Prosecutors from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office accused Trump of violating the gag order numerous times since it went into effect.

The judge presiding over Donald Trump’s hush money case on Tuesday held the former president in criminal contempt over a series of posts on Truth Social that he said violated a gag order barring any attacks on jurors and witnesses.

Judge Juan Merchan ruled Trump in contempt for nine violations of his gag order, with a fine of $1,000 for each instance. The order prohibits the former president from “making or directing others to make public statements about known or reasonably foreseeable witnesses concerning their potential participation in the investigation or in this criminal proceeding,” and “public statements about any prospective juror or any juror.”

Merchan had indicated on April 23 that he was not impressed by the arguments from the defense, telling one of Trump’s attorneys that he was “losing all credibility” when he suggested that Trump was exercising caution to comply with the gag order.

  • @WoahWoah
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    71 month ago

    1K??? AHAHAHAHAHAAAHAHHHAAHAAAA

    OMG this is hilarious. I officially now have more contempt for this judge than I do for Trump. And that’s really saying something.

    • xor
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      391 month ago

      That’s the maximum non-custodial sentence

      • @Olgratin_Magmatoe
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        191 month ago

        So in other words, the fine needs to be a percentage of wealth/income, not a flat rate.

        • @Furbag
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          181 month ago

          There is a possibility that he might be despite the monetary punishment. Trump just committed Criminal Contempt and has thereby violated his pre-trial release conditions on nearly all of his other trials. It’s within their rights now to lock him up until the other trials commence and conclude.

          I’m tempering my expectations here, because those judges would still have to hold a hearing to give Trump’s legal team a chance to argue that he did not violate his per-release agreement. Nevertheless, it’s on the table now, all that remains is finding a judge with enough of a spine to uphold the rule of law equally.

          Him being put on notice in this specific trial is a good thing. The next step after this is a jail cell if he keeps running his mouth. Hopefully that’ll mean this entire process will be a lot quieter now with fewer outbursts and interruptions. Although. a lot of pundits are speculating that Trump will start toeing the line now so that he only has one infraction of his gag order at a time to intentionally get thrown in jail so he can turn it into a political stunt and garner sympathy. It’s not clear if he’ll get the maximum 30 days or not, but it doesn’t really matter, he’ll try and spend as little time in jail as possible, but make it seem like he is a victim of political persecution.

    • Subverb
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      31 month ago

      It’s the maximum penalty, and the judge acknowledged that he had no control over it and that he wished it scaled with the contemnor’s ability to pay.

    • @anon_8675309
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      21 month ago

      One way to look at it. Another is that Trump is not being treated any different than someone else when it comes to the fine. If he keeps doing it and the judge locks him up, everyone knows the judge was fair.

      • @WoahWoah
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        01 month ago

        Go do the same shit and see what happens to you.