Donald Trump fails to postpone sentencing scheduled for Friday

Donald Trump fails to postpone sentencing scheduled for Friday
Donald Trump fails to postpone sentencing scheduled for Friday

President-elect Donald Trump, convicted criminally in New York in the spring for hidden payments to a porn star, failed on Monday to postpone the pronouncement of his sentence scheduled for Friday, ten days before his inauguration.

In yet another legal maneuver, the lawyers of the man who will be the 47th President of the United States on January 20 have demanded since Sunday evening, in an appeal before the Manhattan public prosecutor's office, an “automatic suspension” of the criminal proceedings.

This provides, under a January 3 order from a judge of a court in the State of New York for the jurisdiction of Manhattan, that the sentence against Donald Trump be pronounced at a hearing on January 10. January at 9:30 a.m. (1:30 p.m. GMT).

No prison planned for Trump

It is therefore on this date, already postponed many times, that Donald Trump will in principle know his sentence, even if the Republican billionaire re-elected on November 5 will not a priori go to prison.

“The guilty party's appeal to suspend the proceedings is rejected, including the sentencing scheduled for January 10,” wrote Judge Juan Merchan, who presided over the Stormy Daniels trial last spring, in an order made public Monday evening.

In their argument, Donald Trump's lawyers had ordered the magistrate to “cancel the sentencing hearing scheduled for January 10, 2025 and (to) suspend all deadlines in this case until well-founded appeals on President Trump's immunity have been completely and definitively exhausted, and that the case is ultimately abandoned.

These two New York counsel, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, are also tipped by the president-elect to be the next numbers two and three at the Department of Justice in the Trump administration 2.

Sentencing scheduled for January 10

To facilitate Judge Merchan's decision, the head of the Manhattan public prosecutor's office, prosecutor Alvin Bragg, who investigated the entire case, requested Monday that “the court reject the guilty party's request and pronounce the sentence as scheduled on January 10.”

After six weeks of trial in the middle of the electoral campaign, in an electric climate, Donald Trump on May 30 became the first former American president (2017-2021) to be criminally convicted.

The popular jury of the Manhattan court found him guilty of 34 counts for hidden payments of $130,000 to a porn star, Stormy Daniels, real name Stephanie Clifford, made just before the November 2016 presidential election. .

Donald Trump, “revenge”: how the president-elect is already trying to bring his critics into line

“Masquerade”

It is not the checks to conceal an alleged sexual relationship that the billionaire is accused of, but “aggravated accounting falsification to conceal a plot aimed at perverting the 2016 election”, according to the courts.

Donald Trump and his entourage have repeatedly denounced a “masquerade”, a “witch hunt” orchestrated according to them by the New York justice system and the Democratic administration of President Joe Biden.

Donald Trump had already failed in December to overturn this historic guilty verdict, arguing his presidential immunity, a constitutional principle that the Supreme Court of the United States had greatly expanded on July 1, to the advantage of the former and future president .

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