NEW YORK (AP) — When he was elected two years ago as Manhattan’s first Black district attorney, Alvin Bragg spoke candidly about his unease with the job’s political demands. A former law professor, he’s more comfortable untangling complex legal questions than swaggering up to a podium.
But when the first of Donald Trump’s four criminal prosecutions heads to trial on Monday, about alleged hush money payments to cover up a sex scandal during the 2016 election, Bragg will be at the center of a political maelstrom with few precedents.
Even before announcing the 34-count felony indictment against Trump last year, Bragg was a lightning rod for conservative critics who said he wasn’t tough enough on crime. The upcoming trial will test the Democrat’s efforts to portray himself as apolitical in the face of relentless attacks from the Republican former president and his supporters, who say the prosecution is the epitome of partisanship.
Northeast China launches first cross
Mark Pope introduced as Kentucky's men's basketball coach
China launches construction of biomedical platform for disease research
2024 New York International Auto Show kicks off
Kenya, World Bank unveil carbon market guidebook for enterprises
Baidu strongly denies rumor of link between its AI tool and China’s military research
In pics: Wudongde hydropower station in SW China
Xi sends greetings to Malaysia's new king
Chinese firms can narrow AI gap with US within 1 or 2 years: founder of cybersecurity company