A courtroom sketch of Donald Trump smiling.
A courtroom sketch of former President Donald Trump smiling to the jury pool as he was introduced to them at the beginning of his New York criminal trial on Monday.
  • Seven men and five women have been selected as jurors for Donald Trump's criminal trial.
  • Most members of the jury have white-collar careers.
  • Jurors include three men who work in finance and two male lawyers.

Twelve of Donald Trump's peers — seven men and five women — have been chosen to decide the first-ever criminal trial of a former US president.

The jurors hail from throughout Manhattan. A majority have white-collar careers.

Three jurors, all of them men, have careers in finance. Two jurors, both men, are practicing attorneys. Another two, both women, are health workers.

On Thursday afternoon, New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan selected the 12th juror in Trump's Manhattan criminal case.

Two men chosen in the afternoon filled seats that had been vacated earlier in the day. One seat was vacated by a woman who feared publicity, another for more mysterious reasons.

One out of six alternate jurors, a woman, was also chosen.

"We have our jury," Merchan announced to the courtroom after the 12th juror was chosen.

Merchan must still choose five more alternate seats, a process that will probably be completed as soon as Friday. The judge said opening statements were expected to begin Monday.

Trump's lawyers questioned the jurors about their feelings about the former president. One woman — who said her apartment was robbed before and has a "close friend" who was convicted of financial fraud — said she didn't like Trump's "persona."

She said Trump was "very selfish and self-serving" and "not my cup of tea."

But she told the lawyers she believed she could set those feelings aside for the trial.

"I don't like some of my coworkers, but I don't try to sabotage their work," she explained, drawing an outburst of laughter from the jury box.

Others left a markedly less-colorful impression. One of the attorneys chosen to serve is a middle-aged white man who works at a big law firm, but he said he knew "virtually nothing about criminal law" because he handled only civil cases.

Then there's a guy with outdoorsy hobbies who said that he didn't really follow the news but that he did listen to podcasts on behavioral psychology.

"It's my little hobby," he said.

Several jurors are difficult to pigeonhole.

There's a man who said he knew "little" about Trump's criminal cases and got his news from The New York Times, the Daily Mail, Fox News, and MSNBC.

Another is a young Black woman who said that her friends carried strong opinions about Trump but that she was "not a political person" and appreciated that he "speaks his mind."

"I would rather that in a person than someone who's in office and you don't know what they're doing behind the scenes," the woman said.

A courtroom sketch of people in a courtroom , with Trump in the center sitting beside his lawyer Todd Blanche.
A courtroom sketch of Trump beside his lawyer Todd Blanche on the second day of jury selection.

Trump was more attentive to the jury-selection process on Thursday compared with earlier in the week, when he frequently sat back, closed his eyes, and appeared to nod off.

The courtroom was markedly colder than on the previous days, something Trump complained about throughout the day.

He sometimes wrapped his arms around himself as if trying to stay warm. He also looked at prospective jurors in the juror box, turning his body and draping his arm over the back of his chair.

Thursday's jury-selection process got off to an ominous start when prosecutors said Trump sought to intimidate prospective jurors through a post on Truth Social, asking that he be held in contempt. One of the jurors who'd been chosen earlier in the week dropped out, saying she was concerned about her ability to be impartial given the public attention to the case.

Prosecutors in the Manhattan district attorney's office allege Trump illegally falsified business records by covering up hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels, an adult-film actor and director. The aim of those payments, prosecutors say, was to keep her quiet about an affair she says she had with him ahead of the 2016 election so he wouldn't lose female voters.

While jurors weren't expected to be totally ignorant of Trump and the hush-money controversy, they were asked a series of questions meant to suss out whether they could put aside any preconceived views and deliberate the case based on the evidence presented in the trial.

After all the chosen and prospective jurors were dismissed for the day, the defense lawyer Todd Blanche acknowledged that testimony could begin as early as Monday.

Blanche asked whether prosecutors could disclose who they planned to call as their witnesses first so the defense could prepare.

"That's been a courtesy we have been extending," the prosecutor Joshua Steinglass responded.

"But Mr. Trump has been tweeting about the witnesses," the prosecutor complained, adding that he wouldn't give out the first witnesses' names this far in advance.

Blanche asked whether that would change if the defense promised that Trump wouldn't "Truth" anything about the witnesses on social media.

"What if he makes that promise?" Blanche asked.

"That he would not be tweeting about any of the witnesses?" the judge responded. "I don't think that is a promise he can be making."

As Trump left the courtroom Thursday, he complained about the indictment and the cold courtroom.

"I've been sitting here for days now, from morning 'til night, in that freezing room," Trump said in the hallway. "Freezing. Everybody was freezing in there."

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