Donald Trump can be sentenced Friday in hush money case, Supreme Court says in 5-4 ruling

  • President-elect Donald Trump can be sentenced Friday in his New York hush money case, the Supreme Court said in a 5-4 ruling.

    The high court on Thursday rejected Trump’s emergency request to delay the proceeding, setting the stage for him to be sentenced just days before he is inaugurated on January 20 for a second term.


    Four conservative justices – Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh – said they would have granted Trump’s request. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court’s three liberals to side against Trump.

    Judge Juan Merchan, the New York judge who oversaw Trump’s trial, had ordered sentencing in the case for Friday morning but has signaled that Trump will face neither penalties nor prison time.


    The sentencing hearing is scheduled for Friday at 9:30 a.m. Trump will appear virtually, according to a person familiar with the plans, joining the proceedings from Mar-a-Lago.


    In a brief, one-paragraph statement, the court said that some of Trump’s concerns could be handled “in the ordinary course on appeal.” The court also reasoned that the burden sentencing would impose on Trump’s responsibilities is “relatively insubstantial” in light of the trial court’s stated intent to impose no penalty.


    The president-elect’s request at the US Supreme Court was an extraordinary appeal because the justices rarely dip into a state criminal case before all appeals in state courts are fully exhausted. Trump’s underlying challenge to his conviction is still pending and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg argued the Supreme Court didn’t have jurisdiction to even consider the emergency request to delay the sentencing.


    Trump was convicted in May of falsifying business records over payments to his then-lawyer Michael Cohen to reimburse a $130,000 hush money payment made to adult-film star Stormy Daniels, in order to keep her from speaking out about an alleged affair before the 2016 election. (Trump has denied the affair.)


    The incoming president, who will be inaugurated in less than two weeks, is fighting his conviction, saying that it should be tossed because a conservative majority of the Supreme Court in July ruled that former presidents are entitled to sweeping immunity for official actions.

    Part of Trump’s argument was that his trial included evidence involving official actions from his time in office, which under the Supreme Court’s immunity decision, would ordinarily be barred from reaching a jury. Prosecutors countered that those concerns could be hashed out on appeal.


    Merchan rejected that argument in December, ruling that the evidence presented by the Manhattan district attorney’s office was not related to Trump’s official conduct as president.


    Trump’s attorneys told the Supreme Court that having to deal with the sentencing would distract from his transition to power and potentially jeopardize national security.


    “Defending criminal litigation at all stages – especially, as here, defending a criminal sentencing – is uniquely taxing and burdensome to a criminal defendant,” Trump’s lawyers told the high court.


    “President Trump is currently engaged in the most crucial and sensitive tasks of preparing to assume the executive power in less than two weeks, all of which are essential to the United States’ national security and vital interests,” they wrote.


    New York prosecutors scoffed at that argument in their own filing Thursday.


    “There is a compelling public interest in proceeding to sentencing,” Bragg told the Supreme Court. “Defendant has provided no record support for his claim that his duties as President-elect foreclose him from virtually attending a sentencing that will likely take no more than an hour.”


    In a final filing Thursday, Trump argued that the case involved concerns of “great national importance” and that “the constitutional structure, and the nation” would be “irreparably harmed by letting the sentencing go forward.”



  • So not only is it a fake sentence with no actual penalty, but he doesn't even have to show up in-person. What a complete mockery of the justice system. A couple of the conservative "justices," at least one of whom should be in prison themselves, only allowed sentencing because they know it's all a joke. Had he been sentenced properly, they never would have allowed their boss to face punishment for his crimes.

  • So not only is it a fake sentence with no actual penalty, but he doesn't even have to show up in-person. What a complete mockery of the justice system.

    Trump already has a penalty. For example, he cannot work at McDonald's like an ordinary American can.

    Donald Trump Couldn't Get a Job at McDonald's. He's a Felon | Opinion
    While we're caught up in the image of Trump in a golden arches apron, slinging Big Macs, there's a much bigger reality at play. The truth is, Donald Trump…
    www.newsweek.com

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  • I'm sure he's devastated.

    He is. His unconditional discharge means that his conviction will stay on his criminal records.


    Trump is like any other convicted felon.


    Convicted felons cannot serve on a jury like a regular US citizen would (but maybe Trump did jury duty in the 20th century)


    Many countries have laws that prohibit convicted felons from traveling, but he wouldn't be the first president to require permission to enter another country because George W. Bush had to get a waiver to visit Canada because of drunk driving.


    Trump Will Be Sentenced In Hush Money Case Today—Here’s What To Expect
    The Supreme Court rejected Trump's last-ditch effort to pause it Thursday evening.
    www.forbes.com

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  • why did people even vote for someone who was gonna get convicted :meme-side-eye:

    I think Kamala Harris lost because of her nomination (she didn't participate in the primaries is what I'm saying here), and also because she was unable to get the votes of the Latinos and young voters. If you don't believe me, look at counties like San Bernandino County, California and Miami-Dade County, Florida. Those counties are usually "Solid Democrat", but they flipped from Democrat (from Harris' favor) to Republican (to Trump's favor)


    We never had a president who won the primaries and later suspended their presidential campaign until Biden did so in 2024.

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  • Legal experts say the Case Appeal will prove faulty initial Trail. I'll wait till after the Appeal Trail.

    I know there is some glaring faults, like an actual Crime not specified, presumption level Jury Instructions, Misdemeanor crime parlayed to Felony level, reaching beyond statue of limitations and State Court processing a Federal Case.

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