Trump’s Felony Conviction Stands, Judge Rules

Authored by rollingstone.com and submitted by IWantPizza555
image for Trump’s Felony Conviction Stands, Judge Rules

A judge has denied Donald Trump‘s request to toss his hush money conviction on grounds of presidential immunity.

According to CNN, Judge Juan Merchan ruled on Monday that despite the Supreme Court granting Trump immunity from prosecution for “official” acts committed while president, the prosecution’s evidence in his Manhattan case related “entirely to unofficial conduct.”

The judge has not yet ruled on a motion from Trump’s lawyers to dismiss the conviction entirely now that his is president-elect.

Merchan wrote that it was “logical and reasonable to conclude that if the act of falsifying records to cover up the payments so that the public would not be made aware is decidedly an unofficial act, so too should the communications to further that same cover-up be unofficial.” Trending Stories AOC Loses Committee Vote to 74-Year-Old Gerry Connolly What the ‘I Slept With 100 Men in One Day’ Doc Gets Right About Sex Work Trump’s Felony Conviction Stands, Judge Rules Police Identify Wisconsin School Shooter as 15-Year-Old Female Student

In a statement, Steven Cheung, Trump’s spokesperson and incoming White House communications director, claimed the judge’s decision was “a direct violation of the Supreme Court’s decision on immunity, and other longstanding jurisprudence.”

In May, Trump was found guilty on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records stemming from a payment to keep adult film actress Stormy Daniels quiet about an alleged affair ahead of the 2016 election. After Trump’s attorneys were able to secure a series of successful delays — and Trump’s victory over Kamala Harris to win a second term in the White House — his team was able to indefinitely postpone the sentencing phase of his conviction.

Raspberries-Are-Evil on December 17th, 2024 at 02:04 UTC »

So sentence him.

orcinyadders on December 17th, 2024 at 01:42 UTC »

That’s the thing with presidential immunity. It doesn’t apply when you’re not actually president, dumb asses.

blues111 on December 17th, 2024 at 01:01 UTC »

Good, the hush money case had nothing to do with his presidential duties it was stupid for him to try this argument