Appeals Court Allows Trump To Revive Effort
The appeals court’s decision doesn’t clear Trump, but it gives his legal team a vital opening.
By questioning whether the lower court properly weighed his bid to move the hush money case into federal court,
the panel signaled that the impact of the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling is far from settled.
If a federal judge ultimately agrees that key acts were shielded by presidential immunity or that the case belonged in federal court,
Trump’s historic New York conviction could be weakened—or potentially unraveled.
Meanwhile, the political drama cuts both ways.
New York Attorney General Letitia James, who built her brand pursuing Trump,
now faces her own criminal trial over alleged mortgage fraud tied to a Norfolk investment property.
With prosecutors seeking up to 60 years in prison and millions in fines,
the spectacle of Trump and his chief antagonist both under criminal scrutiny turns their long-running feud into a stark,
personal reckoning over power, credibility, and the limits of lawfare in American politics.