The Justice Department Quietly Ends Reprosecution of Man Who Received Clemency From Trump
Philip Esformes was sentenced for charges on which a jury hung. After receiving a commutation, the federal government vowed to try to put him back in prison.

A Florida man accused of facilitating an illegal health care scheme has been spared additional prison time, ending the Justice Department's attempt to reprosecute him after his sentence was commuted by former President Donald Trump.
Philip Esformes on Thursday pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and was sentenced to time served, with prosecutors agreeing to dismiss the remaining five counts. It's a quiet conclusion to a controversial prosecution that saw the federal government resuscitate the criminal case against him not long after he'd spent four and a half years behind bars and was released from prison in December 2020, despite that he had already been sentenced for the same counts on which they sought to retry him.
In 2016, Esformes—who owned a network of skilled nursing and assisted living facilities—was arrested, held without bond in solitary confinement, and charged with over two dozen counts in connection with allegedly bribing doctors to secure patients for his establishments, where the government says he billed Medicare and Medicaid for unnecessary treatments. But while Esformes was convicted on 20 of those counts, including money laundering, the jury deadlocked on six of the most serious charges.
A judge sentenced him, however, as if he'd been convicted of them, in a little-known practice that often offends people's basic impressions of the protections built into the U.S. criminal justice system. Particularly in federal court, if a defendant receives a split verdict—a conviction on one or some counts, with an acquittal or a hung jury on the remaining charges—a judge may punish them as if they were found guilty of everything.
Esformes' case was somewhat timely in that "acquitted conduct sentencing," as it's typically called, has come under particular scrutiny in recent years. The Supreme Court has previously ruled that judges are permitted to consider counts on which a jury rendered a not guilty verdict, or by extension on which they deadlocked, if he or she decides by a "preponderance of the evidence" that the defendant is, in fact, guilty. That standard of proof is considerably lower than the one employed by juries, which are instructed to convict only if the panel concludes the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Judge Robert Scola of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida was explicit that Esformes' 20-year sentence was in part based on the charges for which a jury did not reach a verdict. (Esformes was also ordered to forfeit $38.7 million and to pay $5.5 million in restitution, which were not absolved with the clemency order handed down by Trump.) "I don't know what more you are going to get out of the case if you try those additional counts," he told the prosecution at a restitution hearing in November 2019. There was no utility in a retrial, Scola said, because he had already baked the charges on which a jury hung into the prison sentence he'd given Esformes two months prior.
The federal government agreed. "Certainly, Your Honor, if the case comes back on appeal, we would ask the hung counts to run with the appeal so the whole thing could be retried," Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Young responded. "We have entered into agreements to dismiss the hung counts if the defendant's appeal is dismissed, and we would agree to do so here."
But after Esformes received clemency in December 2020, the Justice Department reneged on its promise, pledging to retry Esformes on an indictment that isolated the hung counts for which he'd already been sentenced and received a commutation.
The move was not without criticism. "This defendant, as much as you might not like him…do you think he should be punished two or three times for the same conduct?" Brett Tolman, the former U.S. Attorney for the District of Utah and now the executive director of Right on Crime, asked me last year. "I don't find anybody who thinks that's fair." Both Sen. Mike Lee (R–Utah) and Rep. Andy Biggs (R–Ariz.) sent letters urging Attorney General Merrick Garland to change course, accusing his department of politicizing the clemency process. The Subcommittee on Crime and Federal Government Surveillance called a congressional hearing centered around Esformes' case in June 2023, during which both sides of the political aisle sparred over a "two-tiered system of justice."
The reaction, however, did not fall entirely neatly along partisan lines. "If you walk through the facts, it's clearly double jeopardy," Jessica Jackson, the left-leaning attorney and activist who helped spearhead the advocacy around the landmark FIRST STEP Act, told Reason last year. "The judge on the record at sentencing used the hung conduct as part of his sentence….That sentence was then commuted by President Trump. In my mind, while it's a novel area of legal precedent, this is double jeopardy by the letter of the law, really."
The root of the legal issue here—whether or not judges should be able to sentence defendants for crimes they weren't convicted of—continues to be a subject of intense debate, the climax of which coincided with Esformes' reprosecution. In June of last year, just over a week after the congressional hearing dedicated to his case, the Supreme Court declined to hear a petition from Dayonta McClinton, who was sentenced to 19 years in prison after he helped rob a CVS Pharmacy. "The driving force" of that sentence, the judge said, was for killing his friend, Malik Perry, after a jury acquitted McClinton of causing that very death.
