Judge Merchan delays sentencing in Trump’s hush money case until after election


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Judge Juan Merchan has agreed to delay Donald Trump’s sentencing in New York until after the election, showing the latest way that the GOP presidential nominee has benefited from the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling.

Trump’s lawyers cited the ruling in seeking to push the Sept. 18 sentencing. Merchan had previously set Sept. 16 to rule on Trump’s motion to overturn his guilty verdicts based on the immunity ruling, and his lawyers signaled to the judge that if he rules against them on that motion, then they’ll immediately appeal prior to sentencing.

On Friday, Merchan said he will now decide whether to set aside the guilty verdicts on Nov. 12 and then proceed to sentencing (if necessary) on Nov. 26. Election day is Nov. 5.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg didn’t fight Trump’s delay bid, instead deferring to the judge in a manner that seemingly made it easier for Merchan to grant Trump’s request. The Sept. 18 date was already a delayed one, following the Supreme Court’s July 1 ruling in Trump v. United States, which raised the question of whether, in retrospect, state prosecutors improperly introduced official-act evidence to prove Trump’s guilt and, if so, what effect that had on the guilty verdicts reached in May before the immunity ruling.

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This is a developing story. Check back for updates.


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