: 本案的审判历时很久,本身就是一个丑闻。特朗普在庭审首日似乎睡着了,这将成为媒体关注的焦点,并可能影响其竞选活动。特朗普在庭审首日似乎睡着,这与他竞选活动中攻击对手“瞌睡乔”形成鲜明对比。特朗普在庭审首日似乎睡着,这既突显了案件的严重性,也暴露了他滑稽的一面。本案的核心是特朗普与《国家问询报》涉嫌的刑事阴谋,而非他与情妇的关系。特朗普是一个滑稽的人。应该关注特朗普的行为而非言论。特朗普试图通过各种方式阻止审判,这表明他试图逃避责任。特朗普试图利用其权力来阻止对他的调查和起诉。 Andrew Weissman: 美国终于能够对前任总统追究责任,这表明美国司法体系的公平性。本案的审判过程与其他高调案件的审判过程类似,是正常的。检方需要证明其证据的相关性和非偏见性。 Jen Psaki: 曼哈顿地区检察官艾尔文·布拉格认为,本案的关键在于确保每个人都在法律面前平等。本案的指控已经存在多年,特朗普利用其政治权力来保护自己,包括利用司法部来阻止调查。本案的审判能够进行本身就是一个奇迹,而特朗普还面临其他指控。 Nicole Wallace: 本案的核心是特朗普为掩盖丑闻而进行的非法行为,而非单纯的“封口费”案件。特朗普在庭审首日的表现对其竞选活动不利。特朗普在庭审首日打盹,这与他攻击拜登“瞌睡乔”形成对比,这在政治上是不对称的。特朗普的竞选活动与其面临的指控存在矛盾,他回避了与本案相关的指控。 Alex Wagner: 特朗普在社交媒体上的言论在庭审中被提及,这表明他缺乏问责意识。特朗普在《好莱坞访问》录像带中的言论在庭审中被提及,这将影响审判结果。特朗普的案件审判地点在纽约,这具有象征意义。本案的审判人员构成具有象征意义。 Chris Hayes: 特朗普在庭审中缺乏自我控制,这可能会对他的竞选活动产生负面影响。特朗普在庭审中缺乏控制权,这对他来说是一种精神折磨。特朗普在庭审中的表现与其以往的公众形象形成对比。 Joy Reid: 陪审团甄选过程中的问题旨在考察陪审员的政治倾向,包括媒体消费习惯和政治捐款等。迈克尔·科恩为特朗普的行为付出了代价,这体现了司法的不公平性。检方对科恩的证词充满信心。特朗普与《国家问询报》的合作关系本身就是一个疯狂的事情。特朗普与《国家问询报》的合作关系是本案的关键证据。特朗普利用《国家问询报》掩盖负面新闻,并制造有利于自己的新闻。特朗普与《国家问询报》的合作关系可能构成犯罪。特朗普与《国家问询报》的合作关系是犯罪行为,也是令人尴尬的。特朗普与《国家问询报》的合作关系是本案的关键,将吸引全国关注。 Stephanie Ruhle: 特朗普试图通过制造混乱来转移注意力,但他最终将无法逃避责任。 Lawrence O'Donnell: 特朗普的竞选活动与其面临的审判存在冲突,他将利用庭审外的机会进行竞选活动。 Lisa Rubin: 陪审团甄选过程中的问题旨在考察陪审员的政治倾向,包括媒体消费习惯和政治捐款等。 Maya Wiley: 检方需要证明特朗普为了掩盖丑闻而伪造商业记录,以及这些行为是为了影响2016年大选。

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The panel discusses the significance of the first day of Donald Trump's criminal trial, highlighting the historic nature and the potential impact on his campaign.

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40,000. That's the average number of questions children ask between two and five years old. At the Goddard School, we say bring them on because in our classrooms, children take the lead by asking questions, making new discoveries, and

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Historic. The first criminal trial of an ex-president. When you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. Donald Trump off the campaign trail and in the courtroom. I'm going to jail because of my decision to help Mr. Trump. You have to ask Michael to come.

They made it sound like I had no choice. A tabloid case shaping the election. We cannot and will not normalize serious criminal conduct. MSNBC's special Trump on Trial starts now.

Good evening. I'm Ari Melber here at MSNBC headquarters, where our all-star lineup is covering this first criminal trial of a former president. Rachel Maddow, Jen Psaki, Nicole Wallace, Alex Wagner, Chris Hayes, and later Joy Reid, Stephanie Ruhle, and Lawrence O'Donnell all with us. Today is the first time Donald Trump sat as a defendant for the actual start of any criminal trial.

We are past indictments, arraignments, all those pretrial motions, and the many, many failed attempts by Trump and his lawyers to delay this judgment day today in New York. He lost those efforts. And this defense table is not where he wanted to be today. But Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg has now achieved results where other prosecutors were thwarted. Bragg taking a campaign year cover up and charging it as a felony plot.

About 500 New Yorkers showed up today as potential jurors in this case. They may not recall the many details of this story that now dates from seven years ago. Most of the courtroom action will be about selecting 12 jurors and six alternates. This day ended with no jurors selected yet.

And this first day of the trial immediately dove into evidence about Donald Trump's potential criminal motive. Lawyers clashing over how to reference that infamous Access Hollywood tape, which prosecutors say motivated then candidate Trump to pay off Stormy Daniels by Election Day. Wanted it done beforehand for a campaign purpose. That's one sign of the many fireworks to come, which could captivate this jury and the nation watching.

So here we are, April 15th, 2024, now sets a legal precedent and marks American history. Other people who have served as president have been investigated, impeached, and accused of all kinds of wrongdoing. But none, none of them ever ended up at that defendant's table for a criminal trial where Donald Trump sat today. This is not a forum where the defendant has control.

The judge is in charge, and the jury decides. And that was clear immediately today, as Defendant Trump sat largely subdued and motionless, his public outbursts muted, his political bluster on hiatus. Legally, Donald Trump is presumed innocent. The burden of proof is on prosecutors alone. But starting tonight and in these weeks ahead, Americans will be presented with this momentous trial, the evidence, the testimony, both sides of the case.

No one really knows what comes next. We don't know what the legal outcome will be. We don't know how a mistrial, which would not convict the defendant, we don't know how that would land with voters. Or if a Trump conviction would bring a jail sentence. Or if a conviction would impact voters. Overall, Donald Trump does face four total indictments. We've covered that. And remember...

Three of them turn on alleged election crimes, crimes about abusing and trying to get or hold on to power. Those three in D.C., Georgia and New York. Now, this New York case just happens to be the first prosecution to go to trial. And it could very well be the only one to go to trial before this year's elections. So the stakes really could not be higher.

Our whole panel is here to get into this tonight. I want to bring in Rachel Maddow, who joins us on Remote First. Rachel, what does today and the start of this trial mean? First of all, I think that was an excellent summary, Ari. I think that you've put those stakes exactly right.

I mean, it took us a long time to get here. The origin of this case is, you know, ahead of the 2016 election. It's been a long time. That in itself is a bit of a scandal. I think that's part of what I'm going to be talking about on my show tonight at 9 p.m. Eastern.

But we did finally get here. You know, the wheels of justice grind slowly. I did not think they would grind so slowly that they would rock the defendant apparently to sleep at the defense table today. I mean, I have to say, I was not there. I do not know if he was asleep. It is possible he was, you know, meditating or just resting his eyes or something. I don't know. But like...

Like, that's, those headlines, you know, on the front page of the New York Times, front page of the Washington Post, front page of the Huffington Post, front page of multiple news outlets today coming out of this, that Trump appeared to fall asleep

on the first day of his trial, those are going to stick. I mean, I know it's not the most important legal thing, but we are in the middle of a campaign. And the age issue is the main thing the Trump campaign wants to use against his opponent, the whole Sleepy Joe thing. This is, as you said, Ari, this is the most historic thing that Donald Trump has ever done.

No president ever has been, no former president ever has been a criminal defendant. And on day one, the headlines coming out of it are that he appeared to doze off. To me, that's just, I mean, it's insane. It's also a reminder of how scary, however scary and somber and important this is. We're also dealing with somebody who is just fundamentally buffoonish.

And this will be as much a reminder of that as it is of all the more serious things here that are at stake. You know, this is a guy, this is, we've already had mentions today of like the one alleged mistress and the other alleged mistress and the doorman is making the allegations about the alleged love child with the third alleged mistress. And then, I mean, and the crux of this is not who he slept with. The crux of this is his alleged criminal conspiracy with the National Enquirer.

I mean, this really is a fundamentally buffoonish person.

And this will center that in the mind of the American people in a way that, you know, him staying awake in court today might have might have diverted. But this is what we've got. You go to you go to the election with the candidates you have. Yeah. And Rachel, this goes, as you say, back to 16. So I have one more question about that. And then I think Chris looked like he wanted to react to your point about the courtroom decorum. But but Rachel, on 2016, you've advised everyone from all the way back then.

