Trump loses bid to toss hush money conviction on immunity grounds
Donald Trump on
Monday lost a bid to overturn his criminal conviction stemming from hush money
paid to a porn star in light of the U.S. Supreme Court's July ruling
recognizing immunity from prosecution for a president's official acts.
Justice Juan Merchan's denial of Trump's motion to dismiss the New York
state case forecloses one avenue for the Republican president-elect to enter
the White House on Jan. 20 for his second four-year term without the stain of a
criminal conviction.
Trump's lawyers are separately trying to have the verdict overturned on
separate grounds in the wake of his defeat of Democratic Vice President Kamala
Harris in the Nov. 5 election. Merchan has not yet ruled on that motion.
In Monday's 41-page decision, Merchan sided with Manhattan District
Attorney Alvin Bragg's office, which brought the case. The prosecutors argued
their case dealt with Trump's personal conduct, not his official acts as
president.
The judge said Trump's prosecution for "decidedly personal acts of
falsifying business records poses no danger of intrusion on the authority and
function of the executive branch."
In a statement, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung called Merchan's
decision "a direct violation of the Supreme Court's decision on immunity."
The case stemmed from a $130,000 payment that Trump's former
lawyer Michael Cohen made to adult film actor Stormy Daniels.
The payment was for her silence before the 2016 election about a sexual
encounter she has said she had a decade earlier with Trump, who denies it.
A Manhattan jury in May found Trump guilty of 34 counts of falsifying business records to cover up
the payment. It was the first time a U.S. president - former or sitting - had
been convicted of or charged with a criminal offense.
Trump pleaded not guilty and called the case an attempt by Bragg, a
Democrat, to harm his 2024 campaign.
The
hush money case was the only one of four sets of criminal charges brought
against Trump in 2023 to reach trial.
Federal cases over his efforts to change the result of the 2020 election
and his handling of classified documents upon leaving office have been
dismissed, per U.S. Department of Justice policy holding that presidents cannot
be federally prosecuted.
Another criminal case against Trump over the 2020 election in Georgia
state court is in limbo. He pleaded not guilty in all cases.
The Supreme Court, in a decision arising from one of the two federal
cases against Trump, decided that presidents are immune from prosecution
involving their official acts, and that juries cannot be presented evidence of
official acts in trials over personal conduct.
It marked the first time that the court recognized any degree of
presidential immunity from prosecution.
Trump's lawyers said the New York jury that convicted him was shown
evidence by prosecutors of his social media posts as president and heard
testimony from his former aides about conversations that occurred in the White
House during his 2017-2021 term.
Prosecutors with Bragg's office countered that the Supreme Court's
ruling has no bearing on the case, which they said concerned "wholly
unofficial conduct." The Supreme Court in its ruling found no immunity for
a president's unofficial acts.
Trump was initially scheduled to be sentenced on Nov. 26, but Justice
Merchan pushed that back indefinitely after his election win.
Trump's lawyers earlier this month filed a separate motion urging
Merchan to dismiss the charges because having them loom over Trump while he was
serving as president would impede his ability to govern.
Bragg's office said there were measures short of the "extreme
remedy" of overturning the jury's verdict that could assuage Trump's
concerns.
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