Donald Trump’s lawyers ask judge to overturn ‘hush money’ conviction

Donald Trump’s lawyers ask judge to overturn ‘hush money’ conviction

By MICHAEL R. SISAK and JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK (AP) — A day after New York prosecutors said they would oppose efforts to throw out Donald Trump’s hush money conviction, the president-elect’s lawyers urged a judge to ignore them and settle the matter before he takes office in January.

Echoing their arguments since Trump’s victory, his lawyers said in a letter to Judge Juan M. Merchan on Wednesday that continuing the case would interfere with Trump’s preparations for his return to the White House and hamper his ability to lead the country.

The lawyers, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, said they would file documents formalizing their request for dismissal and asked Merchan for a deadline of Dec. 20, after special counsel Jack Smith’s team is expected to disclose the next steps that she plans to take on in two federal cases. against Trump.

Blanche and Bove urged Merchan to heed the will of the voters who re-elected Trump to office rather than the word of prosecutors, who are often referred to in court proceedings and filings as representing the “people of the State of New York.”

They warned of prolonged appeals that would overlap with Trump’s second term if what they saw as a “politically motivated and fatally flawed” case was not addressed urgently.

“On November 5, 2024, the people of the nation issued a mandate that supersedes the motivations of the (prosecutor’s) ‘people,’” Blanche and Bove wrote. “This case must be immediately dismissed.”

Trump tapped Blanche and Bove for high-ranking positions at the Justice Department.

Trump was convicted in May of falsifying business records to conceal a scheme to influence the 2016 election by paying money to cover up a story of extramarital sex. Trump denies these allegations.

In a court filing Tuesday, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office said it opposed any attempt to dismiss Trump’s case, but said it was open to potentially delaying his sentencing until ‘at the end of his second term.