THE Manhattan district attorney’s office said Tuesday it would agree to adjourn Donald Trump’s sentencing in his hush-money case to give prosecutors time to litigate the president-elect’s expected motion to dismiss the case.
In a letter to Judge Juan Merchan, the district attorney’s office also acknowledged that Trump is not likely to be sentenced “until after the end of Defendant’s upcoming presidential term.” But the DA says Trump’s felony conviction should stand.
A source close to the district attorney’s office said it is open to a four-year pause of the case.
The developments capped a historic and unprecedented turnaround for Trump’s legal and political fate.
One year ago, Trump was facing four separate indictments. Now, as he prepares to retake the White House, the strategy of Trump’s lawyers to try to push all of his cases beyond the 2024 election has proved wildly successful, with the two federal cases about to be wound down, the Georgia State case long dormant and the New York case poised to end indefinitely without a sentence.
Trump was convicted in May on 34 counts of falsifying business records overpayments.
Eighteen-Eleven Media