Former President Trump spoke at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday night, his first remarks after pleading not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in connection with concealing hush money payments.
Trump entered the plea before Judge Juan Merchan during the proceeding Tuesday afternoon in Lower Manhattan, becoming the first former president to be arraigned on criminal charges.
Merchan set the next court date for Dec. 4.
Read below for a recap of the day’s events.
Cohen says Trump allows ‘worst nature’ to impact him
Former Trump attorney Michael Cohen said following Trump’s first comments after being arraigned that Trump is allowing his “worst nature” to affect him in his attacks on others involved in the case.
Cohen said in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper that Trump’s attacks during his speech at Mar-a-Lago calling Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg an “animal” and Special Counsel Jack Smith a “lunatic” are designed to rile up his supporters and show “strength.”
He also said Trump’s attack on Bragg as being “backed” by Democratic donor George Soros is an “antisemitic trope” that he continues to use.
“He allows his worst nature to come forward, and that’s not going to help him in this case,” Cohen said.
— Jared Gans
Trump family front and center
From left, Eric Trump and his wife Lara, Victor Knavs, Donald Trump Jr., and his fiancé Kimberly Guilfoyle, and Tiffany Trump and her husband Michael Boulos, listen as former President Donald Trump speaks at his Mar-a-Lago estate Tuesday, April 4, 2023, in Palm Beach, Fla., after being arraigned earlier in the day in New York City. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Trump wraps up
Trump wrapped up his speech at 8:50 p.m. after roughly 20 minutes. He stepped into the crowd to mingle with supporters in the Mar-a-Lago ballroom.
‘There’s nothing here’
Trump attacked District Attorney Alvin Bragg and shrugged off the seriousness of the 34 felony counts unsealed earlier Tuesday.
Trump said he spent time in New York City “with a local failed district charging a former president of the United States for the first time in history on a basis that every single pundit and legal analyst said there is no case.”
“Last week he delayed for a month, and then immediately took that back and threw this ridiculous indictment together,” Trump continued. “Came out today everybody said this is not really an indictment. There’s nothing here.”
Trump claimed Bragg should himself be prosecuted or resign for illegal leaks of grand jury information.
He also took aim at Judge Juan Merchan, decrying him as a “Trump-hating judge with a Trump-hating wife and family.”
The Hill’s Niall Stanage notes:
Trump takes aim at other probes
Before addressing Tuesday’s proceedings at length, Trump defended himself from two other investigations that are looming over him and his campaign.
The former president took aim at Fani Willis, the district attorney for Fulton County, Ga., who is leading a probe into possible election interference in the state during the 2020 election.
‘In the wings they’ve got a local, racist Democrat district attorney in Atlanta who is doing everything in her power to indict me over an absolutely perfect phone call,” Trump said, referencing his call to the Georgia secretary of state asking him to find enough votes to swing the results in his favor.
And Trump also railed against Jack Smith, the special counsel overseeing the Justice Department’s investigations into Trump’s handling of classified information upon leaving office as well as Trump’s actions around the Jan. 6, 2021, riots.
Trump blasted Smith as “a radical left lunatic known as a bomb thrower who is harassing hundreds of my people day after day over the boxes hoax.”
Trump opens: ‘There is no crime’
Trump kicked off his remarks from Mar-a-Largo just before 8:30 p.m., opening with a slew of grievances about past investigations into his campaign and administration and about the 2020 election before finally addressing the Manhattan case.
“As it turns out, virtually everybody who has looked at this case… say there is no crime and that it should never have been brought,” Trump said to applause. “Even people who are not big fans have said it.”
Trump’s adult children, Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and Tiffany Trump, were spotted in the ballroom where the former president is speaking, as were several campaign aides. Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, has maintained her distance from Trump’s campaign activities since he announced his reelection bid.
— Brett Samuels
Who’s in the crowd?
Some notable names in the crowd at Mar-a-Lago include the former president’s children, Donald Trump Jr., his fiance Kimberly Guilfoyle, Tiffany Trump as well as defeated Arizona Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake and Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.). MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) were also spotted in the crowd.
Trump supporters welcome him home
Supporters of former President Donald Trump chant and wave flags during a rally to welcome him home, Tuesday, April 4, 2023, in West Palm Beach, Fla. Trump is returning to Mar-a-Lago after his arraignment Tuesday in a Manhattan courthouse.
Can Trump still run for president?
