Reporting from the Northeast Valley, Phoenix, and surrounding communities. State, National and International coverage- from the campus of Scottsdale Community College.

Northeast Valley News

Reporting from the Northeast Valley, Phoenix, and surrounding communities. State, National and International coverage- from the campus of Scottsdale Community College.

Northeast Valley News

Reporting from the Northeast Valley, Phoenix, and surrounding communities. State, National and International coverage- from the campus of Scottsdale Community College.

Northeast Valley News

The most important verdict—Nov. 5, 2024

Arizonans react to Trump’s 35 guilty felony counts
An+AI+generated+image+of+former+President+Donald+Trump+%28public+domain%29
Ben Longstroth (Flickr)
An AI generated image of former President Donald Trump (public domain)

Outside the City of Phoenix government offices late this afternoon, on an unseasonably hot May afternoon, people scattered to catch the verdict on their phones. 

As the “guilty, guilty, guilty,” words were uttered through various live news sources, clusters of people were overwhelmingly pleased and some outwardly celebratory with the verdict’s final calculation of “guilty on all 34 counts.”

Closing out the Memorial Day weekend break was the news of the never before verdict of a former U.S. president.

Donald J. Trump had become a felon— found guilty by a jury of his peers. 

The mere definition of a “jury of one’s peers” or, American jurors that are to include a broad spectrum of the population, particularly of race, national origin and gender was enough to send a strong message. 

Essentially the verdict came down “by the people” and all the conspiracy theories that would naturally spring up from the MAGA camps blaming Biden’s government corruption or judicial misconduct would have a tough time combating the fact that the people had spoken. 

One woman who asked not to be identified told Northeast Valley News, “I only pray that I can see that man behind bars.”

Whether or not that will happen remains to be seen. 

But the jurors who deliberated for 12 hours found Trump guilty on a total of 34 counts of lying and falsifying business records and were unanimous in their decision— all but eliminating the possibility of a hung jury. 

Trump will go down in history as the first former president to be convicted of a felony and Thursday’s verdict as well as the very public hush money trial has dominated the headlines in the U.S. and across the globe for weeks. 

“Donald Trump doesn’t care if he commits criminal acts, he gets away with it, all he cares about are the MAGA flies that gather on him wherever he goes,” said Phoenix resident Dan Holt an insurance broker and registered Republican who says he will not be voting for Trump.

During the trial, evidence was presented that Trump’s ex “fixer” Michael Cohen made the hush money payment to porn actor Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election in order to keep secret her alleged affair with Trump a decade prior and until the votes were cast—his testimony was key in the trial. 

Trump consistently denied the affair but the jury—based on the evidenced presented—saw differently. 

As little surprise to most, after the verdict came down, Trump pledged to “keep fighting,” and claimed that the trial was “rigged.”

“He’s (Trump) just an embarrassment to our country, he will keep up the lies and conspiracy theories, but he’s just an embarrassment…pathetic,” said Ansley Michaels of Los Angeles who was in Phoenix for a business trip. “I wonder how he can still run for office, most felons can’t even get normal jobs, so how can he be president, right?” 

Republicans wasted little time blasting the verdict after a jury found Trump guilty on all 34 counts. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) who is looking to succeed Senate Majority Leader, Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) called on Republicans to support Trump. 

Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), reportedly accused the Biden administration of “weaponizing” the judicial system against the presumptive GOP presidential nominee.  

Trump’s sentencing after his guilty verdict is scheduled for July 11 and just four days prior to the Republican National Convention, in which he is expected to formally become the party’s nominee for president — setting up another historic scenario.

Donald J. Trump may be the Republican nominee for president, but on Thursday he also became a felon—an historic fact that America may or may not take into consideration on their Nov. 5 ballots. 

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