Trump’s hush money sentencing postponed after ruling he has broad presidential immunity

Former President Donald Trump sits in Manhattan Criminal Court in New York, on May 20, 2024. (Dave Sanders/The New York Times via AP, Pool)
A New York judge has postponed ex-President Donald Trump’s sentencing which was set to take place on July 11 (Picture: AP)

Former President Donald Trump’s sentencing in his criminal hush money case has been delayed after a Supreme Court ruling that he has broad immunity from prosecution.

Judge Juan Merchan, who is overseeing the hush money case, has postponed Trump’s sentencing from July 11 to September 18 in order to weigh whether the high court’s ruling could imperil the ex-president’s conviction.

The judge’s decision on Tuesday, a day after the immunity ruling, is a setback for the historic case that saw the first felony conviction of a former or current US president.

Trump was scheduled to be sentenced just four days before the Republican National Convention, in which he is expected to be officially nominated as the GOP’s candidate for president.

Ex-President Donald Trump's sentencing hearing was postponed a day after the Supreme Court's immunity ruling
Ex-President Donald Trump’s sentencing hearing was postponed a day after the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling (Picture: EPA)

He faces a sentence ranging from probation to several weeks to up to four years in prison, after a New York jury found him guilty of all 34 counts of falsifying business records around a $130,000 payment to silence a porn star on an alleged affair.

While Merchan agreed to postpone Trump’s sentencing hearing, he may not find a reason to overturn the jury’s verdict.

Trump’s lawyers shortly after the Supreme Court’s decision on Monday sought to file a motion to overturn the hush money verdict by July 10.

Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Joshua Steinglass wrote in a letter to Merchan: ‘Although we believe defendant’s arguments to be without merit, we do not oppose his request for leave to file and his putative request to adjourn sentencing pending determination of his motion.’

The prosecutors requested a deadline of July 24 to file and serve a response, meaning that Trump’s sentencing would happen no sooner than the following day.

Merchan then wrote that the original sentencing date was adjourned to September 18 at 10am ‘for the imposition of sentence, if such is still necessary, or other proceedings’.

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