Watch what they do, not what they say. Even when what they say is so outrageous, it sometimes merits a certain amount of understandable reaction. What he says is all testify. What he says is bring it on. But what he does is try every which way, including in a final losing motion this morning to prevent the very judgment day in this process that we're now going to cover.

Yes, that's exactly right. The motions to delay this, to recuse the judge, to move the venue, to move it to federal court, to get the charges thrown out. I mean, these are all things that a defendant is eligible to try, right? The defendants have a lot of rights and they can exercise all of them without prejudice against their case. But he's desperate to make this go away. And going all the way back to the original investigation here,

When he had control of the U.S. Justice Department, in particular when he had his guy Bill Barr in the U.S. Justice Department, Bill Barr took remarkable, I think, national scandal-level steps to try to make this investigation and this case go away on Trump's behalf. There's a reason this case has bothered him from the beginning. And, you know, again, watch how they behave when confronted with it, not what they say when they try to dismiss its importance.

Well, just to Rachel's point about the campaign dynamics, the optics of all this and the and the sustained eye resting that apparently happened in the courtroom. I mean, I do feel like if you if you call your opponent Sleepy Joe, you have one job for the rest of the campaign, which is like you got to like clockwork orange those puppies like open at all times. But it's also interesting, too, to imagine. I mean, again,

This man, who I think is not a particularly emotionally regulated individual and does not have a tremendous degree of self-mastery and discipline in a situation in which, to your point, Ari, he doesn't control things.

in which he doesn't control the pace, the conversations are happening outside of his purview, but he has to sit there and watch it. I mean, it is, I really can't think of a thing that's more nightmarish in some ways for him, just at a personal level of like, you don't have like the stimulus, you're not getting like little ego bumps from some social media replies.

And you just got to sit there and watch this day after day. I mean, this was day one. This is weeks and weeks of this. So just at the most sort of human level, I was just watching the reports today and thinking about just the sheer psychological torture. I really mean that. That is this. And then also the point that he keeps making, which is which is true, although not for the reasons he says, which is.

He's not on the campaign trail talking to people like he's not doing events with like, you know, the the farmers in Michigan or whatever swing state rally he would be doing. He's sitting in a courtroom in New York where he's accused of serious crimes and felonies where a serious case is going to be presented. Yeah, I mean, I was struck by the visual of him in the courtroom. Obviously, cameras are not in the courtroom. We didn't see, but we did see the photo of him in the courtroom. He looks serious.

in that photo. Rough. A little rough in that photo, I think it's fair to say. But he also was treated as every defendant would have been treated. That's how our justice system should work. He walked down those same dark, dingy hallways, right, that others did. He had to face the judge and answer some simple questions. That's not him, to Chris's point, controlling his own narrative and kind of spouting out to the public. And that struck me. I was a little surprised by that.

The other thing I thought was striking is this whole case has been shorthanded, right? As this hush money case. We're all talking about so many legal cases at all the time. The hush money case, the hush money case. And today it really brought to the surface, not just the details about this particular case, but

Karen McDougal in that case, the paying off, as Rachel mentioned, the National Enquirer paying off people to prevent stories from being from emerging. That tells you that that's a character case there. So if you're looking at the fact that the backdrop of this is a political campaign, we don't know what the politics will be. But I wouldn't say this was like a particularly good visual optics day for Donald Trump. I mean, I can we just go back to the sleeping?

A Republican said to me at 2.30 after Maggie Haberman appeared on CNN, who was actually, Maggie's in the courtroom. A lot of our reporters and Sue Craig, who was on my show, was in the overflow room. But Maggie Haberman is in the courtroom, reported that he slumped and fell asleep for a moment. Now, I have a newborn. I fall asleep everywhere except on live TV. I've got like a mountain of sympathy for nodding off. It's actually deeply relatable. However.

Let's be clear. The entire crux of the campaign against Joe Biden, not just on TV and stump speeches, but all the smears, all the attacks, all the maligning of Joe Biden is about his feebleness. And Donald Trump fell asleep on the first day of his criminal trial today. And if the parties were flipped, that would be everywhere. Oh, my God.

I mean, so it's just for me, the asymmetry of the moment was in such stark contrast when only Republicans were calling me and saying, what are you going to do about Trump falling asleep? I was like, wait, what? I can't I can't run it down. They're going to need 11 sources. He fell asleep. Maggie's on CNN saying it. The other thing about today is that Trump is running on the crimes he was committing.

charged with in the two jacks. He's running on the insurrection. He starts his rallies with, you know, ode to the insurrectionists and me together forever, you know, me and them. He is running on stealing classified documents, saying when you're president, you can do it because of the presidential records. He's not running on having sex with Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal and paying the National Enquirer to catch and kill those stories. Not running on these facts because he doesn't want these facts in front of the country. Rachel, you were nodding. Go ahead.

I was just going to say, on the National Enquirer part of it, I mean, things that we learned about the fact that the National Enquirer has to be central to a presidential, you know, to somebody who was a president and who wants to be president again, itself is insane. But the details of it, I mean, he has...

had, and this was discussed substantively in court today when they were going through the pending motions before they started interviewing the potential jurors, is, you know, can we talk, Mr. Justice, in the case, can we present evidence about the ongoing scheme that Trump had arranged with the parent company of the National Enquirer where they would

pay money to people to bury negative stories about Donald Trump to keep them out of the press at large. Right. That isn't just keeping them out of the National Enquirer. It's keeping those people from telling their story to anybody, but also Trump coordinating with them to produce stories that were against his opponents. And we remember what those were. Right. Ted Cruz's dad killed JFK.

I mean, they are alongside the alien abductions and all this stuff. I mean, this is the level at which Trump was operating, right? This is the way that Trump tried to get himself into the White House. And that coordination, if it was toward a campaign purpose and not just for a PR purpose, but specifically to try to get him into the White House to help him win the campaign, as you pointed out at the top of the show, Ari, that is arguably criminal.

AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, was given limited immunity from being charged itself in that regard in exchange for testimony about what Trump did. Michael Cohen went to prison because of his role in helping along a scheme along those same lines. I mean, this is it's it's criminal and that's why he's here as the defendant. But it's also just profoundly, profoundly embarrassing that

indefensible and something, as Nicole points out, that he can't run on, that he can't turn into a positive. It's tawdry and embarrassing and buffoonish and central to the story, which is going to rivet the country for the next eight weeks. Alex? I was struck by a couple of things. The resting of the eyes, which I will just, you know, I'll go with our standards department here and say that rather than sleeping. But, you know, for people who have sat on the sidelines and watched the

in horror sort of agog at the impunity with which Trump seems to conduct himself both, you know, in person and online. The true social tweets were read in a criminal courtroom today in the context of the gag order, right? Here's Donald Trump's true social tweets being read back to him in a criminal courtroom in a way that may affect the scope of the trial, but could theoretically land him in jail for some part of this if he continues on with this language.

You know, here's a transcript, at least, of the Access Hollywood tape where literally prosecutors are saying, again, in a criminal courtroom, grab them by the you-know-what, right? It is now evidence that is being introduced now.

In a courtroom, and I think we shouldn't lose sight of the fact for so long there's been this desire, there's been this indignation about his lack of accountability. Well, it is happening. These statements are being read to a jury or presumably will be read to a jury. They are being read in front of a judge. The other piece of it is for anyone who lives in New York, who's from New York, so much of Donald Trump's story is the story of a man who was made in New York.

And for this man, Donald Trump from Queens, to be held accountable by a prosecutor from Harlem and Judge Marchand, who was born in Columbia, but grew up in Jackson Heights, Queens. I mean, I think when we think about the history books being written, right, the cast of characters is something out of a

staged play, right? And the poetry of that, I think, shouldn't be lost on those of us who care about the narrative here in history. Well, you raise an interesting point we're going to also dig more into in our special tonight, which is, can you get a fair trial in New York? You can argue you can get a fair trial here than in other states where people would be so aghast at the tabloid stories and the way it works. Here, the baseline is people know a little bit about tabloid. They're like, I read the New York Post. I read the Post. I read the Journal. I read the Times. Like,

This is a New York story. And in fairness to him, I mentioned he's presumed innocent and it is not supposed to be that this is so scandalous that only that convicts him. But if, and the burden's on the prosecutors, that scandal goes beyond just tabloid fodder to, oh, you were getting secret benefits and money that would collapse the

campaign finance system as we know it if everyone could get away with this. So Nicole and Rachel also raised something I want to get into, which is that loss of control in the optics and the substance of that. So we're going to get back into that and dig into a lot more on this case with all of our legal experts after a short break. Stay with us. ♪♪♪

We today uphold our solemn responsibility to ensure that everyone stands equal before the law. No amount of money and no amount of power changes that enduring American principle.

Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg has defined this criminal trial of Trump in those stark terms. Our special coverage continues and our panel is back with Rachel, Nicole, Jen, Alex and Chris, our legal experts and others joining us shortly. And Rachel, I wanted to start there because so many smart and informed people have debated over the past year plus which accusation against Donald Trump is the worst, which criminal trial should begin first. Most candidates, I should say, in both parties don't stand for

currently accused of crimes are not most people who are candidates for Congress are not awaiting criminal trials before the election day just to reset on that. And we wanted to begin with you in that statement from D.A. Bragg. It's really the only time he's spoken about this in detail when he did announce the charges, because his job is not to compare and contrast the whole country. He says there's evidence of a crime in his jurisdiction. And that's what he says is the only thing he had to think about. And that's why we're here today.

Yeah. And I mean, I think when we think about the timeline here, I mean, I think it's important to remember that these charges in some ways have sort of been in the queue. They've been lined up for five and a half years since Michael Cohen, five and a half years ago, pled guilty in federal court to federal campaign finance violations that prosecutors said and Michael Cohen admitted under oath.

were committed at the behest of individual one, who was Donald Trump. I mean, this crime was described in federal court with proof to support it nearly six years ago. And what happened between then and now that finally in a whole different court system, in New York state court,

Trump is finally being held accountable for a crime that happened so blatantly and so obviously and so long ago. And that saga itself is partly the story of Trump's political power and how he chose to use his political power to protect himself inside the criminal justice system.

Part of it is being a serving president when they're not going to bring charges against you. But part of it is also being a serving president who uses his power over the U.S. Justice Department to kibosh investigations and to have federal criminal court documents

whitewashed so that they don't give away as much information about him as they otherwise were going to. So this has just been a very long time in coming. The fact that it's taken so long is testament to how Trump has been able to manipulate the Justice Department, the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. criminal justice system broadly to his own benefit.

I feel like it's almost a miracle that we got this case into trial at all. The fact that there are three more stacked up behind it just tells you about the litany of alleged criminality that this candidate drags with him into this election season.

Well, to Rachel's point, I mean, Rachel is the person who I feel like I've learned the most on the degree to which Barr and the Department of Justice, you know, acted in a scandalous fashion, right, to hijack the normal processes so that the person named as individual one would not amount to anything.

But I also think when you look at the chronology here, there is a clear trajectory and through line, which is the 2016 election was the subject of two different criminal conspiracies. This criminal conspiracy, which is pled to by Michael Cohen in a federal court, and the Russian criminal conspiracy sabotaged the election, which has been charged with indictments of Russian foreign nationals who will likely never face justice.

After no one really in Trump's orbit was punished for that. Right. Then he tried to rerun it with Ukraine in the lead up to the 2020 election, which was found out and blown up. And he faced an impeachment trial over it for which he was acquitted.

Didn't really face any real accountability. All that leads up to January 6th, when even after losing the election, he attempts again to use essentially whatever means necessary and whatever means necessary to this man. He's sort of agnostic about the means. I mean, it could be legal. It could be not legal. Right. It could be.

ethical or dodgy or gray area or scandalous, but he's just trying to do whatever he can to obtain power. It's true in 2016 at the sort of fulcrum of the facts of this case. It's true in the lead up to 2020. It's true after the 2020 election. All of that is one story about someone who never faces accountability for his insatiable thirst for power and his willingness to do anything to, quote unquote, win even after losing. And this is the first of those

Well, and that goes, Nicole, to why the story that the jury and by proxy the country hears is so important. I'm curious what you think, but I would argue that if it becomes only a tawdry tabloid story.

you could probably find one or more jurors who aren't there. But if it's a democracy story, which is what DA Bragg said, and you just spoke to the evidence on that, it becomes something larger. It's about cheating, right? I mean, sports just went through one of the biggest stories in a decade with the interpreter for Shohei Ohtani, right? Being taken off the field literally for, for, for stealing. I mean, it's,

it's a crime that everyone can understand. Stealing, cheating, lying. These are easy to understand crimes. And I think the reason Donald Trump has worked so hard to make this one not go to trial is because it's an easy to understand crime. The jury's going to be asked to figure out if Trump did some things that are pretty easy to understand. And back to Rachel's point, the first people that found Trump to be liable as a conspirator was the Bill Barr Justice Department.

And Jeff Berman writes about this in his book, how involved DOJ leadership down in Washington was at editing that sentencing memo, which describes Donald Trump as individual one over and over and over again. Michael Cohen paid the money to benefit individual one. Michael Cohen, you know, everything, you know, and and

Again, not a lawyer, but I, for some reason, always get picked to be on juries. I mean, the jury is going to be asked to look at Michael Cohen. Michael Cohen didn't have the sex with Stormy Daniel. Michael Cohen didn't become president. Donald Trump did. Michael Cohen went to jail. I mean, one of these things is not like the other. I think the story is a pretty simple story about pretty simple crimes. Rachel, you've been invoked. Go ahead. I was just going to say, I mean, Nicole, I've heard you.

say that that starkly before about Michael Cohen and it always like wears me out a little bit, but it's very true in a very fundamental way. Like I can't say we're talking about Trump. It's always got a super gross element to it. My ears are turning red. Like I'm getting that little, sorry, raised in the suburbs, very Catholic, can't handle it. The basic idea here is very true. Like think about what, think about the fact

that Michael Cohen went to prison for this. Michael Cohen did not have sex with Stormy Daniels. Michael Cohen was not running for president. Michael Cohen received no benefit from this whatsoever. Why is he the one who is the only one who's gone to prison for it, particularly when it wasn't like he invented this as his own idea to please the boss? It's essentially admitted to that the

boss advised him to do this, that this was part of Trump's effort to get elected, to keep this information away from the public during the election. It just can't be as a fundamental matter of fairness. And I think Nicole and Ari, you're both right. As a fundamental matter of fairness, no jury is going to look at this and say, yeah, the one guy who should go to prison for this is the guy who had to zero out his home equity line of credit.

it in order to do this for his boss because the last time the boss had to pay hush money to another alleged mistress, he stiffed the tabloid publisher who put the money up for him that time. So this time I got to do it. Okay, yeah, you're the one who must be punished. It just doesn't make sense. You can't tell yourself any story about that where there's a crime that has been described and admitted to and litigated in court and the only one who ends up in jail because of it is Michael Cohen.

Right. And I think that's why we've heard from people around the DA's office that they're confident. Cohen is not a perfect witness. I don't even know if he could claim he is, but they're confident about that fact pattern holding up and the corroboration. Rachel, anything we should know about what you're doing at nine tonight? Oh, you know, talking too much and busting through the commercials like I always do. I'm going to be honest.

I am going to be talking about the one, I think, the original sin of this story, which has nothing to do with sex whatsoever. The original sin of this story, the very significant, I think, national level scandal that is the origin story of this case right now and why it is the thing that I most worry about.

that is most front of mind for me when I think about a potential Trump second term. That's going to be my lead tonight at 9. Really interesting. It is Monday, so we'll all be watching Rachel at 9 p.m. Eastern tonight. Good to see you. Our panel stage, our special coverage, thank you, our special coverage continues. We've been talking about the Mueller and Bar Justice Department history, that Cohen prosecution. We actually have Andrew Weissman, who's involved in all of this.

all of that history on the molar side with us. We have Joy Reid joining the panel and a lot more legal experts live at the courthouse when we come back.

As Democrats unite around Vice President Harris, they'll gather in Chicago to endorse their presidential ticket. A new era is here. It is go time. Stay with MSNBC for insights and analysis. The race is going to be close. Everybody should prepare themselves for that. Plus reporting on the ground from the convention hall. Extraordinary levels of enthusiasm from Democrats for the fight ahead. The Democratic National Convention. Special coverage this week on MSNBC.

Welcome back to our special coverage on this first day of defendant Donald Trump's criminal trial. Now, we know Trump wanted to avoid this day because he made many different efforts to delay it. Three just last week, each failed. Another today as Trump's lawyers took a request that they had already lost, asking this judge to step aside and just reran that play to lose again in court today. Joy Reid has been covering all of those, all of this and joins us now. And she has an expert standing by. Hello, Joy.

Hey, Ari. Thank you very much. Let me bring in Lisa Rubin, our wonderful MSNBC legal analyst. Lisa, let me let me just go through these in order. I want to start by talking about this process of picking a jury and the questionnaire. What questions stood out to you as being evocative without just asking what's your political affiliation? Are you MAGA or not? That would sort of evoke that for both the prosecutors and the defense.

Well, I think obviously, Joy, there are some questions that really get at jurors' political affiliations, including, for example, ones about their media diet. There are others that are a lot more overt, like, have you ever attended a rally for former President Trump or for an anti-Trump group? Or have you made donations in that direction? Things of that nature. Nobody answered those questions, however, in the affirmative so far. And I thought the most interesting question asked so far was...

Do you have strong opinions or firmly held beliefs about former President Trump? And the reason I think that's a really interesting question was because Judge Marchand's procedure allows jurors to self-identify at the beginning and say, I am unable to serve here because I believe I am incapable of being fair and impartial.

