Trump guilty: How the former president’s appeals process could play out
- Former President Donald Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in New York, with his legal team planning to appeal the verdict.
- A sentencing hearing for Trump is scheduled for July 11.
- The conviction is expected to face years of challenges and could potentially reach the U.S. Supreme Court through the appeals process.
22 Articles
22 Articles
Donald Trump can run for president — even from jail
Former President Donald Trump faces indictment in New York for his role in an alleged hush money payment to porn actor Stormy Daniels. Many are now wondering what Trump’s arrest, which he says he expects to happen Tuesday, would mean for his 2024 presidential bid. Can Trump run if he’s indicted — or even if he’s in jail? The answer is yes. Another, very different, candidate did exactly that. Socialist politician and trade unionist Eugene V. Deb…
L’ancien président américain a vivement contesté le verdict de la justice à son encontre, qui l’a jugé coupable de falsifications comptables pour des paiements dissimulés à l’actrice de films X Stormy Daniels.
Here are Trump’s top three arguments for appeal after guilty verdict in hush money trial
Former President Donald Trump has three key issues he can argue on appeal to overturn his conviction in his New York hush money trial, including that prosecutors never identified an underlying felony to the resurrected misdemeanor bookkeeping charges that had lapsed.
Trump guilty: How the former president’s appeals process could play out
Donald Trump is widely expected to appeal his conviction in New York after a jury on Thursday found the former president guilty of 34 counts of falsifying business records. To begin the process, Trump, the first former president to become a convicted felon, will turn to the state’s Appellate Division, First Department, to weigh his arguments for why his conviction should be overturned. The process could take several months or longer, and even if…
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