In an extraordinary turn, a judge has set President-elect Donald Trump's sentencing in his hush money case for Jan. 10 — little over a week before he's due to return to the White House — but indicated he wouldn't be jailed. Judge Juan M. Merchan issued the ruling Friday. He signaled in a written decision that he'd sentence the former and future president to what's known as a conditional discharge, in which a case is closed without jail time, a fine or probation. The development nevertheless leaves Trump on course to be the first president to take office convicted of felony crimes.

Former President Donald Trump's sentencing in his hush money case has been postponed until at least Sept. 18. The judge agreed Tuesday to put it off while weighing the possible impact of a new Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity. Trump had been scheduled to face sentencing July 11 on his New York conviction on felony charges of falsifying business records. He denies any wrongdoing. A Supreme Court ruling Monday granted broad immunity protections to presidents, while also restricting prosecutors from citing any official acts as evidence in trying to prove a president's unofficial actions violated the law.

President Joe Biden has laid into his likely opponent in November's election, Donald Trump, for being convicted by a Manhattan jury on 34 felony counts related to hush money payments. Biden says "this campaign has entered uncharted territory." Speaking Monday at a fundraiser in Greenwich, Connecticut, Biden said the former president "wants you to believe it's all rigged. Nothing could be further from the truth." He accused Trump of "attacking both the judiciary and elections system as rigged" and said such rhetoric was "reckless and dangerous and downright irresponsible." Biden added: "This isn't the same Trump that got elected in 2016. He's worse."

Donald Trump's lawyers are pressing former attorney Michael Cohen on his criminal history and past lies as they work to convince jurors not to believe the star witness' pivotal testimony in the hush money trial. Cohen was back in the hot seat Thursday a third day of testimony. Defense lawyers are painting Trump's fixer-turned-foe as a spurned former employee who will say whatever it takes to put the presumptive Republican presidential nominee behind bars. Cohen's cross-examination is a crucial moment for Trump's team to try to chip away at Cohen's credibility, which could determine the former president's fate in the case. Trump has pleaded not guilty and denied any wrongdoing.