Judge Fines Donald Trump Again In Hush Money Trial, Warns Him Of Jail

"As much as I do not want to impose a jail sanction... I want you to understand, I will," Judge Juan Merchan said.

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Last week Merchan fined Trump $9,000 for nine social media posts that he ruled had violated the gag order

New York:

The New York judge presiding over Donald Trump's historic criminal trial again found the former US president in contempt of a gag order Monday and threatened to jail him if there are further violations.

Trump, 77, is charged with falsifying business records to reimburse his lawyer, Michael Cohen, for a $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels just days ahead of the 2016 election against Hillary Clinton.

Judge Juan Merchan held Trump in contempt of court and fined him $1,000 for a violation of the gag order prohibiting him from publicly attacking witnesses, jurors or court staff and their relatives.

But Merchan said the fines -- Trump was also fined a total of $9,000 last week -- were not serving as a "deterrent" and he would have to consider jail time for further violations.

"As much as I do not want to impose a jail sanction..., I want you to understand I will," Merchan told Trump, adding that he understood the "magnitude of such a decision."

"At the end if the day I have a job to do and part of that job is to maintain the dignity of the justice system," the judge said, calling Trump's defiance a "direct attack on the rule of law."

Merchan's ruling came at the start of the third week of testimony in the trial of the Republican presidential candidate for covering up hush money payments to Daniels in a scheme to avoid potentially disastrous publicity just before election day.

Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, and Cohen, Trump's ex-lawyer who has become a bitter foe of his former boss, are both expected to testify at some point during the trial.

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'Crisis'

Hope Hicks, a former close advisor to Trump, testified on Friday about the "crisis" that engulfed his 2016 presidential campaign after a tape emerged of him bragging about groping women.

Hicks said she was a "little stunned" by the now infamous Access Hollywood tape in which Trump was heard boasting about grabbing women's genitalia.

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"There was consensus among us all that the tape was damaging, this was a crisis," she added.

Hicks was a key player in the final stages of Trump's successful 2016 presidential campaign when the hush money payments to Daniels were allegedly made.

According to prosecutors, panic over the tape triggered a Trump campaign effort to silence Daniels over her claim of a 2006 sexual encounter with the married Trump. Trump denies ever having sex with Daniels.

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The trial has gripped the legal and political establishment as Trump seeks to re-take the White House from President Joe Biden in November's election.

In addition to the New York case, Trump has been indicted in Washington and Georgia on charges of conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 election won by Biden.

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He also faces charges of illegally storing huge quantities of top-secret documents taken from the White House after his presidency to his home in Florida.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)