Jurors in Donald Trump’s hush money trial begin deliberating Wednesday on whether to deliver the first criminal conviction of a former president—a momentous decision that could upend the November presidential election.
After weeks of testimony from more than 20 witnesses, the piercing glare of the legal spotlight now shifts firmly to the anonymous 12-member panel that holds Trump’s fate in its hands.
Following final instructions from the judge, the jury will retire to consider a verdict that—whichever way it goes—will have an outsized impact on Trump and the country as a whole.
Trump is accused of falsifying business records to reimburse a $130,000 payment intended to silence adult film actress Stormy Daniels, whose account of an alleged sexual encounter threatened his 2016 presidential campaign.
If Trump is found guilty, the political repercussions would far outweigh the seriousness of the charges. With barely five months before the presidential election, the candidate would also become a convicted criminal.
In a full day of closing arguments on Tuesday, his defense team insisted the evidence for a conviction simply did not exist, while the prosecution countered that it was voluminous and inescapable.