Trump's Conviction Gives His Talkative Hometown Something New to Dispute
Briefly

The morning after, the news reverberated across New York like unceasing aftershocks guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty, 34 times in all jolting subways and sidewalks, coffee shops and bodegas, setting off paroxysms of ecstasy and fury. There was little in between.
Andrew Goff, 56, a money manager who lives in Manhattan next to Trump International Hotel & Tower at Columbus Circle, said he hoped Thursday's verdict would help America reach conclusions about Mr. Trump that New York had realized decades ago. He has been a criminal all his adult life.
New Yorkers were forced to realize this because it was so obvious and it's in our backyard.
Nearby, in the shadow of the Plaza Hotel, Norman Allred, 65, lamented how he, a disabled veteran, learned and adhered to codes of honorable behavior, but that Mr. Trump did not.
Read at www.nytimes.com
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