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Donald Trump: prosecutor in charge of the case in Georgia proposes that trial begin on October 23

The prosecutor in charge of the case for which the former US president donald trump (2017-2021) has been charged in Georgia, Fani Willis, proposed this Thursday to the court that the trial start on October 23 and not on March 4 of next year, as he had originally proposed.

Willis raised the new date with the Fulton County Superior Court (Georgia) in a judicial notice filed this Thursday.

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The prosecutor had already expressed her interest on August 16 that the trial in Georgia not conflict with the hearings and trials scheduled in the other three courts where Trump has other open criminal cases.

The beginning of his process for irregular payments to the porn actress stormy daniels to buy his silence during the 2016 election campaign about the “affair” they had in the past is set for March 25, 2024 in New York.

The trial in Florida for the classified papers that he took from the White House when he left power is scheduled for May 20, 2024, when the presidential elections will be just over 6 months away, while the date of the process in Washington for the assault on the Capitol will be determined this coming Monday.

KNOW MORE | Trump confirms that this Thursday he will surrender to the Georgia authorities

This Thursday Trump must appear before the Fulton County jail, in Georgia, to be booked for the 13 charges received in that state for trying to reverse the results of the 2020 elections there, where Democrat Joe Biden won by just two tenths (49.5%).

The former Republican president, accused along with 18 other people, will appear to have his fingerprints taken and his official photograph taken under arrest, but he will be released on payment of the $200,000 bail that his lawyers agreed with the Prosecutor’s Office.

Source: Elcomercio

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