Manhattan’s most explosive courtroom showdown isn’t over. Not even close.
After a year-long crusade and 34 felony convictions, Alvin Bragg thought he’d nailed Donald Trump to the wall. But late Monday night, Trump’s legal team dropped a “powerhouse” appeal that doesn’t just challenge the verdict — it accuses Democrats of weaponizing justice itself and demands the entire case be shat… Continues…
Trump’s appeal does more than protest a guilty verdict; it attacks the very foundation of Bragg’s case. His lawyers argue that what Bragg dressed up as a historic felony prosecution was, in reality, a routine NDA dispute twisted into a political spectacle. By bootstrapping normally minor record-keeping issues into felonies based on a vague, never-agreed-upon “second crime,” they say, Bragg crossed a constitutional line and turned the criminal code into a campaign weapon.
Supporters see the filing as Trump finally punching back against a system that cheered every indictment, every perp walk, every headline. Now, with Democrats suddenly decrying “retaliation” as their own tactics face scrutiny, the appeal lands like a reckoning. If the court agrees that Bragg’s theory was a partisan overreach, the case won’t just be overturned — it will stand as a warning about how far politicized prosecutions can go before they snap.