Because O.J. Simpson died four days before former President Donald Trump stands trial in Manhattan on Monday, and because this prosecution is being called the trial of the century just like Simpson’s trial was, it’s tempting to reduce the Trump trial to a tabloid headline. Can’t you picture it? “The President, the Porn Star, the Playboy Model, the Door Man and the Fixer.”
But prosecutors see the first criminal prosecution of a former U.S. president as something other than a tawdry tale of Trump, then a presidential candidate, paying off a porn star to keep her mouth shut about the sex she says she had with the married man. New York County District Attorney Alvin Bragg insists this trial isn’t about Trump’s reported salacious activities. Instead, he says his team will focus on the seriousness of falsifying business records. Falsifying the Trump Organization’s business records, prosecutors will surely tell the jury, was Trump’s attempt to unlawfully influence the 2016 election, which he went on to win.
New York County District Attorney Alvin Bragg insists this trial isn’t about Trump’s reported salacious activities.
The Simpson trial was often called a circus, and in every way was a television event. While Trump’s trial may be the “trial of the century” — at least until his next prosecution begins — it won’t be the same spectacle. And not just because of Bragg’s intention to focus on the Trump Organization’s recording false information on business records, making it a documents case.
“This is the business capital of the world,” Bragg said in April 2023. “We regularly do cases involving false business statements. The bedrock — in fact, the basis for business integrity and a well-functioning business marketplace — is true and accurate record-keeping. That’s the charge that’s brought here, falsifying New York state business records.”
It will also be less dramatic because there won’t be any television cameras in Judge Juan Merchan’s courtroom. Also, nobody entering the Depression-era courthouse at 100 Centre St. (as I did countless times as an assistant district attorney in New York) is likely to get excited by the surroundings. It’s a building so dismal that in the opening scenes of the show “Law & Order,” the enthusiastic TV prosecutors we see are coming out of the columned courthouse at 60 Centre St., where criminal cases are never even tried.








