Will Trump be sentenced for NY hush-money case by 2029?
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Official court announcements or legal documents from the Manhattan District Attorney's office
Prosecutors Seek to Uphold Trump's Hush Money Conviction, Suggest Delaying Sentencing
Dec 10, 2024, 06:56 PM
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office has argued that President-elect Donald Trump's criminal conviction in his New York hush-money case should stand despite his recent election victory. The prosecutors have suggested that the case could be halted while Trump is in office, citing the Nixon precedent. They have indicated a willingness to delay sentencing until Trump leaves office, potentially in 2029, rather than dismissing the case outright. This approach would preserve the conviction while avoiding immediate punishment or a prolonged legal battle.
View original story
Sentencing delayed by court decision • 25%
Sentencing delayed by Supreme Court intervention • 25%
Sentencing canceled or nullified • 25%
Sentencing occurs as scheduled • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Conditional Discharge • 25%
Other Sentence • 25%
Probation • 25%
Unconditional Discharge • 25%
Other • 25%
Probation • 25%
Community Service • 25%
Fine • 25%
Conditional discharge • 25%
Fine imposed • 25%
Probation • 25%
Unconditional discharge • 25%
Probation • 25%
Prison time • 25%
Fine only • 25%
Other • 25%
Fine only • 25%
Case dismissed • 25%
Custodial sentence • 25%
Probation • 25%
Other • 25%
Sentencing upheld • 25%
Sentencing reduced • 25%
Sentencing delayed • 25%
No sentencing required • 25%
Sentencing delayed until post-presidency • 25%
Case dismissed • 25%
Sentenced during presidency • 25%
No specific precedent • 25%
Existing case law • 25%
Nixon precedent • 25%
New precedent established • 25%