Judge Juan Merchan on Friday granted President-elect Trump's request to file a motion to dismiss the charges in New York v. Trump and removed the sentencing date for the president-elect from the schedule.
A judge indefinitely postponed Trump’s sentencing and allowed his legal team to file a motion for dismissal. But the conviction wasn’t overturned.
President-elect Trump’s sentencing in his New York criminal case will not go forward as planned next week as his attorneys push to dismiss the prosecution following his election victory. Judge Juan Merchan,
Donald Trump’s sentencing on 34 felony counts related to his 2016 hush money scheme has been put on indefinite
President-elect Donald Trump will no longer be sentenced for his 34 criminal convictions next week after a New York judge ordered the case be put on hold Friday.
The judge in President-elect Donald Trump's criminal hush money case has indefinitely postponed sentencing, which had been scheduled for Nov. 26.
Pointing to former congressman Tulsi Gabbard and outgoing congressman Matt Gaetz, the New York Post editorial board implored the president-elect to “rethink” his choices in an op-ed published on Tuesday. Gabbard was nominated as director of national intelligence while Gaetz was named as pick for attorney general.
President-elect Donald Trump's criminal conviction should be tossed out because he was elected president, his lawyers say.
The New York City judge overseeing President-elect Donald Trump's "hush money" case said there will be no sentencing next week.
NY Rep. Ritchie Torres ripped Gov. Kathy Hochul as "new Joe Biden;" concerns of far-left found Dems pushing to "learn from history."