- Missouri sought to delay Trump sentencing and lift gag order
- Trump is scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 18 in hush money case
The US Supreme Court refused to intervene in the New York criminal conviction of
The justices on Monday declined to let Missouri take the unusual step of suing New York at the nation’s highest court. Missouri had sought to temporarily block the former president’s sentencing on Sept. 18 and lift the gag order that bars him from talking about jurors in his case or court staff and their family members.
A majority of justices voted against letting Missouri file the complaint. Justices
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey wrote in an online post that it was “disappointing that the Supreme Court refused to exercise its constitutional responsibility to resolve state v. state disputes.”
Trump, the Republican nominee for president in the November election, was
In seeking to press its suit, Missouri contended the sentencing and gag order would harm the state’s voters by complicating the scheduling of campaign events and limiting what Trump can say.
New York urged the Supreme Court to reject the complaint, saying it consisted only of speculative and generalized grievances and didn’t allege any concrete harm to Missouri itself. New York also said the state doesn’t control the prosecutorial decisions of its local elected district attorneys, including Manhattan DA
A spokesperson for Bragg declined to comment on the Supreme Court order.
Missouri sought to invoke the Supreme Court’s so-called original jurisdiction, which lets states seeking to vindicate their sovereign interests sue one another directly at the nation’s highest tribunal as if it were a trial court.
Missouri had backing at the Supreme Court from Florida, Iowa, Alaska and Montana.
The case is Missouri v. New York, 22O159.
(Updates with statement from Bailey, along with Bragg spokesperson declining to comment.)
--With assistance from
To contact the reporters on this story:
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Steve Stroth, Peter Blumberg
© 2024 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Used with permission.