william: manhattan district attorney alvin bragg, a democrat, has charged donald trump with 34 counts of fabricating financial records to conceal "damaging information from the voting public during the 2016 presidential election." >> unfortunately, the way the media has presented it is, "it's a hush money case," but that's not really what it is. it's about falsifying business records. william: jerry goldfeder is a senior partner at cozen & o'connor, and an expert in campaign law. >> doing that, that is a crime, but it's only a misdemeanor. it's a felony when falsifying business records is done for the purpose of concealing or committing another crime. and that's what district attorney alvin bragg has charged, that trump falsified all these business records, because what he really wanted to do was to hide these facts to win the election. william: and so even though he's not being charged for that subsequent, that secondary crime, that's all it takes to move it from a misdemeanor to a felony? >> that's exactly right. william: while bragg's indictment is full of examples of allegedly fal