NEW YORK: History happened just as everyone was about to leave for the day.
Judge Juan M. Merchan had already summoned Donald Trump, his legal team and prosecutors into the courtroom, where the former president has been on trial since mid-April. The judge said he planned to send the jury home in a few minutes—at 4:30 pm—with deliberations to resume the next morning.
Trump looked upbeat, having animated chats with his lawyers. A bell that rang in the courtroom whenever the jury had something to tell the court had been silent all day.
In the end, it wasn’t the bell that signalled something was up, but the jingling of a court officer’s keys—a ring full of them clanking as Maj. Michael McKee hustled past the judge’s bench and out a door into a private corridor.
Then, unexpectedly, the judge was back on the bench. There was another note from the jury, signed at 4:20 p.m. Merchan read it aloud.
“We, the jury, have reached a verdict,” it said, and asked for an extra 30 minutes to fill out the verdict form. The “hurry up and wait” beat of deliberations gave way to anticipatory tension.
“I’m sure you will hear from the sergeant and the major and everyone else, but please let there be no outbursts of any kind when we take a verdict,” Merchan warned everyone in the courtroom. “I’ll be back out in a few minutes.”
As the minutes ticked by, defense lawyer Todd Blanche whispered to Trump, who was stone-faced, arms crossed across his chest. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, whose office brought the case, entered the courtroom and sat with aides in the gallery.
The courtroom was packed with people, among them dozens of reporters, sketch artists, members of the public and Trump’s son Eric. Bragg staffers crammed into the back row of the audience. Court personnel lined the wall next to the judge’s bench. Just two seats were unclaimed, occupied by a Van Gogh sunflower seat cushion and a newspaper that someone had not returned to claim.
Just before 5 pm, the judge returned to the bench. He reread the portentous note and instructed court officers to bring the jury into the courtroom.
The six alternate jurors, who sat through the testimony but weren’t part of the deliberations, were brought into the courtroom and seated in the first row of the audience. The 12 jurors followed. Most looked straight ahead as they walked past Trump.
About a dozen court officers filled the room.
Then, the moment came. The courtroom was silent.
“How say you to the first count of the indictment, charging Donald J. Trump with falsifying business records in the first degree?” a court staffer asked.
“Guilty,” the foreperson, whose name has not been publicly released, said in a steady voice.
The same answer, “guilty,” came again and again.