The New York Court of Appeals has denied President-elect Donald Trump's request to halt his sentencing Friday in his criminal hush money case.
President-elect Donald Trump was sentenced Friday in his New York criminal hush money case. But he has already pledged to appeal.
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.
A New York top court denied Trump’s bid to delay sentencing in hush money case, while his appeal at the U.S. Supreme Court remains pending.
An appellate judge denied Trump’s bid to delay sentencing, but he may appeal further as he seeks to avoid becoming the first president with a felony record.
Trump says this was a case Alvin Bragg did not want to bring, as the DA stared straight ahead expressionless, watching the feed. "It's an injustice of justice," Trump says about t
Now, speaking today (January 10), Merchan described Trump's case as a 'truly extraordinary', CNN reported, and proceeded to give the sentence the President-elect to an unconditional discharge — as expected. Under New York state law, this is a sentence imposed 'without imprisonment, fine or probation supervision', says MSNBC.
President-elect Donald Trump will enter the White House this month as a felon, but will serve no jail time under a sentence handed down this morning in New York for his criminal conviction in a hush-money trial that angered him and his supporters but didn’t prevent him from reclaiming the presidency.
President-elect Donald Trump received a historic sentence on Friday, Jan. 10, from New York Judge Juan Merchan, dodging jail time and instead getting 'unconditional discharge' for his 34 felony convic
Donald Trump will become president as a convicted felon for 34 counts of falsifying business records to hide hush money. Here's what that means.