Live Updates: Trump Is Sentenced in N.Y. Criminal Case and Will Avoid Jail
The president-elect’s sentence on 34 counts of falsifying business records formalizes his status as a felon and makes him the first to carry that distinction into the White House. He had fought to avoid the proceeding at every turn.
Pinned
After months of delay, President-elect Donald J. Trump on Friday became the first American president to be criminally sentenced.
He avoided jail or any other substantive punishment, but the proceeding carried symbolic importance: It formalized Mr. Trump’s status as a felon, making him the first to carry that dubious designation into the presidency.
Overall, Justice Merchan’s statement was far less scathing than might have been expected. He was primarily focused on distinguishing Trump the individual from Trump the president-elect, and asserting that it is the office that deserves extensive legal protections, rather than the man.
On Friday, Justice Juan M. Merchan sentenced Donald J. Trump to an unconditional discharge, a rare and lenient sentence in New York state courts that still cements Mr. Trump’s status as a felon before his inauguration.
A conditional discharge would have required him to meet certain conditions, like maintaining employment or paying restitution, but Mr. Trump will not be subject to any requirements going forward.
Justice Merchan is reflecting on his time on the bench, and some of the heinous crimes to which he’s sentenced defendants in the past. He remarks that never before has the court been presented with such a “unique and remarkable set of circumstances.” And yet the trial was a paradox, he says, because once the courtroom doors were closed, it was no different from the other trials held in this courthouse.
Trump continues to assert the importance of the election over the verdict, saying that voters got to see this “firsthand.” The trial was not broadcast, though, and many voters were not able to follow it as closely as he is implying. Audio from today’s hearing will be the first nonwritten recording of this case proceeding to which the general public will have access.
Trump calls Michael Cohen, his own former lawyer and fixer who was a key witness during the trial, a “totally discredited person.” He says Cohen has “no standing, he’s been disbarred on other matters.” He says that Cohen was allowed to talk as if he was George Washington. “But he’s not George Washington.”
Trump seems to be reading from something in front of him. He is saying a version of what he has said before, that the payment to Stormy Daniels was a legal expense and that his accountants had logged it that way. He alludes to someone working with his “opponent,” indicating President Biden.
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