We lost over 50 people due to that question alone, and they didn't have to answer any more follow-up questions. Notwithstanding that question, there were people who believed that they could be fair and impartial, but when they got to the jury questionnaire, there were two prospective jurors who both paused on the, do you have strong opinions or firmly held beliefs? And I think that sort of focuses us on one of the conundrums of this trial, which is there are people out there

who believe they can be fair and impartial, but nonetheless might have such strong opinions or firmly held beliefs about former President Trump that one side or the other believes that they are inappropriate to be on this jury. Of the two jurors who answered that question in the affirmative, one of them went to a sidebar with Judge Mershon and both of the parties, they were excused. The other

answered the question before a sidebar and said very clearly, I don't believe anyone is above the law, not a former president, not a janitor. That person is still within the prospective jury pool. Whether he will stay remains to be seen tomorrow, Joy.

Let me go to really quickly, because I know that there's a certain number of peremptory challenges, I guess you would call them right, where the one side or the other can just say, I don't want that juror. I don't want that. And they don't have to give a reason why it's in either the prosecution or the defense use any of those kind of challenges.

It doesn't appear that they have yet. The one juror who was struck for reasons that looked like political affiliation or beliefs, that person was actually struck initially at the suggestion of Judge Mershon when she said that she had strong beliefs or firmly held opinions about former President Trump.

Judge Rashan said, I believe we should excuse this juror. Do either of the parties have any objections? The DA's office said they did not. It was at that point that former President Trump's lawyers wanted to follow up with the juror. You might want to ask yourself, like, why would they care at that point? Don't they want that person gone too? They might care because they're trying to show in appellate proceedings that former President Trump cannot get a fair try here in Manhattan. And so to the extent that they can suss out from this person what they're

firmly held opinions are, they want to know if they're for Donald Trump doesn't harm them. But if they are anti-Trump, add that to the pile of things that they have to complain about at the conclusion of this trial, Joy.

Lisa Rubin, MSNBC legal correspondent. Thank you very much. Always so valuable. Our MVP right there at the courthouse. Back to you, Ari. Yeah, Joyce, stay with me. I want to read a couple more of these questions because, again, we're learning things for the first time. The jury questions are relatively new, and today's the first time we saw them put to anyone. And so jurors are being asked, for example, we've been talking about Michael Cohen a bit. They're asking these jurors whether they've consumed Cohen's books or him on a podcast.

And if they have opinions about the legal issue of whether an ex-president can be charged by New York State. And then the big one, can you promise to set aside anything you've heard to render a verdict based solely on the evidence? And so, Joy, part of this is really human rather than lawyerly. These are human beings, not lawyers, for the most part, answering those questions. And they have to think back, not just historically.

In theory, you say the right answer. I'm fair. But in practice, have you seen Michael Cohen on? I don't know. Joy Reid's show or a different show or have you heard his podcast? What do you think about all that? Because New Yorkers, you know, they might think, well, wait, maybe I have. Does that affect me?

No, it's very interesting because Michael Cohen is a prolific interviewee. We both interviewed him. I think everyone on this panel has talked to him and he's very open about talking about this case. So yeah, there's a good chance that a lot of people have seen him. I don't know that that necessarily means somebody couldn't be impartial. I'll tell you, I recently did sit through this process as a prospective juror. You know, surprise, surprise, I didn't make it. I didn't make it out of the jury. But I always find it interesting when you sit in those rooms, people

take it very seriously. And there are people who will surprise you that seem when they tell their story, when they answer the questions that in a way would seem to indicate maybe there's bias, they still make it onto the jury. You know, I was surprised when I sat through this process, you know, at some of the people who still got on. So we don't really understand the reasons why

a prosecutor or defense witness. They might say the person watches a lot of Fox News, for instance, but they also seem to be somebody who digs deep when it comes to information or they're particularly patriotic and they feel they take very seriously the duty of being on a jury. And so they'll still put them on. So, you know, and I

I'm not a lawyer, but I interviewed them on TV. Laurie, you are you are a lawyer. But I think it is very true when people say you win or lose these cases in the voir dire. Who you pick is what you get. And so I think this part of the process, while it may not be the most exciting part of the process for everyone, in many ways is the ballgame. Can I ask a dumb question? There are no dumb questions. So we call it a questionnaire. Right. And I think the way that

You think of that as like a physical thing that you fill out, but it's being done live dynamically as a form of sort of interviews. And I'm just curious why, like what does that do from an efficiency standpoint? Again,

Efficiency is not really... As opposed to writing answers on a piece of paper? Correct, yes. I mean, like, from an efficiency standpoint, and efficiency is not the name of the game, but Judge Marchand has made a few choices to speed up this process. The first, most notable today, right, which was he declared at the outset that he was going to let people leave if they just said they didn't think they could do it. And he let, I think, 50 people go today for that reason. So he's already made some amendations to the normal process for that reason. But in terms of the question, you're like, what is...

I guess the idea is that in the questioning of the jury, you're seeing stuff physically, right? Reactions, pauses that wouldn't be there if they were just actually filling out a physical questionnaire. Yeah, I think there are two big parts of it. And we have Andrew Weissman coming up in the next block. We can get into even more detail. But one is...

that the court, by which we mean the larger process, has a deep interest in getting this right. You're not taking anyone's word for it. You want to get them on record, which, by the way, means that they're telling this to the government and the court, so they have that liability. And the court has the expertise. So, you know, Nicole, you'll see people all the time who think they're clever, and they say, oh, I'm going to try this, I'm going to try that. Sometimes they get off a jury, sometimes because they want to be on. I always try to get off, and I always get on. Yeah, and they...

Well, because they probably see you as trying to get off, trying to get off, otherwise capable of being honest. And so, number one, it's doing a real vetting. And then number two, we have to always remember we're going to cover both sides of this case for weeks. It's an adversarial process. So both sides get to kind of kick the tires on those answers, as you know. Right. Yeah.

I didn't answer them right, though. I've been picked. I've been called to dirty New York twice. I got picked both times. It is sort of stunning, at least watching the reporting from inside the courtroom, that Donald Trump was following along with the questionnaire as it was being asked. I mean, if you haven't followed this process before, I've never been picked for a jury and now I'm totally going to be.

It's it's fascinating. I mean, you have the the the chief, the defendant here, who is the former president of the United States. You have just normal people who are answering these questions. And there's the president, the former president of the United States kind of following along. You know what they say? I love that for you.

I love that for America. And for Donald Trump. No, but I love it for America. Because they see it happening. I just mean that is stunning to be a person who might be sitting on the jury and have the former president sitting there watching. And for him to be hearing from normal people about their ability to be impartial or to be... When he wasn't resting his eyes. Right. Well, and when this system works...

That citizen's answer and what they're going to decide of his fate matters as much as, yes, a former president. We're going to fit in a break. Let's get a quick look at Andrew Weissman, the former Mueller prosecutor, our legal analyst. Can we? Yeah, he's chomping at the bit to get shot. And he will after this break.

We are back as our special coverage continues. And Chris Hayes has a special guest, Chris. I do. In fact, joining us now, the aforementioned and after viewed former FBI general counsel and MSNBC legal analyst Andrew Weissman. Andrew, first, just this is the first crack we get at you today. Your your kind of top line thoughts of what we saw today.

Top line thought is that this country that likes to think that it is a country that involves the rule of law and is unique in the world has finally joined other Western democracies in being able to show that they can hold even former leaders who have held the most exalted position in the government, that they can hold them to account and subject them to a

fair trial where there are good lawyers on both sides and a fair judge. And the standard of proof is the highest that we have in the criminal justice system. And we are joining now many other so-called Western democracies and showing that we can actually apply the rule of law in this country. We think of ourselves as American exceptionalists, but we actually are not. And it is nice to see that this day has finally arrived.

How much of, if you had to rank today, and again, this is happening in the kind of, most of your life has been in federal courts in various roles. So this is a New York court. If you had to rank it on a sort of one being like very, very standard and normal, just in terms of what was happening and 10 being unlike anything you've seen, like where in those parameters was this first day for you?

For a high-profile matter, this was normal. A normal high-profile case. Right. So high-profile cases where you have, such as Enrod, or you have the Manafort case, some case where it's received national attention,

having sort of many, many jurors brought in, having a jury questionnaire, whether it's filled out in writing, whether it's read to them, that is standard procedure. Now, there aren't that many national cases. So, of course, this is unusual. But the process is one that I was sitting there going, oh, I'm used to this. I have seen this happen. I've been on the prosecution side. And so it seemed very normal to me.

Let me ask you also about one of the legal dust-ups that happened today around the Access Hollywood tape and its general admissibility. And I think we talked about a little bit, they went back and forth on which part of it could be shown to the jury. And what's interesting to me is the context here is about motive, right? One of the things people forget is he was hanging on by his fingernails afterwards. I mean, we had like...

