Trump's election victory throws uncertainty into legal cases he faces
Source: The Guardian
Wed 6 Nov 2024 12.19 EST
Donald Trumps victory over Kamala Harris immediately spurred questions about the viability of the various criminal cases against him, including whether he will be sentenced as planned this month and whether he could pardon himself. Trump, who was found guilty of 34 felony counts this May and will become the first US president with a criminal record, also faces charges in other state and federal courts for his apparent efforts to disrupt the electoral process and hoard classified documents.
The president-elect also faces hundreds of millions of penalties in civil cases, for sexual abuse, defamation and fraud. Trumps delay-based legal strategy, which has proved highly successful for him, could mean he avoids punishment and jail in his New York City criminal hush-money case. After the trial and guilty verdict, Trump was initially scheduled to be sentenced in July, then in September.
Trumps lawyers then asked the judge, Juan Merchan, for a postponement this summer so he could weigh the US supreme court decision that granted broad immunity on former presidents for official acts in office. The decision held that unofficial acts carry no immunity, and his New York trial was largely focused on his 2016 efforts to bury negative stories about an alleged sexual encounter with an adult film star, which happened before his time in the White House.
Some of the prosecution evidence at trial, however, involved personal actions Trump took during his presidency, and in September Merchan decided to delay Trumps scheduled sentencing that month until 26 November after the election. He said he agreed to push back the proceeding to avoid any appearance however unwarranted that the proceeding has been affected by or seeks to affect the approaching presidential election in which the defendant is a candidate. Merchan also said he would issue his presidential immunity decision on 12 November, which could well render the sentencing moot should he rule in favor of Trump.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/nov/06/trump-election-criminal-cases-status
durablend
(8,004 posts)Who are we kidding. Jack Smith dismissed his cases, these are going away too.
Marthe48
(19,158 posts)I hope he descends alive into hell and never dies. Ever
bucolic_frolic
(47,251 posts)Colgate 64
(14,840 posts)Only to the most pollyannish among us. There will be no new criminal cases against him. Not for Jan. 6 and not for the purloined secret documents. His felony sentences by Judge Merchan will either be indefinitely postponed or made meaningless. He got what he's always had - bad actions with absolutely zero consequences. Look for him to try out his new invincibility now that Scotus has decreed that he's immune from prosecution while he's in office.
From The Ashes
(2,679 posts)He's going to have his DOJ shut them all down. He's already said as much.
AverageOldGuy
(2,129 posts)he will pardon all the Jan 6'ers.
AverageOldGuy
(2,129 posts)Uncertainty?
Getfuckingreal. Trump will be inaugurated on Jan 20, 2025. By the end of the month every single federal proceeding against Trump --criminal or civil -- will be withdrawn by Trump's Atty Gen.
Trump's DOJ then will turn their guns on Biden, Harris, Garland, Smith, Gen Kelly, Gen Milley, Schiff, Pelosi, Liz Cheney, any Democrat or Republican who has dared speak a word against Trump.