Trump sentenced to penalty-free 'unconditional discharge' in hush money case
Adam Reiss
Updated Fri, January 10, 2025
https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-sentenced-today-felony-charges-120000142.html?
The New York judge who presided over Donald Trump’s
hush money case on Friday sentenced the president-elect to an “unconditional
discharge,” meaning he is now a convicted felon in the eyes of New York state
law but will face no further penalties.
"This has been a very terrible experience,"
a dour Trump said, speaking remotely from his Florida home when allowed to
address the judge.
“It was done to damage my reputation so I would lose
the election,” he said. "I am totally innocent. I did nothing wrong,"
he maintained.
The sentencing came just 10 days before Trump is set
to be sworn in as the country’s 47th president.
Trump’s attorneys had repeatedly sought to stay the
proceeding, which state Judge Juan
Merchan scheduled
last week. Their appeals to Merchan, two state
appeals courts and
even the country’s highest court over the past week were unsuccessful. Trump’s
last hope, the U.S. Supreme Court, declined
to block the proceeding in
a 5-4 ruling late Thursday. Merchan told the court he still intends to appeal
the verdict.
Prosecutor Joshua Steinglass said in court that Trump
was convicted of 34 felony counts punishable by one to four years in prison,
but recommended the judge hand down as “a sentence of unconditional release”
given the unique circumstances of the case.
“We must be respectful of the office of the
presidency, and mindful of the fact that this defendant will be inaugurated as
president in ten days,” Steinglass said, while also complaining that Trump has
acted like he’s “above the law” throughout the case, including with his
frequent verbal attacks on the judge, prosecutors and even their family
members.
"This defendant has caused enduring damage to the
public perception of the criminal justice system," he said.
Trump attorney Todd Blanche countered that it was the
Manhattan district attorney's office that overstepped in the case. He said
Steinglass' position assumes “this case is legally appropriate, and the charges
that were brought by the people were consistent with the laws of New York.
Again we very much disagree with that.”
“This is a case that without a doubt was brought by a
district attorney who promised he would go after President Trump if elected,
and he had to go through with that promise,” Blanche said.
"It’s a very sad day. It’s a sad day for
President Trump and his family and his friends, but it’s also, in counsel’s
view, a sad day for this country,” Blanche said, adding that Trump planned to
fully appeal the case after the sentence was entered.
The sentencing means Trump will make some ignominious
history before he becomes only the second president to be sworn in for two
nonconsecutive terms: He'll be the only president to have been sentenced on
criminal charges.
Trump, in remarks to the media from his Mar-a-Lago
club in Florida on Thursday after the Supreme Court ruling, alluded to the
possibility of further appeals, such as an attempt to appeal the verdict
itself.
“So I’ll do my little thing tomorrow. They can have
fun with their political opponent,” he said.
Merchan in a decision
last week ordering the
sentencing to proceed that he would most likely give Trump an unconditional
discharge, a sentence that allows the conviction to stand with no further
penalties.
He also, however, blasted Trump for both the conduct
that led to his conviction in May and his behavior during and after the trial.
Responding last week in his ruling to Trump's argument
that the charges weren’t serious and that they should be dismissed, Merchan
wrote, "12 jurors unanimously found Defendant guilty of 34
counts of
falsifying business records with the intent to defraud, which included an
intent to commit or conceal a conspiracy to promote a presidential election by
unlawful means. It was the premeditated and continuous deception by the leader
of the free world that is the gravamen of this offense."
"To vacate this verdict on the grounds that the
charges are insufficiently serious given the position Defendant once held, and
is about to assume again, would constitute a disproportionate result and cause
immeasurable damage to the citizenry's confidence in the Rule of Law," he
wrote.
He also took Trump to task for his attacks on the judicial
system.
"Defendant's disdain for the Third Branch of
government, whether state or federal, in New York or elsewhere, is a matter of
public record. Indeed, Defendant has gone to great lengths to broadcast on
social media and other forums his lack of respect for judges, juries, grand
juries and the justice system as a whole," Merchan wrote, saying he'd repeatedly found Trump in contempt for
violating his partial gag order in the case "despite repeated
admonitions."
Trump, he noted, has continued to call the order
"unlawful" and "unconstitutional," even though "it has
been challenged and upheld by the Appellate Division First Department and the
New York Court of Appeals, no less than eight times."
"Indeed, as Defendant must surely know, the same
Order was left undisturbed by the United States Supreme Court on December 9,
2024. Yet Defendant continues to undermine its legitimacy, in posts to his
millions of followers," Merchan wrote.
Trump attorney Todd Blanche said at an appeals court hearing seeking to
block the sentencing this week that he was skeptical Merchan would give Trump
an unconditional discharge.
“I don’t know how anyone can give any weight to that,”
Blanche said.
In his ruling last Friday, Merchan noted that a
sentence of incarceration is "authorized by the conviction" but said
it is also an alternative that even prosecutors "no longer view as a
practicable recommendation" given Trump's imminent swearing-in.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg told reporters
Thursday, "We believe that the sanctity of the jury verdict must be given
primacy, must be upheld as part of the rule of law, but we’re also mindful of
and respect the institution of the presidency."
Trump's conviction arose from charges that he
falsified business records related to hush money his former attorney Michael Cohen gave porn star
Stormy Daniels in the closing days of the 2016 presidential campaign.
Daniels testified that she had a sexual encounter with
Trump in 2006, which he has denied.
The case was one of four
criminal cases Trump
was facing at the beginning of 2024 and the only one that went to trial.
A state case charging Trump interfered in the 2020
election in Georgia is paused as Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is
challenging an appeals court order that removed her and
her office from
the case last month.
The Justice Department dropped two
federal cases brought
by special counsel Jack Smith after Trump won the election, citing its Office
of Legal Counsel's holding that it can’t prosecute a sitting president.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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