File: Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump attends his criminal trial at Manhattan Criminal Court in New York City, on May 30, 2024. (Photo by Seth Wenig / POOL / AFP)
New York: Donald Trump's team said he won a major legal victory on Friday after a judge in the US president-elect's criminal hush money case ordered that sentencing be delayed indefinitely as the Republican prepares his White House return
"The joint application for a stay of sentencing is granted to the extent that the November 26, 2024 date is adjourned," Judge Juan Merchan said in an order in New York.
Trump's legal team cited a landmark July ruling from the Supreme Court that gives presidents sweeping immunity for official acts committed while in office as justification for their request.
"In a decisive win for President Trump, the hoax Manhattan Case is now fully stayed and sentencing is adjourned," Trump's communications director Steven Cheung said in a statement.
"President Trump won a landslide victory as the American People have issued a mandate to return him to office and dispose of all remnants of the Witch Hunt cases."
Trump was convicted of 34 felony counts in May after a jury found he had fraudulently manipulated business records to cover up an alleged sexual encounter with a porn star ahead of the 2016 election.
Prosecutors argued that concealing the alleged tryst was intended to help him win his first run for the White House.
'Motion to dismiss'
Ahead of the election in November, Trump's lawyers moved to have the case thrown out in light of the Supreme Court decision, a move which prosecutors firmly rejected.
On Friday, Merchan granted Trump leave to seek to have the conviction thrown out, likely meaning several further hearings that could be delayed once Trump is sworn in.
New York state prosecutors previously acknowledged in correspondence with the court the "unprecedented circumstances," and called for the competing interests of the jury's verdict and Trump's election to be balanced.
The Republican president-elect has repeatedly derided the hush money case as a witch hunt.