Trump's unprecedented conviction: Guilty but unsentenced
Donald Trump convicted of committing 34 crimes in New York without sentencing - as stated in the Friday announcement.
A New York court convicted President-elect Donald Trump on Friday of committing 34 crimes related to concealing payment for the silence of Stormy Daniels. At the same time, the court ordered the unconditional release of the convicted party.
In practice, this means that the court recognised Trump as a criminal but did not impose any additional punishment on him.
The verdict issued on Friday by Judge Juan Merchan concludes the first criminal case in history against a former U.S. president.
"Criminal status"
"President-elect Donald Trump has been criminally sentenced. He will avoid jail time, but the proceeding formalises his status as a felon and makes him the first to carry that distinction into the White House," comments the NY Times.
Donald Trump was thus formally convicted for 34 instances of falsifying business documentation. The case involves concealing payment for the silence of Stormy Daniels.
Announcing the verdict, Judge Juan Merchan admitted that Friday's decision was one of the most difficult any judge could face and stated that the verdict he issued is mandated by "extraordinary" legal protection of the office of the president.
However, he added that the legal protections of the presidency "do not reduce the seriousness of the crime or justify its commission in any way," adding that "one power they do not provide is the power to erase a jury verdict."
Trump was found guilty back in May last year, but the announcement of the sentence was delayed due to his requests to postpone the trial and complaints about the unconstitutionality of the process.
Trump on the verdict: "A disgrace to the system"
- It’s been a political witch hunt. It was done to damage my reputation so that I would lose the election, and obviously, that didn’t work - said the president-elect after the verdict was announced.
According to the Insider Paper portal, Trump called the criminal proceedings against him "a disgrace to the system".