as far as the services concerned, they re the hardest part for them will be in preparation because obviously they ve never john anything like this before but if he s given some sort of confinement sentence, whether that s home confinement or into some sort of an institution once he s there and they have that setup, it ll be pretty easy for them because of being in a controlled space in terms of the hits security though, i mean, secret service in the courtroom. he had like two secret service agents with him. it was court officers right. in a prison setting, i guess he would i mean, it would be the prison officers, but also a few secret service or i find it almost impossible to believe that he ll ever be in a traditional prison sentence or a traditional prison environment. he may be sentenced some sort of a state controlled facility that doesn t have other prisoners in it. no matter where he ends up. if it s in a state facility, there ll be some combination of prison offi
absolutely free text dra w to 369369. today, i m caitlin polantz at the federal court in washington and this is cnn closed captioning is brought to you by you, cora, help maintain a healthy urinary tract with you, cora, i can having utis for ten years. you cora. we make uti relief products. we also make proactive urinary tract hello product. ucar is a life stage write today at you core.com cnn breaking news donald trump is a convicted felon, 34 times over. and good evening from outside the courthouse and lower manhattan where it all happened just about three hours ago. there simply is no overstate getting what happened in the entire history of this country and of the american presidency. not one president or former president has ever tried or convicted of anything, let alone multiple so we ll felonies today. a jury of 12 new yorkers supplied that dubious distinction. this is their verdict sheet, guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying business records cover up a hush money
how it plays with swing voters. all right. well, thank you both very much and thanks to all of you for being with us for this special coverage on this historic day here in new york are breaking news. coverage continues now with ac30, 60 cnn breaking news donald trump is a convicted felon, 34 times over. and good evening from outside the courthouse in lower manhattan, where it all happened just about three hours course ago, there simply is no overstating what happened in the entire history of this country and of the american presidency, not one president or former president has ever been tried we re convicted of anything, let alone multiple felonies. today, a jury of 12 new yorkers supply that dubious distinction. this is their verdict sheet, guilty on all 34 counts a falsifying business records to cover up a hush money payment to an adult film star made right before the 2016 election convicted with the 2024 election faster approaching the 45th president of the united stat
45th president of the united states, as a convicted felon, and donald trump s lead attorney, todd blanche well, join me live. i m kaitlin collins, and this is the source it s one of those where were you kind of moments in american history when the verdict came down on donald trump today. gil we ll t guilty, guilty reverberating 34 times over as the former president s that stone-faced and that new york courtroom about are how you feel about this case or about donald trump, the man. it s an extraordinary stain on the office of the presidency and on donald trump s already tarnished legacy he ll be back in that very same courtroom for sentencing in this case on july 11. that happens just days before he takes the stage for the republican national convention accepting his party s nomination for president but this time as a convicted felon, we saw donald trump earlier raising his fist and defiance it s to the crowd that had gathered outside trump tower like this evening. i
cetera. and in a prison setting, it s just it s nothing like a hospital. that s why we see this over and over and over again for decades. i have been studying lethal injection for over 30 years. this is the norm, these botches, and it s only gotten worse in the last decade. david we only have a minute left. let me ask you, do you think part of this is frankly it s hard for a lot of people to have sympathy for somebody, let s take the case you were involved with, the death penalty case. three people died, a pregnant woman among them. it s hard to have sympathy for peoplemp in prison for the most heinous, violent of crimes, and yet, what would you say to them about theul way we know many of these death penalty, many of these executions go. chris, i would say you re absolutely correct, my response so that isul two-fold. one, i have prosecuted every time of violent crime there is.