NEW YORK — A Manhattan grand jury has indicted former President Donald Trump for his role in paying hush money to an adult film star. That is only the first step in what is likely to be a long legal battle. An indictment, whether it is handed up in federal or state court, is a formal accusation — not a conviction — and is among the first moves a prosecutor can make to bring a case to trial. When a person is indicted in a criminal court in the United States, it means that a grand jury composed of
Police are stationed near the Criminal Courts Building in lower Manhattan on Friday, March 31, 2023, one day after former President Donald Trump was indicted by a Manhattan grand jury.
An indictment, whether it is handed up in federal or state court, is a formal accusation — not a conviction — and is among the first moves a prosecutor can make to bring a case to trial. Grand jurors hear evidence and testimony only from prosecutors and the witnesses that they choose to present. They do not hear from the defense or usually from the person accused, unlike in a criminal trial where proceedings are adversarial.
As in other criminal cases, the exact charges against Trump are under seal and will not be revealed until he is brought to Manhattan Criminal Court for a formal arraignment, which is expected to happen Tuesday.
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