Trump complains jury selection moving too fast in Manhattan hush money trial

Former President Donald Trump visits a bodega in the Harlem neighborhood of upper Manhattan where a worker killed a man who had assaulted him in 2022, on April 16, 2024, in New York City. The worker, Jose Alba, was arrested, but the Manhattan district attorney dropped the charges for lack of evidence. Trump visited the bodega after spending a second day in court where he faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the first of his criminal cases to go to trial. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images/TNS)
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NEW YORK — Former President Donald Trump complained Wednesday about jury selection in his Manhattan hush money case as the trial moves faster than expected toward opening statements.

After prosecutors and defense lawyers agreed on a surprisingly robust total of seven jurors in one day, Trump sought to tap the brakes on the process that seemed to be going remarkably smoothly.

The first former president to face a criminal trial said he should be allowed to reject as many jurors as he wants if he suspects the Manhattan residents aren’t going to give him a fair shake.

“I thought STRIKES were supposed to be “unlimited” when we were picking our jury?” Trump wrote on his social media site. “I was then told we only had 10, not nearly enough.”

He denounced Manhattan as the “2nd worst venue” for a trial, apparently comparing it with Washington, D.C., where he will face a separate federal election interference trial.

So far, Trump’s defense and prosecutors have each used six out of 10 allowed so-called strikes to dismiss jurors they suspect may be problematic for their side.

It looks like they could finish selection this week, in time for the trial to kick off in earnest on Monday.