Jan 3, 2025
Donald Trump Officially Evades Prison Time!
President-elect Donald J. Trump’s hush money felony conviction was upheld by Judge Juan M. Merchan.
- 14 minutes
Today, a judge in New York upheld
President Trump's criminal conviction
in the hush money trial.
That is the good news. It has been upheld.
The bad news is literally
everything else about it, because there is
seemingly going to be no penalties.
[00:00:15]
The conviction is upheld,
but with it will come no prison time.
The real, the only consequence
that would have really mattered.
Maybe there will be some fines,
maybe there'll be some
community service or something.
But he's not going to be spending
any time behind bars, unfortunately.
And this is a decision by Judge Juan
Merchan, who I heard was very conflicted
[00:00:35]
over and over, super conflicted, and yet
not going to be sending him to to jail.
The judge indicated that he favored
a so-called unconditional discharge
of Trump's sentence, a rare and lenient
alternative to jail and probation.
He set a sentencing date of January 10th
and ordered Trump to appear
[00:00:53]
either in person or virtually.
I wonder which one he'll choose.
So that is, of course,
just a week and a half, just ten days
before the actual inauguration,
which means that since it will be upheld,
Donald Trump will be sworn in as president
and as the first president to be a felon.
[00:01:09]
At the same time, I sort of have just
taken that for granted, but I guess it is
possible that the judge could have vacated
the actual conviction as well.
Now, we don't know what might be left over
for the judge to do
at that actual sentencing.
But what we know won't happen
is the roughly four years in prison
[00:01:26]
that Donald Trump was theoretically facing
as a result of the hush money trial.
And I want to give you just a little bit
more details of what the judge wrote in an
18 page decision, while Marchand said,
while this court is a matter of law,
must not make any determination
on sentencing prior to giving the parties
and defendants opportunity to be heard,
[00:01:44]
it seems proper at this juncture
to make known the court's inclination to
not impose any sentence of incarceration,
a sentence authorized by the conviction,
but one the people concede they no longer
view as a practicable recommendation.
A sentence of an unconditional discharge
appears to be the most viable solution
[00:02:01]
to ensure finality and allow defendant
to pursue his appellate options.
Which look, I guess there's some sense
to that, but I love that.
Like the focus at the end there
is that we have to make sure we do right
by the defendant who did the crime.
[00:02:17]
We don't have to do right by,
I don't know, I guess, the people who were
harmed by the crime, the people who are
concerned about the precedent being set.
All of the other potential stakeholders
in this issue, it's mostly just
to make sure that he's okay.
He gets to be president.
He gets to do his a his appellate thing.
[00:02:33]
Now, look, we've talked obviously
quite a bit over the last couple of years
about the variety of different allegations
against Donald Trump.
And everyone can disagree about how they
rank the charges against him.
I consider the hush money stuff
to be relatively low priority
[00:02:48]
compared to some of the others.
But it's just it's funny that,
like all up and down the whatever your
list of priorities is, it's just one way
or another lack of accountability, lack
of accountability, Lack of accountability.
I saw was a reaction from you.
[00:03:05]
What do you make
of what the judge decided?
I know that we'd all like to think
that nobody is above the law, and the law
applies equally to everyone but the
practical matter, and I think that's
what the judge was trying to get at,
is that you can't put the president,
the sitting president of the United
[00:03:23]
States of America, in prison for paying
prostitutes with his campaign money,
like it's just not practical to do so.
And, you know, when you consider
the crime, I honestly think if you polled
every single American on this,
like, do you think Donald Trump
[00:03:40]
should go to prison for this crime?
Most people would say no.
You know, you know, whatever the slap
on the wrist ends up being is whatever.
I do agree with you, John.
This is kind of the most weak sauce
of all of the charges, some of them
way more serious than this one,
particularly in places like Georgia.
[00:03:58]
But you know, I'm not.
I can't pretend that I'm mad at a judge
for recognizing that jailing the sitting
president of America for this specifically
would just be, you know,
it would just be seen as very partizan.
[00:04:17]
And I actually think
that there is accountability.
I mean, thanks to the judge keeping
this felony, Donald Trump will forever be
the first convicted felon
to be president of the United States.
That will always be around him.
And if you want to talk about sort of
precedent and holding people accountable
[00:04:33]
based on the falsifying business records,
felony, the lowest level of felony.
And according to New York's own records,
90% of all people who are convicted
on these charges, if they're a first time
offender, they don't get incarceration.
The reason that Allen Weisselberg,
the CFO of the Trump Organization,
[00:04:51]
and Michael Cohen got prison time
is because there were other charges
as well tax fraud and wire fraud.
But just on this particular misdemeanor,
even though it's 34 counts, in my view,
Donald Trump is getting what 90%
of the people in his position get.
