The president-elect’s first act will undoubtedly try to pardon himself. Judge Juan Merchan needs the courage Mike Pence had ...
President-elect Trump faces a sentencing hearing in state court in New York on Nov. 26 regarding his 34 counts of falsifying ...
Merchan is overseeing Trump's criminal hush money case in New York, where in May he was convicted on 34 counts of falsifying ...
Former Federal Prosecutor Andrew Cherkasky discusses New York v. Trump judge Juan Merchan's anticipated decision regarding ...
Q: What will happen in Donald Trump’s New York state criminal case now that he is president-elect? A: Trump is scheduled to ...
A state case against him for allegedly conspiring to interfere with Georgia’s election in 2020 will go on hold until after ...
Trump is set to be sentenced in the case on Nov. 26 and whether the hearing will happen is being decided by Judge Juan ...
Trump’s anticipated return to the White House has thrown constitutional wrenches into the case that could weaken his forthcoming sentence or doom the case entirely, but a lot hinges on Judge Juan ...
Trump has yet to be sentenced in New York, with Judge Juan Merchan in September pushing back sentencing until after the election. Trump cannot appeal his conviction until the sentencing decision ...
If a Florida resident is convicted of a felony in another state, they lose their voter eligibility only if such a conviction would make them ineligible to vote in the state where they were convicted.
His own. As you think about voting, remember that on Nov. 26, three weeks after Election Day, Trump will be sentenced by Judge Juan Merchan for his 34 felony convictions in New York City.
Trump’s hush money sentencing is unprecedented and unpredictable. But barring successful appeals, he’ll still owe more than ...