US president-elect Donald Trump asked a New York court on Tuesday to throw out his conviction on charges stemming from hush money paid to a porn star, and to dismiss the case before his scheduled Friday sentencing. The request to a state appeal court marked a last-ditch effort by Trump to block a lower-court ruling on Monday to proceed with the sentencing on Friday, 10 days before Trump’s January 20 inauguration.
In Monday’s ruling, Justice Juan Merchan rejected a request from Trump’s lawyers to delay the sentencing while they appealed two of his previous rulings upholding the Manhattan jury’s May guilty verdict on 34 felony counts of falsifying records.
The judge wrote that Trump’s request for a delay was mostly “a repetition of the arguments he has raised numerous times in the past.” In scheduling Trump’s sentencing for Friday, Merchan said he was not inclined to send Trump to jail. He said a sentence of unconditional discharge, effectively putting a judgment of guilt on his record without a fine or probation, would be the most practical approach given Trump’s looming inauguration. Citing both presidential immunity and the demands of Trump’s impending inauguration, his lawyers on Monday morning said Merchan’s intention not to penalise Trump was “of no moment.”
“Presidential immunity violations cannot be ignored in favour of a rushed pre-inauguration sentencing,” the lawyers wrote in a court filing. The case stemmed from a US$130,000 payment Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels to keep her quiet before the 2016 election about a sexual encounter she said she had with Trump, who denies it. Trump, a Republican, defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton in that election.
Trump has long argued that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, a Democrat, brought the case to harm his 2024 re-election campaign. Bragg has said that his office routinely brings felony falsification of business records charges.
The hush money case made Trump the first US president – sitting or former – to be charged with and convicted of a crime.
Since the verdict, his lawyers have made two unsuccessful attempts to have the case tossed, which they now say they plan to appeal. Merchan previously rejected their argument that the US Supreme Court’s July finding in a separate criminal case against Trump that presidents cannot be prosecuted for official acts meant the hush money case must be dismissed.