So I don't have a problem with that.
[00:05:07]
And I'm just thrilled that the judge
kept the felonies, because now, to me,
history is more important than whether we
actually get the real picture
of Donald Trump in an orange jumpsuit.
Yeah, you're right.
And we're actually going to go in a moment
to the argument that the judge made
[00:05:24]
for why that should be maintained,
because obviously Donald Trump would have
preferred to get rid of that as well.
But I want to say, like,
because we're talking about
how he's making history, he's going
to be the first felon and everything.
And, and I remember something
that several months ago, I think Mondale
[00:05:39]
said on the show, and he pointed
out that he doesn't like that people are
doing a lot of what he sees as like,
you know, demonizing someone for having
been through, you know, they committed
a crime, you know, and all of that.
We shouldn't necessarily be demonizing
people just for being felons.
And as a general matter,
I certainly agree with that.
[00:05:56]
I've, you know, I've advocated for people
to have their ability to vote restored
after or even still while they're serving.
I think the thing for me that makes it
something to be pointed out in this case
is this isn't a matter of like, a person
who committed a crime, paid their,
[00:06:13]
you know, their dues to society,
made amends, turned their life around,
and, you know, like they committed a crime
when they were younger or something.
Or maybe we could have someone that, like,
they committed some sort of felony doing
an environmental protest or something.
Like, it's not one of those situations.
[00:06:29]
Donald Trump has never taken
accountability for this or any
of the other crimes that he committed.
This is a thing
that he didn't do 50 years ago.
He a lot of this crime
was committed while he was president.
It was in the aftermath of him
being elected the first time around.
He's never admitted to it.
He's never taken responsibility for it.
[00:06:46]
That's the thing that really bothers me.
And in addition to never personally
taking responsibility,
theoretically some of the penalties
or fines might still go through in the.
In the case of the E, Jean Carroll,
we had an update on that recently.
So that's the thing
that really bothers me.
But but I want to lay out the argument
for why the label of A felon should
[00:07:03]
stick around as provided by the judge.
Mershon said to dismiss the indictment
and set aside the jury verdict
would not serve the concerns set forth by
the Supreme Court in its handful of cases
addressing presidential immunity.
Nor would it serve the rule of law.
On the contrary, such decision
would undermine the rule of law
[00:07:20]
in immeasurable ways.
And so he rejected the Trump legal
argument that the case should be dismissed
on the grounds of presidential immunity,
saying he called those claims a novel
theory of presidential immunity that would
amount to abuse of his legal discretion.
Quote, the defendant
has presented no valid argument
[00:07:37]
to convince this court otherwise.
And it almost seems sort of unfair
that you'd expect Donald Trump
or his legal team to do that,
like the impression they've been given
by their own personal experience
throughout all of these cases
and by what the Supreme Court has said is,
look, whatever it is, whether it's a crime
you committed before you became president,
[00:07:55]
once you were president,
that had to do with the official duties
of being president.
That didn't we're going to come
up with something that protects you,
something that covers you.
And so, of course, Donald Trump thinks
that he doesn't have to make a good case.
Everything else just gets set aside.
Why shouldn't this too?
And so frustrating.
[00:08:11]
But David, I want to give you a chance
to jump in on this.
Well, he's cornered, right.
Because these are actions that happened
during the campaign in 2016, just a couple
of weeks before the November election,
in 2016, he made these payments.
He allegedly falsified the business
records so that the money could get
to Stormy Daniels, an adult film star.
[00:08:28]
And so, you know, I think it's I think
it's great that our system is holding
somebody accountable in the sense that yet
maybe it's okay to pay off porn stars
if you're a if you're a candidate,
but you better do it in terms of on the up
and up in terms of your own finances.
It better be money out of your pocket
and not money that should go
[00:08:44]
to the taxpayers because it's
some sort of business expense.
So I do think that look, Donald Trump
yeah, he's going to get he's going
to get off for everything else
because of actions while he was president.
And he's not being charged with lying
about this, even though everybody believes
that he lied when he said he didn't
pay her, but he made those statements
[00:09:01]
while he was president.
So maybe he's immune for making, you know,
false statements while he's president.
But in my view, he is being held
accountable for actions that are important
to our not only our judicial system,
but also our campaign system.
Yeah.
You know, in a lot of ways, when the court
put that immunity ruling out there, to me
[00:09:21]
it just felt like they were codifying
something that was actually true.
Meaning that a president
kind of can't commit crimes
in his capacity as president.
Like, what do I mean by that?
Take Barack Obama, for instance, who,
you know, made the unprecedented decision
[00:09:38]
to drone strike an American citizen.
And then a few weeks later,
drone strike the guy's son.