Who was it? Was it Jason Chaffetz on our air? Like going on, he went on like five of our shows, be like, I can never look my daughter again in the eyes. I'm not supporting him. And then supported him and presumably looked at his daughter again. But what was the dispute there and what got resolved? So the first thing that they...

government needs to show is that proof that it wants to offer is relevant. And then the second thing is even if it's relevant, it can't be sort of unduly prejudicial. The court's going to be looking to see is there a more benign way for the evidence to come in that doesn't have sort of spillover prejudice.

Right. So here, as you said, the Access Hollywood tape, the sort of the substance of it was clearly going to come in because it is the state's main argument for the motive for why this happened and why it is that they were so concerned about more bad news coming out at this time that would further peel back the sort of the truth of who Donald Trump is. That's going to be the theory.

And so the back and forth was sort of how much of that could come in and what form. And I'd say Judge Marchand somewhat split the baby. He gave the state what it needed to make that argument, but said that the actual tape, at least as of now, unless the defense sort of opens the door to it, the actual hearing of Donald Trump saying those words will not be played, but they will be able to actually have the transcript of what he said.

Yeah, you said split the baby. And as I was watching this unfold, it struck me as sort of iconically Solomonic, right? That they sort of gave a little bit to each side in that ruling. Andrew Weissman, it's such a pleasure. Thank you, sir. You're welcome. Ari, back to you. Shout out to King Solomon. With the minute we have left, your thoughts on that point. Again, in fairness to the defendant, they won't play the worst possible thing, the awful video, but just the evidence of it. Yeah, look, I think it's...

I think Alvin Bragg and Juan Marcian are difficult villains for Donald Trump. I think that if he planned to make this the centerpiece of his campaign, it's not going to be very exciting for the people who are paying attention to events. Now, that doesn't include his base. They're not paying attention to events.

Vaughn had some great reporting today. He was at a rally with 5,000 Trump supporters. Trump said there were 42,000 of them there. Vaughn interviewed one after and said it was great to be here with 42,000 other Trump supporters. I mean, so that's not who's going to be infected by anything that happens. But for the sort of magical mushy middle of American politics, they're not going to

see particularly villainous figures in Judge Mershon or Alvin Bragg. These are not political actors. These are people who do the more tedious and boring things that make the rule of law grind. And I have to say, I was walking around New York. I didn't run into a single New Yorker going about their lives that had any idea this was happening. So I think one of the most remarkable things at 7 o'clock in the East is that

I don't think that anything really happened. Donald Trump, day one, lots more news cycles, lots more twists and turns. But on the first day of Donald Trump's first criminal trial, the earth still stands. Yeah. Earth one, as it were. Earth one, as it were.

Earth One. That's right. Coffee mug coming, potentially. Right, right. Really interesting points from Nicole and Chris and everyone there. Our special coverage continues, plus Jen Psaki, plus Rachel at nine, plus Lawrence, who joins us right after this break, along with Maya Wiley. We'll be right back.

Good evening. I'm Ari Melbourne. Our special coverage on this first day of the first ever criminal trial of an ex-president continues. And our all-star panel is here. Lawrence O'Donnell joins, Jen Psaki, Alex Wagner, Chris Hayes, Joy Reid, Maya Wiley standing by. We've got a lot to get into. The Manhattan D.A.?

charging Donald Trump's 2016 cover-up as a felony plot. This hour, we're actually going to dig into something we didn't even get to yet in our last hour of special coverage, the two key reasons that the DA says...

He can convict Trump along those lines, those two pieces. There's also the clash inside the courtroom today as prosecutors say Trump broke the gag order. We'll get to that later. But we begin with how defendant Trump is struggling to run his campaign while stuck inside this courtroom today. A challenge partly of the defendant's own making because he is the one who over and over delayed this and other cases. Now he's in one at this unfortunate time period for him.

Today, we learned Trump must be present for basically the whole trial that could run six weeks or more. The judge ruled, for example, against defendant Trump's request to skip certain days. And the campaign does plan more traditional events on weekends and using the court's off day Wednesdays for fundraising. The tension with the campaign schedule goes way beyond the calendar.

Evidence shows voters are repelled by this damning evidence and the whole ordeal of a criminal trial. And that may be why Trump delayed and delayed and delayed today from happening earlier. It's also, of course, why he's accused rivals in both parties of supposed crimes. And it's why most people view this trial and the claims here as pretty serious. Many Republicans say they would oppose Trump if he were ultimately convicted.

Those views are a reminder that many people oppose electing a convicted felon to the White House and defer to the courts, not public debate or hyperbole, to actually find out if any given defendant running for office is guilty.

I want to bring in our panel, starting with the aforementioned Lawrence O'Donnell, who joins us. Lawrence. Great to be here, Ari. Your thoughts and the point that we talk a lot in the words of law, legality and crime. People talk about the insurrection like a crime. But the polling suggests a lot of people are waiting for the court system to decide. Yeah, well, I don't think it has any impact on his life.

campaign schedule at all. He's already the laziest presidential campaigner in history. This is a presidential campaign that can go days on end.

doing nothing or putting out a video that takes eight minutes of his time at home. And we saw how he's going to campaign. He's going to go out to those microphones, which they should not have in the courthouse. And he's going to campaign in the courthouse every day before the trial, after the trial,

You've never seen a criminal defendant get that option before of, yeah, whenever you're walking in or out of the courtroom, we're going to make sure there's a whole, you know, camera bank over here and microphones for you as a criminal defendant to say whatever you want to about the case. And the giant problem with that in this particular case is Donald Trump is not going to testify. He's not going to testify in any of his cases, especially not this one.

But he is going to, in effect, testify in the courthouse every single day by going out to the only thing we can see, since we're not allowed in the courtroom with cameras. He's going to be the only televised witness.

participant in this trial. And everything he says out there would be, as you know, inadmissible in the courtroom. And it will all be relevant to the courtroom. It'll be relevant to the way people perceive what's going on in the courtroom. And the DA is not going to follow him to that microphone. There is no plan at all in the DA's office to how do you counter

A criminal defendant going to a national microphone every single day, minimum of twice. And their answer to that is, we don't know. We work in the courtroom. The minimal thing that should have been established is that that microphone setup just isn't there in the courthouse. That the judge could have controlled. They didn't. And so the guy who will never testify under oath will be out there at the microphone.

campaigning, in effect, every day of the trial. And Joy is still with us as we look at that campaign contrast. Your thoughts on both what Lawrence says and the pitfall for Trump, that if he actually did what he claims he would do and testified, he'd be out of control, he'd be subject to the rules of evidence, and it might not go as well.

It might not go as well. And I think Lawrence makes a really good point is, you know, there is the Donald Trump laziness aspect of it. Absolutely. But he's not lazy when it comes to talking and running his mouth. This is terrible for the campaign because the facts in this case, as sort of slimy as they are, take us back to the first time he ran and the problem that began the very month that he began running for president. I went

I went back over what Michael Cohen was charged with by the Jeff Sessions, Donald Trump Justice Department, by the way. This was not by some liberal justice department. Michael Cohen was charged by Donald Trump's Justice Department. In June of the year Donald Trump begins running for president, June of 2015,

He starts running. Michael Cohen doesn't join the campaign, but they give him a campaign email within the very first month of Donald Trump's first campaign.

He and David Pecker start talking about squashing any stories that might be negative regarding women. They start doing that. Fast forward to the following summer. You have Karen McDougal come out in June and start saying she was going to talk. They buy her limited life rights, or at least they offer to in for one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars. We're not talking about the June before the election. They can't even close that deal before Stormy Daniels comes out and says she's going to talk to.

And so they they're they're literally let me just read this one little very quick thing that I'm going to read. This is from the Michael Cohen indictment. Cohen caused and made the payments described here. And that's to through David Pecker to Karen McDougal and to Stormy Daniels. Or he made that one directly to Stormy Daniels.

In order to influence the 2016 presidential election. In doing so, he coordinated with one or more members of the campaign, including through meetings and phone calls about the fact, nature and timing of the payments. As a result of the payments solicited and made by Cohen, neither woman one or woman two spoke to the press prior to the election. They charged him with campaign finance violations. Ari, they charged him with that crime and named Donald Trump president.

without using his name as individual one. The problem for Donald Trump is that all of the facts in this case, as sort of gross as they are for us to think about, all go to the fact that the entirety of his initial campaign for president was plagued by this one issue of his relationships outside of his marriage with women. And then you get to October when the Access Hollywood tape drops.

It's very clear when you just read the Cohen indictment that this was a crisis for Donald Trump's campaign. It's very hard to get outside of these facts. And you can say whatever you want about Michael Cohen. The reason that he is a convicted felon.