Donald Trump’s indictment has raised numerous questions over whether the former president may run for office, but legal scholars explain that he is still legally able to continue his White House bid while he faces criminal charges.
Saikrishna Prakash, a law professor at the University of Virginia’s School of Law, explains that the Constitution does not offer any disqualifications for candidates seeking the presidency if they’re either indicted or in jail.
“There is no disqualification that says that if you are indicted, you can’t run in the Constitution. There’s not even a disqualification that says that if you’re in jail, you can’t run. And so the Constitution itself has limited qualifications and doesn’t say that you can’t serve if you’re indicted or in jail,” said Prakash, who’s also the author of “Prosecuting and Punishing Our Presidents” in the Texas Law Review.
— Caroline Vakil
Bolton on Trump indictment: ‘I’m extraordinarily distressed by this document’
John Bolton, former Trump national security advisor, blasted the indictment that was handed down to former President Trump on Tuesday, saying it “is even weaker than I feared it would be.”
“Speaking as someone who very strongly does not want Donald Trump to get the Republican presidential nomination, I’m extraordinarily distressed by this document,” Bolton said on CNN. “I think this is even weaker than I feared it would be.”
Bolton, who has split with former President Trump since leaving his administration, said he thinks the case is “easily subject to being dismissed or a quick acquittal.”
— Stephen Neukam
Daniels ordered to pay Trump’s fees
Former President Trump was awarded about $121,972 in attorney fees from adult film star Stormy Daniels just hours after the former president appeared in court Tuesday for the first time in connection to hush money payments made to Daniels during the 2016 presidential campaign.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ordered Daniels to pay Trump for attorney fees endured during a 2018 defamation lawsuit that she filed against him. The lawsuit, which was dismissed later that year, was based on a tweet posted by Trump that suggested Daniels had lied about being threatened by an unknown man in 2011 in relation to an alleged affair she had with the former president.
Demonstrators were generally peaceful
NEW YORK – Hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside the Manhattan Criminal Courthouse on Tuesday where former President Trump pleaded not guilty to a 34-count felony brought by New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
As helicopters whirred loudly above the courthouse in a city where large protest movements and highly coordinated police responses are a regular occurrence, the demonstrations alternated in tone between explicitly angry and theatrically revelrous.
Trump: No ‘surprises’
Trump posted on social media from his plane that he believed there were no “surprises” during his arraignment, expressing confidence in his innocence.
“Just lifted off for Palm Beach, Florida. Will be delivering remarks tonight at Mar-a-Lago at 8:15 P.M., EASTERN,” Trump wrote. “The hearing was shocking to many in that they had no “surprises,” and therefore, no case. Virtually every legal pundit has said that there is no case here. There was nothing done illegally!”
McCarthy calls indictment a ‘farce’
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) accused District Attorney Alvin Bragg of trying to interfere with elections with the indictment of Trump and McCarthy reiterated his commitment to having House Republicans investigate Bragg.
“Alvin Bragg is attempting to interfere in our democratic process by invoking federal law to bring politicized charges against President Trump, admittedly using federal funds, while at the same time arguing that the peoples’ representatives in Congress lack jurisdiction to investigate this farce,” McCarthy tweeted. “Not so. Bragg’s weaponization of the federal justice process will be held accountable by Congress.”
McCarthy references Bragg’s office admitting that approximately $5,000 spent on the investigation of Trump came from federal funds.
House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) led two other committee chairs with a request last month for Bragg to testify to Congress about the case.
– Emily Brooks
Business records charge linked to election law violation
Trump is facing 34 felony counts of falsifying business records under New York state law.
Falsifying business records rises to a felony when an individual’s “intent to defraud includes an intent to commit another crime or to aid or conceal the commission thereof.”
One of the underlying crimes, prosecutors allege, is an election law violation that occurred when Trump directed the hush money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels “for the principal purpose” of influencing the 2016 election.
“The charge requires, as I specify, criminal conduct that was concealed. One of the concealed crimes we allege is New York state election law,” Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg told reporters Tuesday.
–Karl Evers-Hillstrom
Bragg: ‘Thirty-four false statements made to cover up other crimes’
Manhattan District Attorney laid out the case prosecutors are making against former President Trump after he was arraigned on Tuesday, saying Trump repeatedly falsified business records to cover up other crimes.
“Thirty-four false statements made to cover up other crimes,” Bragg said at a press conference after the arraignment. “These are felony crimes in New York state, no matter who you are.”
