The booking photo of former US President Donald Trump after he surrendered and was booked at the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta (Fulton County Sheriff's Office/PA Wire)

Donald Trump sentenced over hush-money case

by · Manchester Evening News

US President-elect Donald Trump was formally sentenced today in his porn star hush money case - but the judge declined to impose any punishment.

The outcome cements Trump’s conviction while freeing him to return to the White House without the baggage of a jail sentence or a fine.

Trump’s sentence of an unconditional discharge puts an end to a norm-smashing case that saw the former and future president charged with 34 felonies, put on trial for almost two months, and convicted on every count.

Trump was convicted for falsifying business records relating to a payment made to adult-film star Stormy Daniels, who claims she had sex with the real estate mogul shortly after the birth of his son Barron.

Yet, the case and the sordid details aired in court of a plot to bury affair allegations did not hurt him with voters, who elected him to a second term.

Manhattan Judge Juan M Merchan could have sentenced the 78-year-old Republican to up to four years in prison but chose a sentence that avoided problematic constitutional issues by effectively ending the case. The judge did assure that Trump will become the first person convicted of a felony to assume the presidency.

Former President Donald Trump appears at Manhattan criminal court before his trial in New York in May 2024. (Michael M. Santiago/AP)

Judge Merchan said that as when facing any other defendant, he must consider any aggravating factors before imposing a sentence, but the legal protection that Trump will have as president “is a factor that overrides all others”.

“Despite the extraordinary breadth of those legal protections, one power they do not provide is that they do not erase a jury verdict,” Judge Merchan said.

Trump, briefly addressing the court as he appeared virtually from his Florida home, said his criminal trial and conviction has “been a very terrible experience” and insisted he committed no crime.

The Republican former president, appearing on a video feed 10 days before he is inaugurated, again pilloried the case, the only one of his four criminal indictments that has gone to trial and possibly the only one that ever will.

“It’s been a political witch hunt. It was done to damage my reputation so that I would lose the election, and obviously, that didn’t work,” Trump said.

He called the case “a weaponisation of government” and “an embarrassment to New York.”

With Trump 10 days from inauguration, Judge Merchan had indicated he planned a no-penalty sentence called an unconditional discharge, and prosecutors did not oppose it.

Prosecutors said Friday that they supported a no-penalty sentence, but they criticised Trump’s attacks on the legal system throughout and after the case.

“The once and future president of the United States has engaged in a co-ordinated campaign to undermine its legitimacy,” prosecutor Joshua Steinglass said.

Rather than show remorse, Trump has “bred disdain” for the jury verdict and the criminal justice system, Steinglass said, and his calls for retaliation against those involved in the case, including calling for the judge to be disbarred, “has caused enduring damage to public perception of the criminal justice system and has put officers of the court in harm’s way”.

As he appeared from his Florida home, the former president was seated with his lawyer Todd Blanche, whom he has tapped to serve as the second-highest ranking Justice Department official in his incoming administration.

“Legally, this case should not have been brought,” Blanche earlier said.

Trump, a Republican, will become the first person convicted of a felony to assume the presidency.

Before the hearing, a handful of Trump supporters and critics gathered outside. One group held a banner that read, “Trump is guilty”. The other held one that said, “Stop partisan conspiracy” and “Stop political witchhunt”.

The hush money case accused Trump of fudging his business’s records to veil a 130,000-dollar (£105,000) payoff to adult film actor Stormy Daniels.

She was paid, late in Trump’s 2016 campaign, not to tell the public about a sexual encounter she maintains the two had a decade earlier. He says nothing sexual happened between them, and he contends that his political adversaries spun up a bogus prosecution to try to damage him.

“I never falsified business records. It is a fake, made up charge,” the Republican president-elect wrote on his Truth Social platform last week.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, whose office brought the charges, is a Democrat.

Mr Bragg’s office said in a court filing on Monday that Trump committed “serious offences that caused extensive harm to the sanctity of the electoral process and to the integrity of New York’s financial marketplace.”

While the specific charges were about checks and ledgers, the underlying accusations were seamy and deeply entangled with Trump’s political rise.

Prosecutors said Ms Daniels was paid off — through Trump’s personal lawyer at the time, Michael Cohen — as part of a wider effort to keep voters from hearing about Trump’s alleged extramarital escapades.

Trump denies the alleged encounters occurred. His lawyers said he wanted to quash the stories to protect his family, not his campaign. And while prosecutors said Mr Cohen’s reimbursements for paying Ms Daniels were deceptively logged as legal expenses, Mr Trump said that is simply what they were.

“There was nothing else it could have been called,” he wrote on Truth Social last week, adding: “I was hiding nothing.”

Trump’s lawyers tried unsuccessfully to forestall a trial. Since his May conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records, they have pulled virtually every legal lever within reach to try to get the conviction overturned, the case dismissed or at least the sentencing postponed.

The Trump lawyers have leaned heavily into assertions of presidential immunity from prosecution, and they got a boost in July from a Supreme Court decision that affords former commanders-in-chief considerable immunity.

Trump was a private citizen and presidential candidate when Ms Daniels was paid in 2016. He was president when the reimbursements to Mr Cohen were made and recorded the following year.

On one hand, Trump’s defence argued that immunity should have kept jurors from hearing some evidence, such as testimony about some of his conversations with then-White House communications director Hope Hicks.

And after Trump won this past November’s election, his lawyers argued that the case had to be scrapped to avoid impinging on his upcoming presidency and his transition to the Oval Office.

Judge Merchan, a Democrat, repeatedly postponed the sentencing, initially set for July. But last week, he set Friday’s date, citing a need for “finality”.

He wrote that he strove to balance Trump’s need to govern, the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, the respect due a jury verdict and the public’s expectation that “no one is above the law”.

Trump’s lawyers then launched a flurry of last-minute efforts to block the sentencing. Their last hope vanished on Thursday night with a 5-4 Supreme Court ruling that declined to delay the sentencing.

Meanwhile, the other criminal cases that once loomed over Trump have ended or stalled ahead of trial.

After Trump’s election, special counsel Jack Smith closed the federal prosecutions over his handling of classified documents and his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

A state-level Georgia election interference case is locked in uncertainty after prosecutor Fani Willis was removed from it.