Trump’s lawyers allege juror misconduct in latest bid to get his hush 
		money conviction dismissed
		
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [December 18, 2024]  
		By MICHAEL R. SISAK 
		
		NEW YORK (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump’s lawyers are raising a new 
		claim in their fight to overturn his hush money conviction, alleging 
		that the historic verdict was tainted by juror misconduct. 
		 
		But prosecutors contend that the allegations in a defense court filing 
		made public Tuesday are “unsworn, unsupported" hearsay and part of a 
		last-ditch effort to undermine public confidence in the case. 
		 
		Trump’s lawyers claimed in a letter to Manhattan Judge Juan M. Merchan 
		that they had “evidence of grave juror misconduct during the trial." 
		 
		Details of the allegations were redacted and hidden from public view. 
		 
		The defense letter, dated Dec. 3, was added to the public court docket 
		on Tuesday along with two partially redacted responses from the 
		Manhattan district attorney’s office, which prosecuted the hush money 
		case, dated Dec. 5 and 9. 
		 
		“Partisan political motivations infected nearly every aspect of this 
		Witch Hunt, including the jury room,” Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung 
		said. 
		 
		He accused Bragg and Merchan of allowing “their own personal political 
		biases to fuel this charade” and said “they should be ashamed of their 
		inaction in refusing to investigate this serious matter, and allowing 
		the grievous misconduct to occur.” 
		
		
		  
		
		“It is clear that there is more information that should come to light 
		regarding misconduct, and those with knowledge of such information 
		should come forward and do what is right,” Cheung said, calling on the 
		judge to dismiss the case immediately. 
		
		The development comes as Merchan is weighing a pending defense request 
		to throw out the case in light of his impending return to the White 
		House. 
		 
		In their written responses, Manhattan prosecutors argued that Trump’s 
		lawyers were trying to muddy the verdict by airing their claims in a 
		letter to the judge rather than a formal motion to dismiss the case. 
		Prosecutors also questioned the defense’s resistance to having Merchan 
		hold a court hearing where their juror misconduct claims could be 
		examined more thoroughly. 
		 
		Trump’s lawyers, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, argued in their letter that 
		such a hearing would involve “extensive, time-consuming, and invasive 
		fact finding" and would interfere with the president-elect’s transition 
		into office. Prosecutors wrote that by opposing a hearing, the defense 
		was trying to force Merchan “to accept their untested, unsworn 
		allegations as true.” 
		 
		Merchan said in a separate letter Monday that he ordered the redactions 
		both to preserve the integrity of the case and to ensure the safety of 
		jurors, whose names have been kept private. Three of the letter’s seven 
		pages were entirely covered in black ink. 
		
		  
		
		[to top of second column] 
			 | 
            
             
            
			  
            Former President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at 
			Trump Tower, May 31, 2024, in New York. Trump’s lawyers are alleging 
			that his hush money conviction was tainted by juror misconduct, 
			opening a new front in their fight to overturn the verdict and throw 
			out the historic case. (AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson, File) 
            
			
			
			  
            Blanche and Bove’s letter “consists entirely of unsworn 
			allegations,” Merchan wrote. 
			 
			Allowing them to be filed publicly without redactions “would only 
			serve to undermine the integrity of these proceedings while 
			simultaneously placing the safety of the jurors at grave risk,” he 
			wrote. 
			 
			“Allegations of juror misconduct should be thoroughly investigated,” 
			Merchan wrote. “However, this Court is prohibited from deciding such 
			claims on the basis of mere hearsay and conjecture.” 
			 
			Trump has been fighting for months to reverse his May 30 conviction 
			on 34 counts of falsifying business records to conceal a $130,000 
			hush money payment to porn actor Stormy Daniels to suppress her 
			claim that they had sex a decade earlier, which he denies. The 
			payment was made shortly before the 2016 election. 
			 
			On Monday, Merchan rejected Trump’s request to throw out the case on 
			presidential immunity grounds, finding that the U.S. Supreme Court’s 
			July 1 ruling granting the former president broad protection from 
			prosecution did not require upending the case. 
			 
			Trump’s immunity claim was just one of several efforts he and his 
			lawyers have made to get his conviction overturned and the case 
			dismissed. 
			 
			After Trump won last month’s election, Merchan indefinitely 
			postponed his late November sentencing so both sides could suggest 
			next steps. Trump’s lawyers argued that anything other than 
			immediate dismissal would undermine the transfer of power and cause 
			unconstitutional “disruptions” to the presidency. 
			 
			Prosecutors, seeking to preserve the verdict, proposed several 
			alternatives. 
              
			They included: freezing the case until Trump leaves office in 2029; 
			agreeing that any future sentence won’t include jail time; or 
			treating the case the way some courts do when a defendant dies. 
			 
			In the last scenario, borrowed from what some states do in such an 
			occurrence, the case would be closed by noting that Trump was 
			convicted but that he wasn’t sentenced and his appeal wasn’t 
			resolved because he took office. Trump’s lawyers branded the concept 
			“absurd.” They also objected to the other suggestions. 
			 
			Trump, a Republican, takes office Jan. 20. He’s the first former 
			president to be convicted of a felony and the first convicted 
			criminal to be elected to the office. 
			
			All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved  |