sentencing

Trump lawyers made this 'colossal mistake' after judge denied bid to delay sentencing: expert

Despite his best efforts, President-elect Donald Trump is still scheduled to be sentenced for his 34 felony convictions this Friday in New York.

Trump was hoping to push his sentencing date past his January 20 inauguration date, after which any sentencing is unlikely given that it would interfere with his duties as commander-in-chief. But on Tuesday, Justice Ellen Gesmer of the First Judicial Department's Appellate Division in New York denied the president-elect's motion to delay his January 10 sentencing date.

In a thread posted to Bluesky, former assistant U.S. attorney Mitchell Epner explained that Trump will now have to appeal Gesmer's decision to the New York Court of Appeals, which is the Empire State's highest court. Judges on that court could then either deny Trump's appeal, or not rule at all, which would mean his sentence would still be handed down on January 10.

READ MORE: Merchan denies Trump's motion to dismiss and orders him to appear for sentencing next week

However, if the New York Court of Appeals upholds Gesmer's ruling, Trump would then have to hang his hopes on the Supreme Court of the United States. While the Court has a 6-3 conservative supermajority, New York is part of the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, which is under Justice Sonia Sotomayor's purview. It's not likely that Sotomayor — who President Obama appointed to the Supreme Court in 2009 — would side with Trump.

"NY law is quite clear that a case can go forward without the defendant in attendance, if they refuse to show up," Epner wrote. "Once the sentence of "unconditional release" is imposed, it will be up to Trump whether to pursue an appeal of the underlying 34 felony convictions during his Presidency."

Former Watergate prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks called Justice Gesmer's decision "good news" in the wake of U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon's "crazy" ruling on Tuesday. Cannon — a Trump appointee — blocking the release of Department of Justice special counsel Jack Smith's final report summarizing his two investigations into the president-elect. Northeastern Illinois University political science professor William Adler wryly observed that Cannon would block Trump's sentencing, adding: "yes I know it's a NY state case and she's in Florida, you think she cares?"

Historian Varad Mehta observed that while Trump could have filed motions in the federal judiciary to delay his sentencing, he may not have enough time to do so given that his sentencing date is just three days away.

READ MORE: 'Above the law': Experts say Merchan's sentencing delay proves Trump making 'mockery' of justice system

"Onto the NY Court of Appeals," Mehta tweeted. "And while they're at it, Trump's lawyers should finally be filing in federal court to stop this. It's a colossal mistake for them not to have done so already, but better late than never."

After Trump was found guilty on all 34 felony counts of falsifying business documents last May, Merchan was initially planning to hand down his sentence in July. However, he pushed back his sentencing date to September in order to review how the Supreme Court's decision to grant Trump absolute broad criminal immunity for all official acts applied to his convictions. Sentencing was pushed back once again to after the November election, before being moved to January 10, 2025.

Merchan has signaled that he will hand down a sentence of unconditional release, meaning Trump won't actually face any jail time or fines despite being convicted of 34 felonies and facing a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. However, assuming the January 10 sentencing date moves forward, Trump will officially be the first convicted felon to serve as president of the United States.

Click here to read Justice Gesmer's 19-word ruling.

READ MORE: Donald Trump guilty on all counts in New York criminal trial


Merchan denies Trump’s motion to dismiss and orders him to appear for sentencing next week

Even though he's due to be sworn in as the 47th president of the United States in a little more than two weeks, President-elect Donald Trump is still being ordered to appear in court next Friday to be officially sentenced for his 34 felony convictions.

On Friday, New York Daily News reporter Molly Crane-Newman reported that Trump's motion to dismiss his felony convictions handed down by a Manhattan jury last spring was unsuccessful, according to New York Supreme Court acting Justice Juan Merchan's latest ruling. Crane-Newman posted Merchan's order to Bluesky on Friday afternoon, in which the judge who oversaw Trump's 2024 trial ruled that the president-elect failed to prove that his convictions should be thrown out in accordance with the Supreme Court's immunity decision.

"HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant's motion to dismiss the indictment and vacate the jury verdict ... is denied, and it is further ORDERED that Defendant appear for sentencing following conviction on January 10, 2025 at 9:30 in the morning," Merchan wrote. He added that Trump could appear in-person or virtually, and that he is ordered to respond with his preference by Sunday, January 5.

READ MORE: 'Above the law': Experts say Merchan's sentencing delay proves Trump making 'mockery' of justice system

Even though Trump is to be sentenced for 34 felony crimes, Merchan's ruling suggested that he would simply impose an "unconditional discharge," meaning that the president-elect won't face any actual penalties. He referred to it as "the most viable solution" and acknowledged Trump's concerns that being sentenced to prison or home confinement would impede his duties as president.

"While this Court as a matter of law must not make any determination on sentencing prior to giving the parties and Defendant an opportunity to be heard, it seems proper at this juncture to make known the Court’s inclination to not impose any sentence of incarceration, a sentence authorized by the conviction but one the People concede they no longer view as a practicable recommendation," Merchan wrote.

