New York Prosecutors Urge Judge In Trump's Hush Money Trial To Preserve Conviction
NEW YORK (AP) — Prosecutors are urging a judge to uphold Donald Trump’s historic hush money conviction, arguing in court papers made public Thursday that the verdict should stand despite the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on presidential immunity.
The Manhattan district attorney’s office said in a court filing that the high court’s opinion “has no bearing” on the hush money case because it involves unofficial acts for which a former president is not immune.
“There is no basis for disturbing the jury’s verdict,” prosecutors wrote in a 66-page filing.
Lawyers for the Republican presidential nominee are trying to get the verdict — and even the indictment — tossed out because of the Supreme Court’s decision July 1. The ruling insulates former presidents from being criminally prosecuted for official acts and bars prosecutors from pointing to official acts as evidence that a commander in chief’s unofficial actions were illegal.
Trump’s lawyers have argued that prosecutors rushed to trial instead of waiting for the Supreme Court’s view on presidential immunity, and that the trial was “tainted” by evidence that should not have been allowed under the high court’s ruling, such as tweets that Trump sent while he was president in 2018.
Prosecutors countered that evidence, which they said was indicative of a “pressure campaign” to keep his then-lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen from turning on him, “constitutes only a sliver of the mountains of testimony and documentary proof” that the jury considered before reaching its verdict May 30.
Even if the Supreme Court’s decision required that evidence be excluded from the hush money trial, “there would still need be no basis for disturbing the verdict because of the other overwhelming evidence