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That's pretty damned disingenuous!
-- sounds like the feds came to their senses and dropped their reprosecution.
-- Whoops! No, they got a guilty plea.
That’s pretty damned disingenuous!
[Tilts hand]
It says they ended it, not dropped it.
"Particularly in federal court, if a defendant receives a split verdict—a conviction on one or some counts, with an acquittal or a hung jury on the remaining charges—a judge may punish them as if they were found guilty of everything."
Juries are nothing butt window dressing! Treat your jury duty accordingly! Or at least, treat your "honest" answers during jury selection accordingly, and then practice (unspoken is best; find other reasons) JURY NULLIFICATION to the hilt!!!
Just another old white guy, with the aggravating factor of being from Florida.
Lock him up.
They'd have forgotten all about this guy if Trump hadn't commuted his sentence.
Not true. They threatened this long before Trump even heard the guy's name.
National Socialism will do anything to hold on to socialized medicine. To them it's the key to banning birth control, banning drugs, beer and cigarettes and instituting eugenics laws only a nazi could love. But it is a vote-getter from an aging population bled white by cartel-forming restrictions on the practice of medicine.
Clearly we need to enforce the Comstock Act.
After running on the promise to end Obamacare, the Republicans had the votes to end Obamacare, and did not end Obamacare.
One Uniparty to rule us all and in the darkness bind us.
Meanwhile, watch out for the Vivek hit pieces coming your way at Reason.
Vivek Ramaswamy Criticizes Koch Network For Funding Haley
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/vivek-ramaswamy-criticizes-koch-network-funding-haley
“I think it’s very disappointing that that network has thrown its support behind a candidate who does not even stand for the principles that they claim to embody,”
He cited Ms. Haley’s stance on Ukraine funding and her call for an end to anonymous social media accounts as examples of proposals that are inconsistent with those principles.
President’s Trump’s views, he argued, are “far more aligned with what AFP claims to stand for.”
He also lauded Chris Maidment, a former AFP staffer who left the network after it threw its weight behind Ms. Haley. Mr. Maidment was fired by AFP for publicly speaking out against its backing for Ms. Haley.
“Nikki Haley is totally sideways on [AFP]’s foreign policy stance. She’s anti-free speech,” Mr. Maidment wrote on X on Dec. 1, 2023, as part of a thread distancing himself from AFP’s Haley endorsement.
“I congratulate the guys like Chris Maidment or others who have worked there who have been vocal and brave enough to criticize their own decision, saying it betrayed their own principles. It'll be people like that that can actually restore that sanity and that sense of purpose,” Mr. Ramaswamy said.
But he stressed that “people make mistakes.”
“I invite them to reconsider their decision ... And you know what? I’m optimistic that, with some forethought, they actually will,” Mr. Ramaswamy said.
Mr. Ramaswamy has a libertarian past and some libertarian-inflected stances to this day. He voted for the Libertarian Party’s presidential candidate, Michael Badnarik, in the 2004 presidential election. In 2023, he campaigned at the Porcupine Freedom Festival, an annual gathering for libertarians in the northwoods of New Hampshire.
Yeah, we all noticed how silly that endorsement from Koch was. No problems with Vivek calling them out.
Vivek = Sandra?
I was repeatedly given assurances by one of them that Ronnie D. was the better candidate than Trump and that neither one stood a chance in the general election unless Biden put boots on the ground in Ukraine. So, no.
what else does he know & about whom?
Speaking of prosecutors, looks like big fat Fani is a naughty nanny.
https://technofog.substack.com/p/new-cell-phone-records-prove-da-willis
New Cell Phone Records Prove DA Willis Affair
Late-night rendezvous started before Wade's appointment
Wade and Willis exchanged “over 2000 voice calls and just under 12,000 texts messages” from January 1, 2021 through November 30, 2021.
Geolocation data indicates Wade was at DA Willis’s condo "at least 35 occasions”. The data revealed he was “stationary” at the condo “and not in transit.”
Wade’s visits to DA Willis’s condo were corroborated by texts and phone calls. According to the report: On November 29, 2021, “following a call from Ms. Willis at 11:32 PM, while the call continued, [Wade’s] phone left the East Cobb area just after midnight and arrived within the geofence located on the Dogwood address [the condo] at 12:43 AM on November 30, 2021. The phone remained there until 4:55 AM.”
