Donald Trump was convicted in May on 34 counts of falsifying business records. He was sentenced Friday in a New York court.
Trump was found guilty in May of 34 felonies for authorizing a scheme in 2017 to falsify records in order to cover up reimbursements for a "hush money" payment.
Trump attends his sentencing hearing with Judge Juan Merchan following jury conviction in his hush money case.
NEW YORK — President-elect Donald Trump is seeking to cancel his Friday sentencing for his hush money conviction, arguing that the sentencing hearing must be postponed while he appeals.
President-elect Donald Trump will be sentenced in his hush money criminal case Friday after the Supreme Court refused to pause it, the first-ever sentencing of a former president on criminal ...
Trump was found guilty by a New York jury of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in May 2024. His sentencing was ...
President-elect Donald Trump is asking the Supreme Court to delay his planned sentencing Friday in his criminal hush money case, setting up a potential test of the high court’s ruling to extend ...
The president's new criminal lawyers have begun the potentially yearslong process of appealing his sentencing and conviction.
President-elect Donald Trump formally appealed his New York felony conviction, jumpstarting his latest fight to get the ...
NEW YORK, Jan 6 (Reuters) - U.S. President-elect Donald Trump on Monday lost a bid to put off his sentencing on Friday for his criminal conviction stemming from hush money paid to a porn star.
Judge Juan Merchan has denied Donald Trump’s request to postpone his Friday sentencing for his hush money conviction, the judge said in a filing Monday. Trump’s lawyers are likely to appeal ...
Donald Trump will face virtually no legal consequences related to his hush-money sentencing, but he will have to endure some undesirable, tangentially connected ramifications as a result.