NEW YORK — A judge has postponed a decision on whether to undo President-elect Donald Trump's hush money conviction as prosecutors consider how to proceed in light of last week's election and his lawyers argue for dismissal so he can run the country.
The postponement announced Tuesday comes at a dramatic and dynamic point in the New York case, which focused on how Trump accounted for payments to a porn actor before the 2016 election and produced a first-ever conviction of a former commander-in-chief.
Sentencing had been set for Nov. 26. But Manhattan prosecutors now say they're reassessing, and they appear open to the possibility that the proceedings can't go as planned.
''These are unprecedented circumstances,'' Assistant District Attorney Matthew Colangelo wrote in an email to the court. He said prosecutors need to consider how to balance the ''competing interests'' of the jury's verdict and the presidency.
Trump lawyer Emil Bove, meanwhile, argued the case must be thrown out altogether ''to avoid unconstitutional impediments to President Trump's ability to govern.''
The messages were exchanged over the weekend and released Tuesday, when Judge Juan M. Merchan had been set to rule on Trump lawyers' earlier request to toss his conviction for a different reason — because of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling this summer on presidential immunity.
Instead, Merchan told Trump's lawyers he'd halt proceedings and delay the ruling until at least Nov. 19 so that prosecutors can suggest a way forward. Both sides agreed to the one-week postponement.
Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung heralded the delay. He said in a statement that the president-elect's win makes it ''abundantly clear that Americans want an immediate end to the weaponization of our justice system, including this case, which should have never been filed.''