Trump may face ‘civil death’ if he is convicted in New York trial: Analysis

Former President Donald Trump appears at Manhattan criminal court before his trial in New York, Thursday, May 16, 2024. (Steven Hirsch/Pool Photo via AP)

Former President Donald Trump appears at Manhattan criminal court before his trial in New York, Thursday, May 16, 2024. (Steven Hirsch/Pool Photo via AP)

What consequences should the American legal system mete out to ex-President Donald Trump for allegedly deceiving the American voters in the 2016 election which sent him to the White House by hiding past alleged affairs with two women through falsified business records? If Trump is convicted in the Manhattan criminal case, he will lose his right to vote in Florida.

Trump is the first president to be charged with any crime. Nonetheless the question of how to deal with an antidemocratic candidate in a democracy is not a new problem. As I explore in my forthcoming book, “Corporatocracy,” the question of how to deal with Trump raises the broader and older issue of what types of civil death should he be subject to.

Scholars debate the definition of “civil death.” But generally, “civil death” today typically refers to the collateral consequences of being found guilty of a crime. As the New York Court of Appeals wrote in a case from 1888: “The incident of civil death attended every attainder of treason or felony, whereby, in the language of Lord Coke, the [ ] person ‘is disabled to bring any action, for he is extra legem positus [placed outside the law], and is accounted in law civiliter mortuus [as civilly dead] [.]’”

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