"Unprecedented Trials: Trump's Felony Convictions, Presidential Immunity Debates" Podcast Por  arte de portada

"Unprecedented Trials: Trump's Felony Convictions, Presidential Immunity Debates"

"Unprecedented Trials: Trump's Felony Convictions, Presidential Immunity Debates"

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Donald Trump is entangled in a range of **court trials and legal challenges** across several jurisdictions. In New York, he was indicted by a Manhattan grand jury on March 30, 2023, on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. The trial, known as The People for the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump, began on April 15, 2024. A Manhattan jury found him guilty of these counts on May 30, 2024. Trump was sentenced by Justice Merchan on January 10, 2025, receiving an unconditional discharge, meaning he will not face fines or imprisonment for this conviction. Ongoing appeals focus on whether the case should be moved to federal court, with Trump’s lawyers arguing that the evidence dealt with his first term as president, potentially invoking presidential immunity. The Department of Justice has filed supporting briefs, and a three-judge appellate panel is reviewing the case, which remains highly consequential since never before has a sitting or former president been convicted of a felony, raising new questions about the boundaries of presidential immunity, as detailed by OPB and Lawfare.

Trump also faced a major federal case in Florida. On June 8, 2023, he and two associates were indicted on 32 counts related to willfully retaining national defense information, five obstruction charges, and additional counts for interfering with a federal investigation and making false statements. Judge Aileen Cannon dismissed this federal indictment on July 15, 2024, ruling that Special Counsel Jack Smith was improperly appointed and funded. The Justice Department initially filed an appeal of this dismissal to the 11th Circuit, but then dismissed its own appeal by January 2025, effectively ending the federal prosecution in that district, as tracked by Lawfare and Just Security.

In Georgia, Trump and 18 co-defendants were indicted on August 14, 2023, by a Fulton County grand jury. This extensive racketeering indictment alleges an organized effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia. Some co-defendants continue to file appeals, and there have been many efforts to move the proceedings to federal court or to disqualify District Attorney Fani Willis. Scheduling disputes, appeals, and additional motions are still working their way through the Georgia courts, as covered extensively by Just Security.

Meanwhile, Trump’s legal team continues to pursue a variety of **appeals and removal efforts** in each major case. For example, in the New York case, various attempts were made to move the state prosecution to a federal venue, but these efforts have so far been unsuccessful. Final appeals and appellate arguments are pending in both the New York criminal and civil cases, as well as in the Georgia case, and the legal calendar for Trump remains crowded with those ongoing proceedings, summarized by Just Security’s master calendar.

These historic trials not only mark the first criminal conviction of a U.S. president but also probe unsettled legal ground regarding the limits of presidential immunity and the role of federal versus state courts in prosecuting a former president for acts before and during their time in office.

Thank you for tuning in, and be sure to come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.

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