No court, no court date, no arrest,
no warrant was read, no anything.
It was just basically an extrajudicial
killing of an American citizen.
[00:09:54]
And like in any other context,
like that would be seen as a crime
that would be seen as somebody
acting outside the means of the law.
But like what the court is saying is like,
no, when you're president, you're afforded
special protections so that you can go out
and freely be president.
[00:10:12]
I think the problem with Donald Trump
is that, like, he's kind of a unique
figure in how nakedly and transparently
corrupt the guy is.
And so it kind of just flies
in the face of this as an idea.
I think even somebody like Richard Nixon,
who we know
[00:10:28]
committed crimes while in office.
Like in public,
he had this presentation of this, like,
really like, you know, buttoned up guy
and, like, law abiding citizen and like,
you know, hyper law abiding citizen.
Donald Trump doesn't he, like, dispenses
with all of those, like, pretenses.
[00:10:46]
And I think that's the difficulty
we're facing here, where it's like most
presidents seem like, you know,
law abiding citizens on the outside,
and therefore they should be
able to freely flout every single
international law and even American law
while they're in office.
[00:11:03]
Donald Trump seems
to be doing it in the reverse.
That's a good point.
Yeah, I think look, as a general rule,
I think it would be great to at least try,
like as an experiment.
What would it be like if our politicians
were at least a little bit concerned
about being locked up?
If they commit crimes, whether they're
a Republican or a Democrat?
[00:11:20]
We've gone a couple hundred years
with them, never worrying about it.
Let's try.
Maybe if they were at least at least look,
in the case of these other presidents,
they at least tried to link it
in some way to their official duties.
Donald Trump's running around
stealing documents and sending mobs
[00:11:35]
at the white House and everything,
like there's no case to be made there.
And and on this particular crime, while I
maintain that, I put it below, you know,
the fake electors on January 6th and,
and probably the classified documents
as well for me, like the fact
that he's doing the affair or whatever,
I don't particularly care about that.
[00:11:52]
Even if you if you argue that this is
in some way money for sex, I personally
think that basically all sex work should
be legalized and regulated or whatever.
It is still worthwhile pointing out
that even if you believe
that Donald Trump and Matt Gaetz, it
wasn't when they committed these crimes.
But for me, it's if we're going
to have a political system
[00:12:11]
where the only people that have a chance
of being notable political figures
are millionaires and billionaires,
and they're just going to buy
every election or whatever.
At the very least.
Can we find out what they did?
Could we know that if we make it totally
legal for them to flout campaign finance
laws by just paying off everyone to hide
all of the skeletons in their closet,
[00:12:30]
then we don't even get disclosure
on their various weird crimes
and pasts and everything.
And and I think
that we are owed at least that.
It bothers me, I understand it,
but it bothers me that the MAGA movement,
the people in it, don't care that
they're the ones he was trying to pull,
[00:12:49]
like the wool over the head of.
It's not like, oh no,
if the Democrats find out I had an affair,
they won't vote for me.
They never were going to.
He was paying money to make sure
that people who trusted him never found
out that he wasn't the guy they had been,
that they'd been claimed that he was,
[00:13:06]
and so that should bother them more.
Like, I don't know what crime
Bernie like in a similar version
would have to cover up.
But I like to think that if he paid
someone off so that I never found
out what he did, that would bother me.
But it doesn't seem to bother them,
which also bothers me.
I think the system worked though,
because we are finding out these things.
[00:13:23]
We are finding out about Matt Gaetz
through the congressional report.
We are finding out
what happened with Donald Trump,
in part because of whistleblowers
like Michael Cohen and the media.
What we're just not getting is we're
not getting them going off to prison.
And I would argue it's more important
that we actually get the information so
the public can decide whether Donald Trump
is a laughing stock, which I think he is.
[00:13:42]
Does he need to go to prison?
I mean, sure, it might it might might
feel great to us, but to me,
it's more important for the information
to be in front of the American people,
whether it's Donald Trump,
whether it's Bernie Sanders, anybody else.
We're going to get the information.
And in that sense,
I think the system has worked.
Yeah.
And to just to, end off on John's
point there about Trump's fans
[00:14:01]
and why they might not care about this,
I think there's just a general sense
that all these other guys who came before,
who were allegedly squeaky clean,
you know, Joe Biden, Barack Obama,
George W Bush before he got in office,
of course, some people would say,
[00:14:18]
well, those guys didn't get the job done.
It's not as if being squeaky clean
is a prerequisite to actually
delivering the goods for people.
And I can understand
not that I agree with them.
I can understand why people might be
willing to make an exception for somebody
who they think, I think quite mistakenly,
but they think is going to make
[00:14:37]
a difference for them while in office.
Thanks for watching The Young Turks
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