Donald Trump's sentencing in his New York criminal case on Friday closes out a series of prosecutions that he largely beat by retaking the U.S. presidency, though he is still fighting to avoid paying hundreds of millions of dollars for losses in civil lawsuits.
Trump himself has pledged several first-day plans, including hitting Mexico, Canada and China with import tariffs and pardoning Jan. 6 rioters.
After Trump vowed to put 25% tariffs on all imports from Mexico when he returns to the White House in less than two weeks, Sheinbaum said Mexico will retaliate in kind.
This’ll be among the least suspenseful of all sentencings. Judge Juan Merchan has announced in advance — quite pragmatically, actually — that he intends to sentence Trump to an unconditional discharge. To translate that bit of legal jargon: nothing.
ABC News has been plagued by a series of embarrassing headlines from David Muir's clothespin debacle to legal drama surrounding Sunny Hostin's husband.
Justice Juan Merchan will soon sentence President-elect Donald Trump in a Manhattan courtroom after his guilty verdict on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. Merchan has already stated that he intends to sentence Trump to “unconditional ...
Democratic Sen. John Fetterman accepted President-elect Trump's invitation to visit him at his Mar-a-Lago club, the senator said in a statement provided to ABC News.