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Special treatment? How judges are handling Trump ahead of election.

This was supposed to be the week.

Former President Donald Trump’s legal travails were about to reach their first dramatic conclusion. Fifty days out from a presidential election in which he is the Republican nominee, Mr. Trump would be sentenced in a Manhattan courtroom. 

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The U.S. justice system is meant to treat every defendant equally. But when that defendant is both a former president and a presidential candidate, courts are showing the flexibility that accompanies foundational principles.

So what would the punishment be? Prison time? A wrist slap? 

The answer, the norm in Mr. Trump’s cases of late, is that America will have to wait. The sentencing is now scheduled for late November, after a decision by New York state Judge Juan Merchan. 

The cases have tasked courts with an unprecedented challenge: how to accommodate this unique defendant’s unique circumstances while upholding the expectation that every defendant is treated equally under the law. But they’ve also revealed that the justice system’s principles have pliability. 

All this matters because of concerns that Mr. Trump is being treated too harshly, or too lightly, and what that could mean for democratic norms. 

“No other former president of the United States has ever been criminally prosecuted, so he’s unique in that way,” says David Alan Sklansky of Stanford Law School. The question, he adds, is whether judges are ensuring “that the law applies equally to everyone.”

This was supposed to be the week.

Former President Donald Trump’s legal travails were about to reach their first dramatic conclusion. Fifty days out from a presidential election in which he is again the Republican nominee, Mr. Trump would be sentenced in a Manhattan courtroom. 

Prosecuting a former leader is perhaps the ultimate stress test of a democracy’s justice system. So what would the punishment be? Prison time? A slap on the wrist? 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The U.S. justice system is meant to treat every defendant equally. But when that defendant is both a former president and a presidential candidate, courts are showing the flexibility that accompanies foundational principles.

The answer, as has become the norm in Mr. Trump’s cases, is that America will have to wait. The sentencing is now scheduled for late November, after a decision last week by New York state Judge Juan Merchan. The ruling is symptomatic of the pressures judges are weighing in all four criminal cases against the former and possibly future president.

The cases have tasked courts with an unprecedented challenge: how to accommodate this unique defendant’s unique circumstances while upholding the bedrock expectation that every defendant is treated equally under the law. But they’ve also revealed that the justice system’s foundational principles have some pliability. 

All this matters because of ongoing concerns that Mr. Trump is being – or will be – treated either too harshly or too lightly, and what that could mean for democratic norms and the rule of law.

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