On September 11, 2021, Wade arrived at the condo address at approximately 10:45 PM. He left the address at 3:28 AM and arrived at his Marietta residence at 4:05 AM. He then texted DA Willis at 4:20 AM.
but but but all those other (D) liars were protected why am I out to dry?
Cell towers are racist.
I would've figured that a bunch of vertical shafts that beam out and keep records of the majority of booty calls past and present would be more patriarchal than racist.
It is more amusing that Trump's legal staff had the phone records in hand when they questioned both those scumbags and got their lying replies on record, under oath; perjury.
If you think this is a bizarro legal case, there once was an opposition party Congress that tried to remove a President by impeachment AFTER he left office at the end of his term!
Never happened.
Honk honk gov’na shrike!
Trump was still president at the time of the second impeachment, a fact of which Iwanna Newname appears unaware.
And the trial happened AFTER he left office.
Don't bother that arrogant piece of shit with facts!
These prosecutors and judges need to be in PRISON. He was charged, hung jury, convicted unlawfully (as a hung jury is an acquittal by defintion). He was pardoned and then charges brought back against him for the same crime he was imprisoned for?
SO explain to me how the prosecutors and the judges involved are not literally HUNG BY THE LIMB OF AN OAK TREE for violating one of the MOST FUNDAMENTAL laws in our country....DOUBLE JEOPARDY.
ANY prosecutor or judge that allows a trial to exist wherein the person was tried and did any time on the charges should be literally LYNCHED until dead.
as a hung jury is an acquittal by defintion
Nobody take legal advice from this person.
It seems everyday the injustice coming out of this system gets worse. Sentencing someone for crimes they are not convicted of should never have been acceptable. Placing people on trial multiple times for the same crime was never to be allowed. Prosecuting lawyers for taking cases is unreal. When did our justice system become so bold they flaunt these injustices in our faces?
If this article is correct, never mind punishing someone for crimes of which they were not convicted. We have a system that punishes people for crimes of which they were acquitted.
If so, there's no more point in having trial by jury at all. Let's just have the prosecutor have a chat with the judge, to be followed immediately by sentencing.
Don't worry, the article isn't correct. There was no acquittal whatsoever at any point in any stage of any of this.
I don't know about this case, but in McClinton vs United States, the judge did indeed punish based on an acquitted charge. See the SCOTUS review of the case, in the introduction to their decision not to accept an appeal, here.
https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pdf/21-1557_3kg4.pdf
Did you read it?
This was a denial of cert. Meaning SCOTUS refused to take up the issue - specifically, because they wanted to hear what the Sentencing Commission had to say about the subject before weighing in on it. There was no acknowledgement by them whatsoever that the judge "punished based on an acquitted charge" - just some banter as to the pros and cons of hypothetically doing so. (With Kav, Neil, and ACB making it very clear that said banter was NOT a Constitutional interpretation of the subject.)
And did you read what Alito had to say? Because he pointed out an extremely important distinction that Armchair America doesn't get about the criminal justice system - even though they know it and they've likely even seen it happen.
Acquittal means Not Guilty. It does not mean Innocent.
Not Guilty and Innocent mean two very, very different things. And most Americans don't understand that. And even though they DO (OJ Simpson was not guilty of killing his wife, doesn't mean OJ Simpson didn't in fact kill his wife) they still can't seem to wrap their brains around it conceptually.
Alito explains: Suppose a crime has three elements, A, B, and C. Suppose that the jury acquits a defendant of the charge, and suppose that a special-verdict form reveals that every juror found that the prosecution had not proved A. If the facts needed to prove B or C have a bearing on the appropriate sentence for a separate offense for which the defendant was found guilty, what is the trial judge to do?
Is he supposed to just ignore them, even though they're germane to that separate offense? Does the lack of A necessarily render B and C moot and beyond consideration to any sentencing consideration? Especially when sentencing comes with judicial discretion?
It's a good question.
Suppose three guys rob a bank. During the bank robbery, they all fire a few shots into the air. A panicked bank patron has an asthma attack, can't find their inhaler, and dies. Well, now you've got a body on top of the robbery. And we're not even sure which of the three was the trigger puller that specifically caused the guy to have his asthma attack. They're charged with murder and robbery. They're acquitted of murder, because they didn't actually kill anyone and even if they did, there's reasonable doubt as to which one's conduct specifically precipitated the death.
