Will there be another hush money trial against Donald Trump after he leaves office?
The possibility is raised by the president’s pending appeal, which was the subject of a hearing Wednesday. But the issue at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit wasn’t whether Trump’s state conviction will be overturned, but where his attempt to overturn it will proceed: in state court or federal court, with the president pushing for the federal route.
The hearing left it unclear what the three-judge panel will decide. But regardless of where the appeal moves forward, the Supreme Court can have the last word. And that last word could be that Trump deserves a new trial, based on its immunity ruling last summer.
Regardless of where the appeal moves forward, the Supreme Court can have the last word.
Before the immunity ruling came down last year, a Manhattan jury found Trump guilty of falsifying business records, for covering up a 2016 election conspiracy involving hush money paid to adult film star Stormy Daniels. Trump’s former fixer Michael Cohen paid her to stay quiet during the 2016 presidential campaign about her claim that she had sex with Trump, which he denied. He won the election.
The Supreme Court declined to halt Trump’s sentencing before he retook the White House after winning the 2024 election. Splitting 5-4, the justices said Trump’s argument that evidence introduced at the trial violated the immunity ruling can be addressed in his appeal. The majority also cited the fact that he was going to receive an “unconditional discharge,” a penalty-free sentence as a courtesy to the then-incoming president, which he received before taking office again.
Now back in office, Trump is pressing to undo the historic conviction. He’s represented by new private lawyers because he named his lawyers who lost the hush money trial, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, to top posts in the Justice Department (which is backing Trump’s removal bid).








