By Luc Cohen, NEW YORK United
States
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is scheduled to be sentenced on Friday for his criminal conviction stemming from hush money paid to a porn star, a case that for a time overshadowed his bid to retake the White House.
The U.S. Supreme Court paved
the way on Thursday for the 9:30 a.m. ET (1430 GMT) sentencing in New York
state court in Manhattan, rejecting a last-minute request by Trump to halt it
10 days before his Jan. 20 inauguration.
Justice Juan Merchan, who
oversaw the six-week trial last year, has signaled he does not plan to send
Trump to jail or to fine him. But by granting an unconditional discharge, he
would place a judgment of guilt on Trump's permanent record.
Trump, 78, who pleaded not
guilty, was expected to appear virtually at the hearing.
He fought tooth and nail to
avoid the spectacle of being compelled to appear before a state-level judge
days before returning to the public office he lost four years ago.
"He doesn't want to be
sentenced because that is the official judgment of him being a convicted
felon," said Cheryl Bader, a law professor at Fordham University in New
York.
The trial played out against
the extraordinary backdrop of Trump's successful campaign to retake the White
House. The sentencing marks the culmination of the first-ever criminal case
brought against a U.S. president, past or present.
Manhattan District Attorney
Alvin Bragg, a Democrat, charged Trump, a Republican, in March 2023 with 34
counts of falsifying business records to cover up his former lawyer Michael
Cohen's $130,000 payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels for her silence
before the 2016 election about a sexual encounter she said she had with Trump,
who denied it.
Trump defeated Democrat
Hillary Clinton in that election.
The Manhattan jury found Trump
guilty of all 34 counts on May 30. Prosecutors argued that despite the tawdry
nature of the allegations, the case was an attempt to corrupt the 2016
election.
Critics of the
businessman-turned politician cited the charges and other legal entanglements
he faced to bolster their contention that he was unfit for public office.
Trump flipped the script. He
argued the case - along with three other criminal indictments and civil
lawsuits accusing him of fraud, defamation and sexual abuse - was an effort by
opponents to weaponize the justice system against him and harm his reelection
campaign.
He frequently lashed out at
prosecutors and witnesses, and Merchan ultimately fined Trump $10,000 for
violating a gag order.
As recently as Jan. 3, Trump
called the judge a "radical partisan" in a post on his Truth Social
platform.
In a decision that day,
Merchan said that setting aside the verdict would "undermine the Rule of
Law in immeasurable ways" and wrote that Trump's behavior during the trial
showed disrespect for the judiciary.
"Defendant has gone to
great lengths to broadcast on social media and other forums his lack of respect
for judges, juries, grand juries and the justice system as a whole,"
Merchan said.
Late on Thursday, hours before
sentence was to be imposed, Trump wrote on his social media platform that he
would be appealing the case and was confident that he would prevail.
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