Bragg said that Trump made continuous lies over nine months, alleging that he was paying his former attorney Michael Cohen for legal services when he was really paying him in an alleged scheme devised between Trump, his lawyer and the company that owns the tabloid National Enquirer to buy and suppress “negative information” to “help Mr. Trump’s chance of winning the election.”
— Stephen Neukam
Trump flies back to Florida
Trump’s personal plane took off from New York’s LaGuardia Airport at 4:21 p.m. as the former president returned to Florida following Tuesday’s arraignment.
Trump will return to his Mar-a-Lago estate in West Palm Beach, where he is scheduled to deliver remarks later Tuesday night.
— Brett Samuels
Watch live: Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg holds press conference following Trump arraignment
Prosecution plans to call Stormy Daniels as witness
Prosecutors in the case against Trump indicated on Tuesday they plan to call adult film star Stormy Daniels as a witness. The next in-person hearing is Dec. 4 in which the judge will decide on motions to dismiss the charges filed by Trump’s legal team.
–Zach Schonfeld
Attorneys say Trump ‘frustrated’ by charges against him
Trump’s attorneys said after Tuesday’s arraignment that the former president is “frustrated” and “upset” by the charges against him, but that he is “motivated” to fight them.
Todd Blanche, Joe Tacopina and Susan Necheles spoke with reproters outside the Manhattan courthouse after Trump was arraigned and departed en route to the airport.
“When you say what his reaction was — what do you think his reaction was?” Blanche asked.
The three also downplayed reports of friction among the legal team. One of Trump’s lawyers representing him in Justice Department cases suggested in recent days that Tacopina might have a conflict of interest.
“There is no disunity here. That’s gossip and it’s nonsense,” Necheles said.
— Brett Samuels
Next court date: Dec. 4
The judge overseeing former President Donald Trump’s criminal case in New York City has set the next in-person hearing for Dec. 4, roughly two months before the official start of the 2024 Republican presidential primary calendar.
The Iowa Republican caucuses will be held on Feb. 5, 2024, marking the start of the GOP primary season, underscoring how Trump’s legal troubles could shadow him into the time when voters are actually picking a candidate to nominate for president.
The New Hampshire primary, the first one on the GOP calendar, is scheduled for Feb. 13, 2024.
— Brett Samuels & Zach Schonfeld
No gag order imposed
Former President Trump and his legal team won’t be barred from publicly discussing the case in which he was charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
After much speculation about whether a gag order would be imposed on parties in the case, none was requested during the Tuesday arraignment — and Judge Juan Merchan said he wouldn’t have granted one if it had.
— Julia Mueller & Zach Schonfeld
Statement from Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg:
Court releases Trump indictment
Former President Trump was charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
Former President Trump did not address reporters at any point during his roughly two hours at the Manhattan courthouse.
The former president was expected to offer up a one-line comment when he arrived, but he did not respond to reporters gathered before he entered the courtroom. He also did not speak before leaving the building.
Trump is scheduled to deliver remarks from his Florida home at 8:15 p.m.
Trump arraignment ends
Former President Trump has left the Manhattan courtroom after pleading not guilty.
Trump pleads not guilty to 34 counts
Former President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty as he was formally charged with 34 counts Tuesday, appearing in court for the first time since being indicted in connection with concealing hush money payments, multiple outlets reported.
Trump became the first former president to be arraigned on criminal charges, appearing before Justice Juan Merchan during the brief proceeding in Lower Manhattan.
Jean-Pierre: Biden isn’t focused on Trump today
President Biden is not focused on former President Trump’s arraignment, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Tuesday, just moments after Trump surrendered at a Manhattan courthouse.
“The president’s going to focus on the American people like he does every day, this is not something that is a focus for him,” she said.
Jean-Pierre started her briefing just as Trump arrived at the courthouse, where he was to be arraigned on criminal charges. Throughout the briefing, she largely refused to comment on the arraignment and pushed back on reporters’ questions about why.
CNN’s Van Jones: Trump has gone ‘from reality TV to reality’
CNN pundit Van Jones quipped that Trump has gone “from reality TV to reality” after being criminally charged in a New York Court room on Tuesday.
“Yeah from reality TV to reality, you know, that’s how it looks,” Jones said minutes after a photo of Trump sitting in the court room during his arraignment said. “This is not Judge Judy. This is real, and you can see it.”