Is this is the stuff he was not before he did this for Donald Trump. Everything he did that is a crime that they're going to try to use to impeach him. He did for individual one. So every fact in this case is going to be both unnerving, I think, to independent voters who will be reminded and jogged back into their original vision of Donald Trump as this on this undisciplined,

cheater who cheats on his marriage and who cheated in the election. It's a problem. I hate to ever disagree with Lawrence O'Donnell, but I'm going to in this moment because I do think, and we've all talked about this a little bit, the more sometimes you see Donald Trump, the more people see Donald Trump, the more we saw sleepy Donald Trump today a little bit. He didn't say anything particularly memorable at the cameras. He may in the days to come. There's many days to come, but he also may say things that are very crazy. And that, I think,

may also influence independent voters. We don't know yet. I will say to Joy's point, I mean, one of the most interesting things about this, and Rachel mentioned this too, the National Enquirer of this all, which is a big part of this story, we have Lachlan Cartwright on tonight on the show, who was the number two guy at the National Enquirer. He said in his New York Times piece, he wrote, it was the 13-page statement of facts that brought me to tears, right? This is the guy

who's the number two at the National Enquirer, okay? Because of the role they played in Catch and Kill. And not just one story, multiple stories. And that tells you a lot about who Donald Trump is. So we don't know how the public will consume it. New Yorkers aren't talking about it on the streets today. But it does tell you about his character. It does tell you about who he is. It does tell you about his willingness to do anything, as Chris said earlier, to hold on to power. I mean, and

The other piece of it, I think I agree with you, Jen, is we're going to get some new information here. I mean, Bragg is not just going to have Michael Cohen there on the witness stand for weeks on end. He's bringing in we already have a list of potential witnesses. You know, Carrick McDougal is going to be up there. Keith Davidson, the lawyer for both Karen McDougal and Stormy Daniels, is going to be up there. The entire editorial infrastructure of AMI and the National Court.

Acquirer going to be up there. Dave Pecker, Dylan Howard, Jeffrey McConaughey, the comptroller for the Trump organization. These people have new perspective on a very tawdry story. And like if there's one thing this country likes,

is a great story. Can I add two more to that? I mean, Madeline Westerhout, am I saying the same crap? And Hope Hicks. These were people, I mean, Madeline Westerhout sat literally outside of the Oval Office. You cannot get closer to the Oval Office than the desk she sat at. She saw everybody who went in. She saw everybody who went out. She could look through the little people in the Oval Office and see who was in there. She knows a lot.

Hope Hicks was on every phone call he was on. So what will we learn? We don't know, but we will certainly learn more about how they discuss this strategically on the campaign as a means of helping his campaign. And that seems to be part of the story here. And to the point of how important this was for the Trump campaign, this issue was something that Trump was trying to use against Hillary Clinton's candidacy because of her husband.

And so we'll recall that at the debates, it was Donald Trump who decided, I'm going to invite women who've made accusations against Bill Clinton. That was his debate strategy. Invite women as guests of the Trump side of the debate who've made accusations against Bill Clinton. That's how important Donald Trump and the Trump campaign believed this issue was. And he did that before.

before they purchased Stormy Daniels silence. Right. So he's the guy who's brought these women to the debate. Now, Stormy Daniels might be coming out in the last couple of weeks of the campaign and telling her story. Well, we have to stop that because that will destroy that debate strategy of bringing those women. I also think to circle back to where you started at the polling about how people are evaluating this.

I think, Lawrence, you're right. You're going to get this sort of unfettered, like, trouble will be at the cameras. Then what will be happening inside the courtroom will be under the rules of evidence. But off camera, still a tawdry and gross story.

I do. My instinct is that ultimately, like the outcome and the verdict matters more than anything. Like it just seems to me if I had to bet what what will be the political effect of this is a guilty verdict will hurt him considerably and something short of that won't or it might help. And I mean, so my going into this, my that's my level setting is that the people that are persuadable or the mushy middle, whoever's in the middle are corrupt.

are kind of looking for guidance from the system to say what it determines is the verdict. That's embedded in the question, and Lawrence, that's such a part of our legal history. When you think of all the courtroom dramas and all the movies, maybe it's nostalgic, maybe it's overblown, but people do have an idea and a story they've been told about this process working and the verdict mattering. So I'm curious what you think about that.

And the echoes of history here that sometimes it's OK to be cliched because it's true. The cover up did foul them up. It was the cover up following the money through Cohen into the White House and back is what DA bragged. Yeah, exactly. And, you know, one of the many reasons why Donald Trump cannot testify.

is that his defense is simply going to be cross-examination points scored, attempted to be scored by his lawyers to suggest that this money was for something else. You know, the Trump money, those Trump checks to Michael Cohen were not for Stormy Daniels.

And and you can't put Trump on the witness stand because he could not survive cross-examination on that particular point. Never mind all the other stuff in the evidence. But but that's the whole defense is can we get out of this with reasonable doubt that

about why Donald Trump signed his name to all of those checks for Michael Cohen. That's the entire defense. There is no other defense. And so it's a very thin reed to hang a defense on, but that's when it comes back to the issue of the defense only needs one juror to get a hung jury. Well, you're brilliantly previewing what we're going to discuss with Maya Wiley next block.

No, that's called getting in the way of it. You should have told me you were doing that. I would have talked about what a beautiful day it was at the courthouse. It was amazing. I've got to say, Trump, April 4th, 2023, was the most beautiful day of 2023 as of that point in the calendar. That was the day Trump showed up at this courthouse for the first time as a criminal defendant. I was down there walking among his fans. It was very, very pleasant.

There were like a dozen of them today, maybe two dozen. Yeah. Give a generous, you know, you know, account of who was there. And, you know, I walked down. It's the only exercise I get is walking on the courthouse and walking back. And it was as empty and quiet and peaceful as you could possibly announce, which you could have expected, which is the.

perfect Monday to follow the opening weekend of a movie in America called Civil War that pretends that this country would be willing to go to war over that freak who couldn't get, remember, 85,000 Trump voters in Manhattan alone, right? None of them went down there. There's two million of them, if you include a little bit of New Jersey, within an hour of here, including Long Island, you know,

And you got, I don't know, to be generous, two dozen down there. Very quiet, very peaceable. No hint of a bloodbath. I don't think they have bloodbath on their mind. I said it when he said it, that he's lying about the bloodbath just like everything else. And so the...

The energy that Trump wants out there, literally on the street, about what an outrage this is, does not exist anywhere in the country because it's legal to protest this in Boise, Idaho, if you want to. You could all have gathered there in the center of Idaho and had your

Big first day protest. Nowhere in America, not one, two dozen people near the court. It's a great point. And it also undercuts some of the threats and the kind of generalized anxiety we heard from certain people, kind of some legal establishment people in the past years. What would happen, as Lawrence reminds us right now, this people would go about their day and have a fair trial and protest.

Thank you for the weather reporting. I didn't know that side of you. Oh, yeah. And look at what was today. Today, best day of the year. Weather-wise, best day of 2024 so far. Multiple talents. He does have a touch with the weather. The first day of criminal process in Trump's life. All fair points. I want to remind folks what is coming up. As mentioned, we have the breakdown of the two key parts of the prosecution's case. Maya Wiley makes her debut tonight. Joy has some questions for her. So stay with us.

Bye.

MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell. When I was working in the Senate, I didn't realize that it's the perfect training for the job that I have now. Covering government, covering politics, the complexity of it all. Mastering the detail is crucial to being able to present anything that happens in Senate buildings or any of the other news centers that we have to focus on every day. The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell, weeknights at 10 p.m. Eastern on MSNBC.

A U.S. Senator destroyed by blackmail. He was not bound by the truth or by facts. The country's most outrageous political demagogue ascending toward the peak of American power. Millions upon millions of devoted followers. This is a story of heroes willing to face down tyranny and the risk to the country if they fail. Rachel Maddow presents Ultra, season two of the chart-topping original podcast. All episodes available now.

On the MSNBC podcast, How to Win 2024, former Senator Claire McCaskill is joined by fellow political experts and insiders to examine the campaign strategies unfolding in this all-important election. We have emerged with the teacher, the coach, the veteran, the governor, Tim Walz. I always think it's better to have somebody on the ticket that has actually won in a state that's hard. Search for How to Win 2024 wherever you get your podcasts and follow. New episodes every Thursday.

Welcome back to our special coverage on this first day of Defendant Trump's criminal trial.

In the DA's case, Trump is indicted for lies. Those are the lies about the payments to Stormy Daniels. The indictment says quite clearly those lies became crimes when Trump and his company blatantly falsified records to hide the truth. The stack of things you see on your screen boils down to the meeting and the money turned into a bunch of documented written lies, falsified invoices, etc.,

That became a felony, the DA argues, by trying to advance a second crime. Some of this evidence is just proven already. For example, prosecutors have Trump on tape planning these payments, the very thing he then denied in that now infamous brief response on Air Force One.

That was false. And today's trial builds on that history and argues, as prosecutors wrote in the original indictment that becomes the trial today, that this was a larger scheme to purchase negative information about Trump to deceive voters and then mischaracterize the receipts. Well, tonight we can tell you those receipts are coming back to haunt the defendant. So we're going to dig into these two planks of the DA's case. And Joy, as an expert on hand to help explain it all. Joy.