But they ARE convicted of robbery. And but for that robbery, that dude wouldn't be dead. A judge shouldn't be allowed to take into consideration the fact that a person died during the robbery, when determining sentencing for robbery, because each of the robbers was acquitted of specifically killing someone during said robbery because it couldn't be found beyond a reasonable doubt that their specific actions caused the death?
You can't envision a judge saying - or being allowed to use discretion to say - "You three committed a robbery and someone died as a result. You may not have murdered them, and were acquitted of murder, but I'm elevating your sentencing for the robbery to take into account the person who died."
What's unreasonable about that?
There was no acknowledgement by them whatsoever that the judge “punished based on an acquitted charge” – just some banter as to the pros and cons of hypothetically doing so.
The second paragraph of the SCOTUS discussion (linked in my earlier comment) reads as follows. Please pay particular attention to the last sentence.
“After that, however, something happened that might strike the average person as quite strange. At McClinton’s sentencing for the robbery conviction, the prosecution again argued that McClinton had killed his friend. When the judge agreed, this caused McClinton’s Sentencing Guidelines range to skyrocket. While the ultimate sentencing decision is discretionary, “[t]he Guidelines are the framework for sentencing and anchor the district court’s discretion.” Molina-Martinez v. United States, 578 U. S. 189, 198–199 (2016) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). McClinton’s Guidelines range had initially been approximately five to six years. Yet taking into account the killing, the judge sentenced McClinton to 19 years in prison.”
Taking into account the killing (for which McClinton had been acquitted), the judge sentenced him to 19 years in prison. So much for SCOTUS not acknowledging that the judge imposed punishment based on an acquitted charge.
“Suppose a crime has three elements, A, B, and C. Suppose that the jury acquits a defendant of the charge, and suppose that a special-verdict form reveals that every juror found that the prosecution had not proved A. If the facts needed to prove B or C have a bearing on the appropriate sentence for a separate offense for which the defendant was found guilty, what is the trial judge to do?”
Then discuss B and C in the context of the separate offense for which the defendant was found guilty. It does not seem too much to ask the jury–and the judge–to consider each charge separately, or to take all relevant facts into account for each charge. Some facts may be of overlapping relevance. So what?
“Acquittal means Not Guilty. It does not mean Innocent.”
In the American system, there is no case in which a man may be found Innocent. The reason is that every man is presumed innocent until proven guilty. A jury determination of Not Guilty means just that–the government did not prove the defendant’s guilt. That being the case, he must be presumed innocent (of that charge; he may be guilty of others) and not punished (for that charge). This is simple stuff.
“You can’t envision a judge saying – or being allowed to use discretion to say – “You three committed a robbery and someone died as a result. You may not have murdered them, and were acquitted of murder, but I’m elevating your sentencing for the robbery to take into account the person who died.”
What’s unreasonable about that?”
What’s unreasonable is that the defendant is not being given his day in court as regards the death. He successfully defended himself against the charge that was brought (namely, murder), and you’re punishing him for the death without proving him guilty of any particular crime.
The proper solution is to figure out what crime the bank robbers actually committed, and charge them with it. Then, if and only if they’re actually convicted, punish them for it.
If the jurisdiction does not recognize the concept of felony murder, and murder 1 does not apply because of the lack of lethal intent, then perhaps murder 2 or 3 is the right charge, or manslaughter.
Find the right charge and charge the defendant with that. Again, it really doesn’t seem too much to ask of highly trained lawyers with all the resources of the government prosecution and justice system to bring to bear.
Broadcast networks started calling people with not guilty verdicts, "Innocent." Their fear was that the broadcast signal would get garbled, swallowing the "Not," letting the defendant being falsely called guilty.
The second paragraph of the SCOTUS discussion (linked in my earlier comment) reads as follows.
Allow me to rephrase - this was a denial of cert. Meaning SCOTUS refused to take up the issue – specifically, because they wanted to hear what the Sentencing Commission had to say about the subject before weighing in on it. There was no acknowledgement by them whatsoever that a judge doing so in McClinton's case was constitutional or unconstitutional.
Just that it might be regarded as "strange."
It does not seem too much to ask the jury–and the judge–to consider each charge separately, or to take all relevant facts into account for each charge.