Trump was initially found guilty on all 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in late May of last year, and faced a potential prison sentence of up to 20 years. His initial sentencing date was slated for July, though Merchan eventually moved it back to September, and then to late November, before once again delaying it after Trump was re-elected. His repeated delays frustrated many legal observers and experts who lamented that Trump was "above the law."

""The American people have no trust in their institutions because those institutions do not work," journalist Nick Field posted to X in September.

READ MORE: Donald Trump guilty on all counts in New York criminal trial

Ruling: Hush money judge decides if Trump can bump sentencing until after election

The judge in Donald Trump's criminal hush money trial ruled Friday to delay the Republican presidential nominee and convicted felon's sentencing hearing until after Election Day on Nov. 5, reports show.

New York City Justice Juan Merchan decided Trump should not face sentencing on 34 counts of falsifying business records tied to a hush money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 presidential election, MSNBC reporter Kyle Griffin shared on X, citing Reuters.

The new sentencing date is now Nov. 26.

ALSO READ: (Opinion) Why Trump’s Arlington controversy is actually a crime

A jury found Trump guilty in May of using fraudulent means to bury salacious stories he feared might torpedo his lone successful bid for the White House.

Trump requested the delay in August on the grounds that criminal sentencing could improperly influence the upcoming presidential election.

The former president also tried to bump the case to federal court in an argument citing the Supreme Court's controversial ruling on presidential immunity in his ongoing election interference case.

A federal judge rejected that demand Tuesday, ruling the hush money payments “were private, unofficial acts, outside the bounds of executive authority.”

Trump is expected to face in November a tight race against Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, a former prosecutor.

Federal judge deals major blow to Trump’s last-ditch effort to delay his sentencing

Former President Donald Trump's legal team is running out of options to delay his September 18 felony sentencing date after a Friday ruling by a federal judge.

MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin tweeted Friday evening that U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein (an appointee of former President Bill Clinton) officially denied the Trump team's request to remove his felony hush money cover-up case from Manhattan to federal jurisdiction. While Trump has the option to refile the petition, Rubin noted that he has to do so either with the blessing of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg or from Judge Juan Merchan. So far, he has neither.

In an interview with MSNBC host Chris Hayes, Rubin explained that the former president's 11th-hour effort to push back his sentencing date isn't done yet. He still has pending motions before Judge Merchan that may result in either postponing the imposition of a sentence until after the election, or even throwing out the case altogether due to the immunity the Supreme Court granted to the ex-president in its controversial Trump v. United States decision in July.

READ MORE: 'Uncharted waters': Experts say Trump's looming sentence could include prison time

"This is a classic example of if you first don't succeed, try, try again," Rubin said. "They have two levers to play now. If Judge Merchan denies their motion to set aside the verdict, they have already indicated that they are going to try to appeal that prior to any sentencing as well. They signed a letter to him indicating that they believe they have state and federal appellate vehicles for that ... if and when they get Judge Hellerstein's permission to file a third notice, if that happens and they don't like his ultimate answer, they could try to exercise their appellate rights with respect to that, too."

"The question is whether or not they have left themselves enough time to essentially beat Merchan to the punch if he wants to go forward with the sentencing on September 18th," she added.

This prompted Hayes to ask Rubin if he was "crazy," as he was under the impression that "you usually can't appeal post-conviction pre-sentencing." She assured the host that he was "not crazy at all," and acknowledged that "we are making up a lot of new rules as we go along" as the 45th president of the United States-turned-convicted felon and his team of expensive attorneys have created multiple unprecedented legal questions.

"They seem to believe that the unprecedented nature of the case plus the immunity decision necessitates an appellate option prior to that post-conviction review that is typically unusual in the state courts," Rubin said. "That's at least the argument they have made, that they don't have to go through sentencing first, that if they lose the motion to set aside the verdict that they are entitled to take this up through state or federal courts. But you're not wrong to say that's not usually the way that this happens."

READ MORE: Defendants in Merchan's courtroom say toughness of sentences depends on level of 'respect'

As of right now, Trump is due in Manhattan on September 18th to be sentenced for his 34 class E felony convictions. Judge Merchan has the ability to sentence Trump as many as 20 years behind bars, though that's an unlikely scenario given that Trump is a 78 year-old first-time offender who was convicted for non-violent crimes. The September 18th date was already more than 60 days after the date he was initially scheduled to be sentenced, as Merchan needed extra time to determine whether the Supreme Court's ruling granting absolute broad immunity to presidents for official acts affected Trump's guilty verdict.

However, former defendants who have been sentenced in Merchan's courtroom have said that the toughness of the sentences he imposes depends entirely on how respectful a defendant is toward both Merchan and the legal process as a whole. And after the former president repeatedly attacked the judge overseeing his case, his daughter and numerous witnesses, Merchan imposed a gag order, only for him to violate that on 10 separate occasions.

Watch Rubin's full segment below, or by clicking this link.



READ MORE: 'Not small things': Former prosecutor predicts this is what will get Trump sentenced to prison

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