All right. Thank you very much, Ari. Let's bring in the great Maya Wiley, former assistant U.S. attorney. And Maya, let's let's get right to these question of these lies as Ari so deftly set up. In order for Donald Trump to be acquitted in this case, would he not have to somehow convince a jury that Michael Cohen by himself,

perhaps working with David Pecker of the National Enquirer, came up with this catch and kill scheme for his own benefit, because there is no other explanation, as Lawrence O'Donnell has said.

Well, Lawrence O'Donnell is right. You are right, Joy. The way we would say it, though, to put it in the legal framework is different, right? Because it's the people of the state of New York. I want us to keep remembering it's the people of the state of New York that have brought this indictment. It was a jury of Donald Trump's peers and a grand jury that essentially have ensured that we are here.

But the burden is on the New York district attorney's office to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Now, I do think there is much evidence here to prove that.

And this is what we should hone on. You actually said it earlier, Joy, and I want to reinforce it. You know, how does the prosecution do that? It does that because it's not only what Michael Cohen is going to say. And to Ari's point, it's because there is so much corroborating evidence, including that Access Hollywood, not just the tape itself, but the evidence that I think is going to corroborate some of what is crucial here to justice.

Make sure that there is a jury that says, hmm, right, exactly what you're saying. Why would Michael Cohen be doing this? What is the interest? Because the first thing that the judge in this case, Judge Martian, is saying to the jurors is the allegation here is that Donald Trump falsified business records. That's that's proven.

That's clear. That's not that's not a problem for the jury. But why? It is the agreement that was that meeting in August, that meeting that two of the people in that meeting are going to be witnesses in this case. That is David Pecker and Michael Cohen. That establishes the agreement as long as the jury believes the witnesses. Right. But then once you have the agreement, what's the agreement for?

It's to conceal the fact. And these are the words that are going to come from the judge that come from the judge to conceal the agreement to unlawfully influence the 2016 election. So that goes back to your point is, well, why would Michael Cohen do that? How does Michael Cohen benefit from that? Michael Cohen does not benefit from this agreement.

Donald Trump is the one who benefited. And the witnesses that we believe will be lined up are the witnesses like Hope Hicks, who was on the campaign. And we know from the search warrant from the Southern District of New York that the precise times of calls, calls that we know that the district attorney is looking at to establish Hope Hicks as a campaign operative actually

actively and consistently in communication with Michael Cohen, including a call that Donald Trump was on, right? All of this evidence can, to your point, unless there is some way that the defense can suggest that this is for, by Michael Cohen and only in his own interest, which is kind of hard to do, unless Donald Trump tries to say it was all about Melania,

I was just worried about Melania. But how do you get that evidence in? He'd have to take the stand. And as we know, the minute he would do that, which is very hard to imagine happening, that opens the door for the prosecution to eat his lunch.

Yeah. Well, OK, so there is that there is there the facts of the case and then there is the background, the kind of atmospherics. This is the atmospherics. I had my wonderful producer printed out that Donald Trump wants to be a part of this case. The Trump make America great again, I guess, PAC sent out this morning an attack on D.A. Alvin Bragg.

attacking him, attacking him as George Soros, his favorite prosecutor, and then going at length into what they are, what they're alleging are his soft on crime positions of not prosecuting this case and not prosecuting that case, trying to tie him to escalating crime, which is actually not even happening. New York crime is down in New York.

I would love for you to comment just for a moment on that, because that has been a thematic for Donald Trump and for other MAGA conservatives of attacking prosecutors they consider to be too liberal. Alvin Bragg is a quiet prosecutor. He's not been out there talking. He's not an ostentatious prosecutor. And yet he's still under this kind of attack. Well, you can run a campaign any way you want, including with misinformation. Yeah.

And as we know, this is also deeply tinged in what you've said, Joy, is tinged with racism and anti-Semitism. Those are tropes. And we should be very concerned about that. At the end of the day, elections have consequences. And the election of Alvin Bragg is the first black district attorney in Manhattan who pledged and was elected by voters in Manhattan to do exactly what he's done.

which is to say, I'm going to go after rich people the same way everyone has been going after poor people, including black people and Latinos when they commit crimes. And this is the same district attorney who, remember, was pilloried because he wouldn't bring a criminal indictment on the the issues that Trump or ultimately was convicted on. And

We've seen the civil case that Tish James brought. But all I have to say is that that in and of itself proves that Alvin Bragg is actually being a district attorney who's looking at evidence and bringing the cases that he thinks are most likely to be just prosecutions that he can prove. This is the one he brought after turning down another one because he's doing what people were electing him to do.

Former you former assistant U.S. attorney and our friend Maya Wiley. Thank you, my friend. Very much. Back to you, Ari. Thank you, Joy. And our thanks to Maya here on the panel. Jen Psaki, before we do lose you as you prepare for your hour, your thoughts on the fact that part one of this case is showing that Trump not only lied, but he lied to the government on paper in these business records.

Well, I think that's what they're proving, but it is reminding people of that fact, right, or that detail. I do. One of the things Maya said, which we were all nodding along to, I mean, we learned a lot about we're learning a lot about Bragg, right, over the course of the last several months. I mean, as she noted early on, he was under enormous pressure. Of course, there was a memo from Mark Pomerantz. He went out and spoke about it. We're all familiar with it. To file a criminal case, he didn't.

was criticized, that would have been the easier political thing to him to do. He didn't do it. And now we're seeing he's kind of maybe this like super meticulous guy.

I mean, he clearly has done a lot of work and thought in terms of determining whether he was going to move forward on this. We'll see how this goes. But I just it's interesting to me because he was projected as this person who was slow, wasn't going to act. He has acted. This is the only criminal case that we're seeing right now in a trial, you know, and Trump in the courtroom. But, you know, overall, Ari, I would say and Andrew kind of made this point earlier, is that.

At the end of the day, Donald Trump was in a courthouse today. This has been the wheels of justice have moved very, very slowly, years slowly. But he was in a courthouse today. This guy has been trying to obfuscate delay. He's been brilliant at that. And he sat there just like every other person in defendant today. Well, it's remarkable. And to your point, this day was not certain.

Georgia's a big case. Jack Smith has a strong case. The fact that the defense table actually had defendant Trump sitting there and now being told by the judge, you will keep sitting there. You don't get other days off. This is the first time that's happened in any of these jurisdictions. So we'll let you run to prepare your show. Lawrence stays. Joy is here. Chris and Alex is here. Maya Wiley is here. And Stephanie Ruhl joins us as we continue our coverage right after this.

Less than two weeks before the presidential election, Michael Cohen wired $130,000 to Stormy Daniels' lawyer. That payment was to hide damaging information from the voting public. The scheme violated New York election law.

DA Bragg there speaking in his only remarks since this historic indictment. He was discussing the election law part of this case that we've been covering. Stephanie Ruhl joins the panel. We should know prosecutors say Trump has already broken the new gag order that's been updated.

Lawyers clashed over that today. Trump has, of course, publicly attacked witnesses and the judge's daughter. Today, the judge scheduled a separate argument on that gag order for next week. But it's not slowing down the process because they went forward on discussing the evidence that will come into this case and those jurors. I want to bring in our full panel now, starting with you, Stephanie. Welcome. Nice to see you. Great to be here. Your thoughts on everything you saw today since you're joining us and this idea that they do have to deal with Trump.

allegedly breaking the gag order while also moving forward on the actual trial. They do. And for the time being, he's not worried. Right. Trump is the grand chief chaos agent. He distracts. He causes chaos. He makes all this noise. He has proven to himself that all press is good press because until now he hasn't faced consequences. He didn't face consequences with the impeachment. He didn't face consequences for Robert Mueller. So he's making all of this noise and saying a lot of things that aren't true, that are violating the gag order, that has a lot

people justifiably upset. However,

He's faced no pain. But once this trial is underway, once this laundry list of witnesses are sworn under oath, giving testimony, that's when the rubber is going to hit the road. And all of this special treatment that he has been getting is going to fall away because we're going to watch the truth come out. Lawrence, I'm curious what you think about that, because in the AG case, I would remind everyone he initially said, I'm not testifying. And he ducked the deposition and they ratcheted up slowly. They didn't jump on it and try to make it look horrible.

unfair, but they increased the fines. And then eventually he did comply and he sat for that deposition. He has folded before and sat for a day or two. Now it looks like he'll be sitting there, Lawrence, for weeks on end. So, you know, the only reason some of the incorrigibles in my Catholic school's

were controllable at all was because you could expel us. You could kick us out. So you were one of them. I got kicked out once, okay? Only once. Ended up going to more than one high school. Donald Trump knows no one

can put a former president of the United States in jail. Cannot be done. Secret Service does not know how to do it. They can't go out to Rikers, make that work. He knows nothing, nothing he does will make this judge put him in jail. Now, the ultimate penalty is what informs all the lesser penalties.

