Sorry that page is no longer available, but I was able to grab some of the text. I hope you have time to read it because it will save a lot of questions when Trump is sentenced on Sept. 18th.
Former President Donald Trump now stands to be sentenced on September 18 on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to aid his position in the 2016 presidential race.
Trump's court case
In order to decide upon a sentence, judges need flexibility and a variety of options to deal with the particular defendant and particular survivors in front of them.
How the judge could rule
The judge could sentence Trump to prison for up to four years, but he does not have to. Other options include community-based sentences during which Trump would be at liberty"including probation, during which Trump would be supervised by a probation officer, or conditional discharge, during which he would not. If given either probation or conditional discharge, he must follow conditions set by a judge, which could include reparation or restitution, public service, or "avoid[ing] injurious and vicious habits" (perhaps like accessing certain social media platforms). The judge's task is to choose from these various sentencing options, or even create a combination of them, to craft a sentence that will do its best to demonstrate accountability and reduce the likelihood that Trump will reoffend.
The only venue Trump has left for sure is Judge Merchan's courtroom on Sept. 18. That's probably good for one or two news cycles. Especially since he's already warned us that he plans to appeal the verdict itself ~ not the sentence.
We might want to prepare ourselves for Judge Merchan's decision. It likely won't be prison or anything else that would smack as election interference. I'm thinking strict supervised probation with some heavy fines for the 11 times Trump violated the Judges gag orders.