The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday denied President-elect Donald J. Trump’s emergency bid to halt his criminal sentencing in New York, all but ensuring it would proceed as planned on Friday.
After a series of unsuccessful legal maneuvers in New York State courts, the former and future president had hoped to prevail before a friendlier audience: a Supreme Court with a 6-to-3 conservative majority that includes three justices Mr. Trump appointed during his first term.
But the court opted to stay out of the case for now, despite having come to Mr. Trump’s rescue in a string of other recent matters. In July, the justices granted former presidents broad immunity for their official acts, undermining a separate criminal case against Mr. Trump in Washington.
The court’s show of independence in the New York case — less than two weeks before the inauguration — capped the former and future president’s frenzied campaign to stave off the embarrassing spectacle of a sentencing. After months of delay, the sentencing will now formalize Mr. Trump’s conviction, cementing his status as the first felon to occupy the Oval Office.
Almost any other defendant would have been sentenced by now. But ever since a jury convicted Mr. Trump in May on all 34 felony counts of falsifying business records, Mr. Trump’s lawyers have lodged a flurry of filings seeking to unwind the conviction, or at least block the sentencing.
They intensified the effort even after the judge overseeing the case recently signaled that he would spare Mr. Trump jail time, or any other substantive punishment, making any sentencing largely symbolic.
The sentencing is scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m. Friday in the same Lower Manhattan courtroom where Mr. Trump’s trial took place last spring. The president-elect has indicated he plans to appear virtually.
This is a developing story and will be updated.