You know, when you know you can get kicked out of a school, there's a bunch of things you're going to do to try to not get up to that line. He knows he can't be sent to Rikers. It won't happen. So he can do anything else he wants because the fine is going to be $1,000 a hit on violating these things. He can't.

He can pay whatever fine that they want to impose. And so I think his lawyers have wisely told him, yeah, you're right, Donald. They cannot put you, none of these judges, none of them, they won't enforce any actual gag orders against him. And asking for them to be enforced is not to recognize what's going on here when you have

Presidents who get lifetime secret service protection. Now, when they were writing the law, it didn't cross anyone's mind to say, "Unless you are convicted of a crime," or, you know, they could have, you know, if they were writing it now, someone would suggest that. But no one thought that at the time. It was pre-Nixon when this was written.

And so so you can't send, you know, two dozen Secret Service agents to jail with him. It's just not doable. That's the part that he knows. So nothing's enforceable between. You're talking about the penalty doesn't exist. And right now in the pretrial detention. Yeah. If I'm talking about sentencing in the end, too, if we get there. But in the end, if he were I mean, Chris, if he's sentenced.

And it goes up to the Supreme Court and it is affirmed. Then you have an orderly process like you do with other complex cases where you might you might figure out the system. I think it's certainly true that you're not going to just send them off to Rikers tomorrow like you would any other defendant. That's not practical. No, I mean, I think I think that that what Lawrence is saying is true. I also think there's just a kind of bluff calling nature to the whole thing. I do think that he thinks the spectacle of it.

I do think he has convinced himself, I think wrongly, that all attention is good attention, even negative attention. I think a huge part of the Republican Party has bought into that, even though it hasn't worked for anyone else but him. Like, it turns out if you go around acting like a sociopath,

when you're trying to like convince people to vote for you, you alienate people. And this very obvious sort of like intro to politics has been completely like zapped out of the minds of a huge amount of the professional class of Republican politicians and Republican political professionals. That said, I keep asking everyone who I encounter along the way on my show, I'm like, just checking in here, like you were a judge for 20 years. Does this happen?

Like someone saying like talking about your daughter, like everyone to a person is like, no, nowhere, never complete. This is like utterly, completely off the spectrum. People gave you that exact answer for four years while he was president of the United States as well. Yes, but there are I mean, totally. But I think that there are to Lawrence's point, like in the reason that that doesn't happen.

in courts is because there are sanctions. And again, an important point to make here when you talk about Rikers, and I've said this before, and Ari, I know this is something you've thought a lot about. You know, most people think

Getting run through the Manhattan DA are in Rikers or the possibility of going to Rikers. That is an enormous, that shapes all of the behavior of everyone. It shapes who wants delay and who wants speed. It shapes whether you're willing to talk smack about the judge's daughter. All of that is the normal system, which is people with not much power.

Facing Rikers is not an issue. And let me bring Joy into that as well, because we've discussed this many times. A lot of the largest prison systems in America for incarceration are housing people who are awaiting trial, as Chris alluded to. Joy?

Yeah, absolutely. And one of the things that Alvin Bragg has actually done that a lot of progressives have been happy about is a lot of those prisons are also housing. They're the new housing for the mentally ill, you know, rather than having to deal rather than actually dealing with issues of mental illness in our cities. We're using prison and jail for that. But to the point that you all were just making, I mean, one of my favorite facts.

about one of Donald Trump's lawyers, Susan Michalis, is that one of her former clients was the notorious New York mobster, Benny Egges.

And I will just assume and presume that old Benny Eggs was not attacking the judge. So Donald Trump is at this point outdoing actual mobsters in his attacks on the judge's families, the daughter, and he's doing it to the point that Lawrence made. He knows he will never spend a day, a second, a moment in prison. But for me, there is something wonderfully poetic about the fact that despite the fact that even if convicted, he's not going to go to prison,

The first person to actually criminally prosecute Donald Trump is

is a black Harvard grad, the very kind of person that his former staff, the people who worked for him, Stephen Miller, et cetera, want to never be at Harvard Law School. But he was. And he came out and graduated. He's prosecuting you, Donald. And a black woman is doing that same exact thing in Georgia. And a black woman forced you to pay one hundred and seventy five million dollar fine. That's out

now also in question because the people who put it up, that might not be legit. Donald Trump is being held to account by the very multicultural, multiracial democracy that he's trying to dismantle. And for me, there's something poetic and actually wonderful about that. It says something good about our country that we're still capable of having that happen. Go DEI. My DEIs are bringing it home on today.

No, it's striking and a system that also is affording him rights that he, when he was in power, tried to deny others. So Joy stays with us. We have to fit in a break. We have a lot coming up, including Jen Psaki, Rachel Maddow, Lawrence O'Donnell, all doing their shows tonight coming up. And when we come back, our full panel and what we are learning in this first week of the first ever criminal trial of a former president.

My attorney and I are committed to making sure that everyone finds out the truth and the facts of what happened. And I give my word that we will not rest until that happens. Stormy Daniels speaking out so many years ago. And here we are. This is now the first criminal trial of former president. Our panel is here. Alex Wagner. It is remarkable.

For people who lived through that period and everything since then, that Stormy and this is the topic of the first criminal trial. She's going to be testifying, we hear, as a witness, possibly. I have to say, we haven't talked about this in the context of this trial. The jury selection is going to be prolonged.

I mean, half of the 96 jurors that were in the first tranche of interviewees today left. They said they couldn't be impartial. They were dismissed. I mean, this is a contentious process. It's going to be complicated. New York City is a complicated landscape. It's not unforgiving in terms of getting an impartial trial. But I think this is going to be prolonged and it's going to be, you know, challenging. The other piece of it is the gag order factors into it. And so far as the more Donald Trump is allowed to mouth off, the more that he is allowed to

speak ill of potential witnesses and say what he's going to say, the more that intimidates people from A, coming forward, but B, wanting to participate in this, right? The other thing we know is he's part of the sidebar conversations that the judge can have with potential jurors if there's a question.

Donald Trump, that means Donald Trump may be up there with the judge as a potential juror is interviewed in depth. If you are a juror, that's either something you really don't want or maybe it's something you do want. He's a known lurker. He is. That's that. It's daunting. Yeah, I think it all combines to create a very, you know, again, uplifting.

uphill climb to get this done in an expeditious fashion. Not that it has to, but there are a lot of challenges here that we're going to bear. He's a lurker and he's a celebrity, right? So we just cannot forget, right? We sit here for all these months saying like, oh my God, if he finally sits for a trial, when this thing happens, like justice will be served. That does not mean that

that Donald Trump will automatically be found guilty here. And people should be prepared for what that is going to look like, what that's going to look like for his hardcore supporters who will say this was always a witch hunt. Forget all the other trials. But it will also be the Uber gift

for the Chris Sununu's of the world and that donor class who were on the fence about should I, shouldn't I? And I'm just saying that's a distinct possibility here. Well, in Lawrence, you only need one. The burden's on the prosecution. They need all 12. The defense only needs one. Yeah, one gets you the hung jury, which gets Trump through the year. That's all he cares about. And of course, after hung juries, prosecutions have to really think, do we want to bring this again? And there's certain number of cases that just drop off with the hung jury. They give up on them.

them. But, you know, this jury will get impaneled. It'll get impaneled as carefully as a jury has ever been impaneled down there. It has a real effect, as we've seen. And I think the

most reasonable bet is that it'll be likely a fair jury. He's already had juries impaneled here in New York City, and they came to an agreement, a unanimous agreement about how to deal with the E. Jean Carroll case. I mean, it's not like we haven't been through this once already in this very jurisdiction with the same jury pool. Chris, I have 30 seconds. Make it make sense.

Well, I just want to say what sort of emphasize what Alex said. I had a former judge on my show this week who was like, I think it could take a month on the on the jury selection, which seemed super long to me. But she's, you know, she was like, this is going to take a while. It's it's it's difficult and it's going to take a while. And so.

All of this, I mean, the timing here, which has always been the kind of metronomic background to this entire thing, starting last year when we were doing these specials about the indictments of like, is it going to happen? We're here now. This trial is happening before this election, barring some crazy unforeseen circumstance. But the amount of time it's going to take is a real open question. Yeah.

And we are on day one of what could be weeks of jury selection and then weeks of arguments, witnesses, and then however long they deliberate. So we will meet back up here at this table many more times. I want to thank our intrepid panel and remind everyone it is a special night on MSNBC. We've got a lot of coverage coming up. We'll be right back.

Hi everyone, it's Chris Hayes. This week on my podcast, Why Is This Happening, author and philosopher Daniel Chandler on the roots of a just society. I think that those genuinely big fundamental questions about whether liberal democracy will survive, what the shape of our society should be, feel like they're genuinely back on the agenda. I think it feels like we're at a real, you know, an inflection point or a turning point in the history of liberal democracy. That's this week on Why Is This Happening. Search for Why Is This Happening wherever you're listening right now and follow.