
Trump And His Allies Whine He’s Being Treated Like Every Other Defendant On Trial
HuffPost
The judge refused a request to appear at the U.S. Supreme Court next week and said it was too soon to decide if Trump could attend his son's graduation.
Former President Donald Trump and his allies raged after jury selection began Monday in his trial over a hush money payment made to an adult film star, sharing broad claims that he was being mistreated by being subject to the same rules as every standard criminal defendant before him.
Judge Juan Merchan, who is overseeing the case, shared courtroom instructions on Monday, telling Trump that he expects him to be present every day of the trial, which could stretch to eight weeks. He warned the former president that any disruptions could result in his exclusion from the court but that any failure to show up when required could bring a warrant for his arrest.
“If you disrupt the proceedings in any way, the law permits the court to exclude you from court, commit you to jail and continue the trial in your absence,” the judge said.
Trump’s attorneys had asked for two exclusions to those rules: A recess on May 17, so the president could attend the high school graduation of his youngest son, Barron. He also asked to be able to attend the U.S. Supreme Court arguments next week as the justices consider his broad claims of presidential immunity, which he hopes will result in the dismissal of some of the cases against him.
Merchan said he would not yet rule on a recess for Barron Trump’s graduation until he could determine whether the trial was running on schedule but said he could not attend the Supreme Court hearing as he had other obligations.