Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg argued in a court filing unsealed Tuesday that Donald Trump’s sentencing in his New York criminal hush money case might be postponed until after he leaves office, rather than the case being dismissed outright.
NOTE: The video is from a previous report.
Bragg requested that New York Judge Juan Merchan deny Trump’s motion to overturn the jury’s decision and dismiss the case based on claims of presidential immunity, stating that the request exceeds what is necessary to safeguard the presidency.
“The People recognize the significance of a smooth executive handover and the peaceful transfer of authority, but these interests do not mandate the exceptional measure of halting post-trial legal proceedings in an ongoing criminal case,” the filing explained.
Trump was found guilty in May on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records related to a hush money payment made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels in order to boost his electoral prospects in the 2016 presidential election.
His sentencing has been delayed three times and he is now pushing to have the case dismissed entirely as he prepares to return to the White House following his reelection in November.
Trump’s lawyers had argued that the case should be tossed because Trump, as president-elect, is immune from prosecution during the transition phase — a claim Bragg rejected.
“There are no grounds for such relief now, prior to defendant’s inauguration, because President-elect immunity does not exist,” Bragg’s filing said. “And even after the inauguration, defendant’s temporary immunity as the sitting President will still not justify the extreme remedy of discarding the jury’s unanimous guilty verdict and wiping out the already-completed phases of this criminal proceeding.”
Prosecutors suggested either delaying sentencing until Trump leaves office, or terminating the proceedings “with a notation that the jury verdict has not been vacated and the indictment has not been dismissed.”
The filing also criticized Trump’s lawyers for rehashing arguments that the court has already rejected and over-interpreting the prohibition on cases against a sitting president, arguing that Trump’s “sweeping argument disregard the careful limits that the Supreme Court and the Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) have placed on presidential immunity.”
“Defendant’s requested relief would go well beyond what is necessary to protect the presidency and would subvert the compelling public interest in preserving the jury’s unanimous verdict and upholding the rule of law,” the filing said.
Trump’s federal election interference case was thrown out last month due to the Justice Department’s standing policy prohibiting the prosecution of a sitting president, and a federal appeals court dropped Trump from the government’s ongoing appeal of special counsel Jack Smith’s classified documents case based on the same policy.
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