President-elect could have been sentenced to up to four years in prison over hush money payment to Stormy Daniels ...
Here's what is means when a court grants an unconditional discharge, as happened with President-elect Donald Trump's hush money case Jan. 10.
President-elect Donald Trump has been sentenced to unconditional discharge for his New York "hush money" trial conviction. CBS News' Jessica Levinson, Weijia Jiang and Katrina Kaufman have analysis on ...
Donald Trump was sentenced an "unconditional discharge" by Judge Juan Merchan on Friday in his hush money case, and will enter office as a felon.
According to New York State law, an unconditional discharge means that Trump will have the felonies on his official record but will not face jail time, fines or probation for his actions. However, it ...
Cases that have ended with an unconditional discharge include a lawyer who was found guilty of misdemeanor charges for falsifying business records, a lawyer who failed to pay taxes and individuals ...
The president-elect's sentence allows the guilty verdict to stand — but it is highly unusual for this type of crime.
Ahead of President-elect Donald Trump’s hush money sentencing in New York, a state judge has said he plans for a no-penalty sentence called an unconditional discharge, but what exactly is it?
The judge in President-elect Donald Trump's New York criminal hush money case indicated Friday that he intends to sentence ...
This week on The News Quiz, Andy Zaltzman is joined by Nish Kumar, Sara Barron, Glenn Moore and Zing Tsjeng to unpack the ...
Trump said his criminal trial and conviction has “been a very terrible experience” and insisted he committed no crime as he appeared virtually Friday to be sentenced.
Judge Juan Merchan has sentenced Donald Trump to an unconditional discharge in the historic hush money case. What will this mean for the president-elect?