Hush money case: Trump to be sentenced, days before return to White House
A state judge is to say what consequences, if any, the country's former and soon-to-be leader will face for felonies that a jury found he committed
AP/PTI
-
Regardless of the outcome, Trump will become the first person convicted of a felony to assume the presidency. PHOTO: PTI
New York, 10 Jan
In a singular moment in US history,
President-elect Donald Trump faces sentencing Friday for his New York hush
money conviction after the nation's highest court refused to intervene.
Like so much else in the criminal
case and the current American political landscape, the scenario set to unfold
in an austere Manhattan courtroom was unimaginable only a few years ago. A
state judge is to say what consequences, if any, the country's former and
soon-to-be leader will face for felonies that a jury found he committed.
With Trump 10 days from
inauguration, Judge Juan M. Merchan has indicated he plans a no-penalty
sentence called an unconditional discharge and prosecutors aren't opposing it.
That would mean no jail time, no probation and no fines would be imposed, but
nothing is final until Friday's proceeding is done.
Regardless of the outcome, Trump
will become the first person convicted of a felony to assume the presidency.
Trump, who is expected to appear by
video from his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida, will have the opportunity to speak.
He has pilloried the case, the only one of his four criminal indictments that
has gone to trial and possibly the only one that ever will.
The judge has indicated that he
plans the unconditional discharge — a rarity in felony convictions — partly to
avoid complicated constitutional issues that would arise if he imposed a
penalty that overlapped with Trump's presidency.
The hush money case accused him of
fudging his business' records to veil a $130,000 payoff to porn actor Stormy
Daniels. She was paid, late in Trump's 2016 campaign, not to tell the public
about a sexual encounter she maintains the two had a decade earlier. He says
nothing sexual happened between them, and he contends that his political
adversaries spun up a bogus prosecution to try to damage him. “I never
falsified business records. It is a fake, made up charge,” the Republican
president-elect wrote on his Truth Social platform last week. Manhattan
District Attorney Alvin Bragg, whose office brought the charges, is a Democrat.
Bragg's office said in a court
filing Monday that Trump committed “serious offenses that caused extensive harm
to the sanctity of the electoral process and to the integrity of New York's
financial marketplace.”
While the specific charges were
about checks and ledgers, the underlying accusations were seamy and deeply
entangled with Trump's political rise. Prosecutors said Daniels was paid off —
through Trump's personal attorney at the time, Michael Cohen — as part of a
wider effort to keep voters from hearing about Trump's alleged extramarital
escapades.
Trump denies the alleged encounters
occurred. His lawyers said he wanted to squelch the stories to protect his
family, not his campaign. And while prosecutors said Cohen's reimbursements for
paying Daniels were deceptively logged as legal expenses, Trump says that's
simply what they were. “There was nothing else it could have been called,” he
wrote on Truth Social last week, adding, “I was hiding nothing.”
Trump's lawyers tried
unsuccessfully to forestall a trial. Since his May conviction on 34 counts of
falsifying business records, they have pulled virtually every legal lever
within reach to try to get the conviction overturned, the case dismissed or at
least the sentencing postponed.
They have made various arguments to
Merchan, New York appeals judges, and federal courts including the Supreme
Court. The Trump attorneys have leaned heavily into assertions of presidential
immunity from prosecution, and they got a boost in July from a Supreme Court
decision that affords former commanders-in-chief considerable immunity.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *