In a historic first, President-elect Donald Trump is scheduled to be sentenced Friday for his conviction on charges that he falsified business records to hide payments to silence an adult film star. Credit: Newsday

This story was reported by Nicole Fuller, Michael O'Keeffe and Janon Fisher.  It was written by Fuller.

Donald Trump's historic criminal case took on an air of finality in a Manhattan courtroom Friday, when the president-elect was sentenced to an unconditional discharge for his conviction on felony charges that he paid hush money to an adult film actress to conceal their affair ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

Just 10 days before Trump is set to be inaugurated as president for a second time, he appeared, once again, as a criminal defendant. State Supreme Court Justice Juan M. Merchan handed down the non-prison sentence, which he had forecast in a ruling last week, removing the air of suspense on what potential punishment the soon-to-be American president would receive. The unconditional discharge carries no penalty, other than the stain of a criminal conviction.

“This court has determined the only lawful sentence without encroaching on presidency is unconditional discharge,” Merchan said. “Sir, I wish you godspeed as you assume your second term in office. “

Merchan said protections afforded to the position of president do not reflect on the integrity of the trial.

“One power they do not erase is a jury verdict,” Merchan said.

Trump, the first ex-president to be convicted of a crime, appeared by video from his Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida -- a courtesy extended by the judge that illustrated the truly unparalleled nature of sentencing a defendant who is poised to be the leader of the free world in a matter of days.

Rarely, if ever, are criminal defendants permitted to skip their sentencing in-person.

Trump, wearing his trademark dark suit and red tie with his defense attorney Todd Blanche at his right, sat in front of two U.S. flags and launched a verbal attack against the case when he was given the chance to address the court.

“The fact is, I am totally innocent, I did nothing wrong,” Trump said, calling his prosecution “a very terrible experience.”

Prosecutor Joshua Steinglass reminded the judge that the jury’s unanimous verdict must be respected, but acknowledged that any other sentence besides an unconditional discharge could interfere with his duties when he becomes president in 10 days.

“The people recommend a sentence of unconditional discharge,” Steinglass said, citing the unique position of Trump as president-elect.

“We must be respectful of the presidency,” Steinglass said. “The American public has the right to a presidency unencumbered by pending court proceedings.”

Steinglass, however, reminded the judge that Trump had repeatedly questioned the legitimacy of the proceedings. And in an interview with probation officials, as is customary following a defendant’s conviction, Trump indicated that he believed he is “above the law,” a probation official wrote, Steinglass said.

Lead Trump attorney Todd Blanche confirmed that Trump would pursue an appeal of the verdict.

Trump's lawyers, who have argued that Trump was wrongly convicted, have sought to overturn his conviction based on the notion of presidential immunity, which they have argued should include the period when Trump is president-elect. Full appeal efforts based on the defense's contention of a wrongful conviction and presidential immunity, can commence now that Trump has officially been sentenced.

Trump, 78, had tried in vain to stop the sentencing in light of his re-election as president last year -- appealing to the trial judge, a state appeals court and even an emergency effort for the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene, which failed on a 5-4 vote -- for the proceeding to be stayed.

The majority on the Supreme Court ruled that Trump would not face an insurmountable burden during the presidential transition by being sentenced because Merchan had indicated he didn't plan on sentencing Trump to jail or probation -- removing any legal avenues for Trump's team to stop or delay the sentencing.

Last May, an anonymous Manhattan jury found Trump guilty of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records during a seven week-long trial, which included embarrassing testimony detailing Trump's sexual encounter with Stormy Daniels just months after his youngest son was born in 2006.
Legal observers doubted that Trump, in his late 70s and a first-time offender of a non-violent crime, would receive jail time.

But Merchan had wide latitude to sentence Trump, who was openly hostile to the judge, calling him "corrupt" and "Trump-hating," to probation or a short jail sentence. Trump faced up to four years in prison under the state statute.

Despite his historic conviction -- he is the first former president to be found guilty of a crime -- Trump's political fortunes soared since his hush money trial.

At the time, the then-presumptive Republican presidential nominee, whose path back to the White House was not guaranteed, faced 88 criminal charges in three other jurisdictions.

But Trump won the November election against Vice President Kamala Harris handily, and since then, prosecutors have moved to drop the other criminal cases -- including allegations that he attempted to overturn his loss in the 2020 election, incited a riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 and mishandled classified documents.

The hush money case, the least serious of alleged offenses, was the only one that stuck, and leaves Trump as a convicted felon.
Trump has denied the affair, denied he broke the law and chalked up his indictment, arrest and prosecution to a conspiracy helmed by President Joe Biden.

But twelve Manhattan jurors, whose identities were not released publicly, sided with the prosecution's narrative of what occurred beginning some 19 years ago when Trump had sex with Daniels in a Lake Tahoe, Nevada hotel room and a decade after that, when prosecutors say Trump deputized his personal attorney to pay $130,000 in hush money to Daniels because the story of their liaison threatened to put the final nail in the coffin of his presidential dreams.
Trump, along with his then-personal attorney Michael Cohen, a Lawrence native, and Trump associate David Pecker, then the publisher of the parent company of the supermarket tabloid The National Enquirer, conspired to help Trump win the 2016 election.
At the heart of the conspiracy was "catch and kill," a tabloid scheme that had Pecker and his deputy serve as the "eyes and ears" for negative stories about Trump being shopped around for publication.

The plan was executed three times, according to prosecutors. Daniels was paid $130,000 for the rights to her story, while former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who has said she had an affair with Trump was paid $150,000. Dino Sajudin, a door attendant at Trump Tower who had shopped around a false story that Trump had fathered a child outside of his marriage, was paid $30,000.

Prosecutors likened the nondisclosure agreement that Daniels signed to an illegal campaign donation.
Cohen made the payment to Daniels -- the only payee whose payment resulted in charges against Trump -- and he was later reimbursed by Trump in a series of checks, trial evidence showed.

The reimbursements were recorded as legal services as part of a retainer agreement in the Trump Organization's records, which prosecutors said was false, trial evidence showed.

The misdemeanor charges of falsifying business records are misdemeanors, but prosecutors upgraded them to Class E felonies, arguing the crimes were committed to cover up another crime -- conspiracy to promote an election by unlawful means.
Prosecutors had argued that the famously frugal Trump was only moved to sign-off on the hush money payment to Daniels in the waning days of the 2016 election after the release of the infamous "Access Hollywood" video, which featured Trump bragging that his fame gave him entree to grab women by their genitals.

Former Trump campaign and White House aide Hope Hicks testified that the publication of the video by The Washington Post was highly damaging and had created panic inside the campaign.

Blanche, now his choice to be deputy attorney general in his new administration, argued that Trump was a victim of extortion by Daniels and Keith Davidson, her attorney. Davidson denied the allegation.
Cohen, the prosecution's star witness, had recorded Trump in a phone call discussing the payment to McDougal, saying to pay in "cash," which was played for the jury.

During the trial, Merchan found Trump is criminal contempt for comments he made in violation of a gag order imposed, barring Trump from speaking publicly about the jurors and court staff.

Trump was fined $10,000 and threatened with jail time if he continued to violate the judge's order, which was partially lifted after his conviction.
Trump framed his prosecution as a “witch hunt,” and his supporters by-and-large agreed with Trump’s contention that it was simply a politically charged move by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg to keep him from being elected president again.

Bragg, like Merchan, was mocked relentlessly by Trump on social media and at campaign events and received scores of death threats.
Trump was initially scheduled to be sentenced on his conviction on July 11, but a ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court asserting that presidents have broad immunity from criminal prosecution led Trump’s defense team to file a motion requesting Merchan set aside the verdict and dismiss the indictment against Trump.

Merchan, with the agreement of the prosecution, agreed to delay the sentencing while he considered the defense motion.

Trump's attorneys argued that allowing the jury to hear testimony from Hicks and another White House aide -- who testified about some of Trump's actions while he was president -- had "tainted" the trial, citing the Supreme Court decision on presidential immunity.

Merchan, in denying the defense's move to set side the guilty verdicts based on premise of presidential immunity, said: "To dismiss the indictment and set aside the jury verdict would not serve the concerns set forth by the Supreme Court in its handful of cases addressing presidential immunity nor would it serve the rule of law. On the contrary, such a decision would undermine the rule of law in immeasurable ways."

The prosecution opposed overturning the jury's verdict but appeared amenable to postponing Trump's sentencing for four years -- once Trump departed the Oval Office.

But Merchan ultimately ruled that the proceeding would go on.

Donald Trump's historic criminal case took on an air of finality in a Manhattan courtroom Friday, when the president-elect was sentenced to an unconditional discharge for his conviction on felony charges that he paid hush money to an adult film actress to conceal their affair ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

Just 10 days before Trump is set to be inaugurated as president for a second time, he appeared, once again, as a criminal defendant. State Supreme Court Justice Juan M. Merchan handed down the non-prison sentence, which he had forecast in a ruling last week, removing the air of suspense on what potential punishment the soon-to-be American president would receive. The unconditional discharge carries no penalty, other than the stain of a criminal conviction.

“This court has determined the only lawful sentence without encroaching on presidency is unconditional discharge,” Merchan said. “Sir, I wish you godspeed as you assume your second term in office. “

Merchan said protections afforded to the position of president do not reflect on the integrity of the trial.

“One power they do not erase is a jury verdict,” Merchan said.

Trump, the first ex-president to be convicted of a crime, appeared by video from his Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida -- a courtesy extended by the judge that illustrated the truly unparalleled nature of sentencing a defendant who is poised to be the leader of the free world in a matter of days.

Rarely, if ever, are criminal defendants permitted to skip their sentencing in-person.

Trump, wearing his trademark dark suit and red tie with his defense attorney Todd Blanche at his right, sat in front of two U.S. flags and launched a verbal attack against the case when he was given the chance to address the court.

“The fact is, I am totally innocent, I did nothing wrong,” Trump said, calling his prosecution “a very terrible experience.”

Prosecutor Joshua Steinglass reminded the judge that the jury’s unanimous verdict must be respected, but acknowledged that any other sentence besides an unconditional discharge could interfere with his duties when he becomes president in 10 days.

“The people recommend a sentence of unconditional discharge,” Steinglass said, citing the unique position of Trump as president-elect.

“We must be respectful of the presidency,” Steinglass said. “The American public has the right to a presidency unencumbered by pending court proceedings.”

Steinglass, however, reminded the judge that Trump had repeatedly questioned the legitimacy of the proceedings. And in an interview with probation officials, as is customary following a defendant’s conviction, Trump indicated that he believed he is “above the law,” a probation official wrote, Steinglass said.

Lead Trump attorney Todd Blanche confirmed that Trump would pursue an appeal of the verdict.

Trump's lawyers, who have argued that Trump was wrongly convicted, have sought to overturn his conviction based on the notion of presidential immunity, which they have argued should include the period when Trump is president-elect. Full appeal efforts based on the defense's contention of a wrongful conviction and presidential immunity, can commence now that Trump has officially been sentenced.

Trump, 78, had tried in vain to stop the sentencing in light of his re-election as president last year -- appealing to the trial judge, a state appeals court and even an emergency effort for the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene, which failed on a 5-4 vote -- for the proceeding to be stayed.

The majority on the Supreme Court ruled that Trump would not face an insurmountable burden during the presidential transition by being sentenced because Merchan had indicated he didn't plan on sentencing Trump to jail or probation -- removing any legal avenues for Trump's team to stop or delay the sentencing.

Last May, an anonymous Manhattan jury found Trump guilty of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records during a seven week-long trial, which included embarrassing testimony detailing Trump's sexual encounter with Stormy Daniels just months after his youngest son was born in 2006.
Legal observers doubted that Trump, in his late 70s and a first-time offender of a non-violent crime, would receive jail time.

But Merchan had wide latitude to sentence Trump, who was openly hostile to the judge, calling him "corrupt" and "Trump-hating," to probation or a short jail sentence. Trump faced up to four years in prison under the state statute.

Despite his historic conviction -- he is the first former president to be found guilty of a crime -- Trump's political fortunes soared since his hush money trial.

At the time, the then-presumptive Republican presidential nominee, whose path back to the White House was not guaranteed, faced 88 criminal charges in three other jurisdictions.

But Trump won the November election against Vice President Kamala Harris handily, and since then, prosecutors have moved to drop the other criminal cases -- including allegations that he attempted to overturn his loss in the 2020 election, incited a riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 and mishandled classified documents.

The hush money case, the least serious of alleged offenses, was the only one that stuck, and leaves Trump as a convicted felon.
Trump has denied the affair, denied he broke the law and chalked up his indictment, arrest and prosecution to a conspiracy helmed by President Joe Biden.

But twelve Manhattan jurors, whose identities were not released publicly, sided with the prosecution's narrative of what occurred beginning some 19 years ago when Trump had sex with Daniels in a Lake Tahoe, Nevada hotel room and a decade after that, when prosecutors say Trump deputized his personal attorney to pay $130,000 in hush money to Daniels because the story of their liaison threatened to put the final nail in the coffin of his presidential dreams.
Trump, along with his then-personal attorney Michael Cohen, a Lawrence native, and Trump associate David Pecker, then the publisher of the parent company of the supermarket tabloid The National Enquirer, conspired to help Trump win the 2016 election.
At the heart of the conspiracy was "catch and kill," a tabloid scheme that had Pecker and his deputy serve as the "eyes and ears" for negative stories about Trump being shopped around for publication.

The plan was executed three times, according to prosecutors. Daniels was paid $130,000 for the rights to her story, while former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who has said she had an affair with Trump was paid $150,000. Dino Sajudin, a door attendant at Trump Tower who had shopped around a false story that Trump had fathered a child outside of his marriage, was paid $30,000.

Prosecutors likened the nondisclosure agreement that Daniels signed to an illegal campaign donation.
Cohen made the payment to Daniels -- the only payee whose payment resulted in charges against Trump -- and he was later reimbursed by Trump in a series of checks, trial evidence showed.

The reimbursements were recorded as legal services as part of a retainer agreement in the Trump Organization's records, which prosecutors said was false, trial evidence showed.

The misdemeanor charges of falsifying business records are misdemeanors, but prosecutors upgraded them to Class E felonies, arguing the crimes were committed to cover up another crime -- conspiracy to promote an election by unlawful means.
Prosecutors had argued that the famously frugal Trump was only moved to sign-off on the hush money payment to Daniels in the waning days of the 2016 election after the release of the infamous "Access Hollywood" video, which featured Trump bragging that his fame gave him entree to grab women by their genitals.

Former Trump campaign and White House aide Hope Hicks testified that the publication of the video by The Washington Post was highly damaging and had created panic inside the campaign.

Blanche, now his choice to be deputy attorney general in his new administration, argued that Trump was a victim of extortion by Daniels and Keith Davidson, her attorney. Davidson denied the allegation.
Cohen, the prosecution's star witness, had recorded Trump in a phone call discussing the payment to McDougal, saying to pay in "cash," which was played for the jury.

During the trial, Merchan found Trump is criminal contempt for comments he made in violation of a gag order imposed, barring Trump from speaking publicly about the jurors and court staff.

Trump was fined $10,000 and threatened with jail time if he continued to violate the judge's order, which was partially lifted after his conviction.
Trump framed his prosecution as a “witch hunt,” and his supporters by-and-large agreed with Trump’s contention that it was simply a politically charged move by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg to keep him from being elected president again.

Bragg, like Merchan, was mocked relentlessly by Trump on social media and at campaign events and received scores of death threats.
Trump was initially scheduled to be sentenced on his conviction on July 11, but a ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court asserting that presidents have broad immunity from criminal prosecution led Trump’s defense team to file a motion requesting Merchan set aside the verdict and dismiss the indictment against Trump.

Merchan, with the agreement of the prosecution, agreed to delay the sentencing while he considered the defense motion.

Trump's attorneys argued that allowing the jury to hear testimony from Hicks and another White House aide -- who testified about some of Trump's actions while he was president -- had "tainted" the trial, citing the Supreme Court decision on presidential immunity.

Merchan, in denying the defense's move to set side the guilty verdicts based on premise of presidential immunity, said: "To dismiss the indictment and set aside the jury verdict would not serve the concerns set forth by the Supreme Court in its handful of cases addressing presidential immunity nor would it serve the rule of law. On the contrary, such a decision would undermine the rule of law in immeasurable ways."

The prosecution opposed overturning the jury's verdict but appeared amenable to postponing Trump's sentencing for four years -- once Trump departed the Oval Office.

But Merchan ultimately ruled that the proceeding would go on.

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