Alito addressed that very point, calling it "odd and unprecedented" and gave three specific examples of how it would be difficult to read the jury's minds as to why they found a defendant not guilty.
Quote: Must the jury keep deliberating on B and C? Perhaps the jury, having decided that the showing on A was obviously deficient, gave little thought to either of those elements. But sending the jury back to continue deliberating on B or C after it has already reached a verdict of acquittal would be odd and unprecedented.
Then discuss B and C in the context of the separate offense for which the defendant was found guilty.
They're not necessary to proving that the underlying crime was committed. Look, take something relatively trivial - like reckless driving.
1) Drove a motor vehicle.
2a) Drove it with a willful/wanton disregard for the safety of others or
2b) Was racing on a public street/highway.
That's easy. Arresting officer testifies "I clocked him at 120, Exhibit A, and my dash cam recorded him weaving in and out of cars on both sides of the street, Exhibit B. Upon finally stopping him, I confirmed his identity as the the driver of the vehicle."
Bang, slam dunk case. Both elements are proven in court, and he's found guilty.
But sentencing does not then occur in a vacuum. The judge has discretion to consider the specific factors of the conduct. The judge might lower the sentence if he was frantically speeding to the hospital to be with his child before she died. He might increase the sentence if he was driving tearing down the highway and resisting arrest after having fled a murder scene.
In the latter case, you wouldn't have to prove he committed murder to take the circumstances behind the reckless driving into consideration. And even if he was charged with murder and acquitted, that doesn't mean EVERY DETAIL RELATED TO THE MURDER is suddenly off limits to the reckless conviction. Why should it be? Like Alito said, that'd be odd and unprecedented.
That being the case, he must be presumed innocent (of that charge; he may be guilty of others) and not punished (for that charge). This is simple stuff.
Yes, it is simple stuff. I don't know why you're struggling with it.
A Not Guilty verdict doesn't magically alter reality. If you beat the snot out of your girlfriend and then put a bullet in her head and are found not guilty of murder (say, they couldn't find the gun, and/or screwed up the GSR test, or whatever) - it doesn't mean you didn't kill your girlfriend. It means that the Court couldn't find you guilty of murder.
But when you ARE convicted on charges for domestic violence, assault, battery, and so forth they are allowed to take into consideration that she died within a demonstrable window immediately following the beating. Making your DV/A&B charge particularly heinous, and thus deserving of elevated sentencing at a judge's discretion.
What’s unreasonable is that the defendant is not being given his day in court as regards the death. He successfully defended himself against the charge that was brought (namely, murder), and you’re punishing him for the death without proving him guilty of any particular crime.
No, you're punishing him for the crime he WAS proven guilty of, and taking into consideration the relevant factors that surround that crime. The fact that he was found not guilty of another crime doesn't mean that you can't therefore consider the relevant factors that surround both crimes. Just not the crime itself.
The proper solution is to figure out what crime the bank robbers actually committed, and charge them with it. Then, if and only if they’re actually convicted, punish them for it.
That's precisely what happens. That's what happened with this guy, that's what happened with McClinton, that's how this all works.
You seem to think that criminal sentencing is based on some pre-established "If X Crime, then Y Sentence." Nowhere in America is that true. This is why most criminal statutes list ranges of punishment. For the precise purpose of taking into account the entirety of the criminal act, regardless of whether you were acquitted of one aspect of it or not.
Sigh. I honestly can't tell if Reason is grossly ignorant of the things they report on, or if they're deliberately misleading to grind narrative axes.
OK, let's unpack this objectively. I'm not even going to mention this dude's alleged crimes or victims, despite the DOJ's (accurate) characterization of it, because it's irrelevant to how wrong this article is.
Here's the short version: This article is BS because Reason gives no argument whatsoever as to why Esformes should have originally been sentenced to less than 20 years. The heavily imply it, but make literally ZERO effort to substantiate their reasoning. The whole article is premised and hinges exclusively on this claim - but they (intentionally?) avoid articulating that. Probably because they CAN'T substantiate it.
Their most brazen lie/deception is this line: the hung counts for which he'd already been sentenced and received a commutation.
No he wasn't, and no he didn't. Period. This is beyond contest when you actually look at the facts. And if you're interested in that...
Longer version:
1) Esformes was convicted on 20 of counts; the jury deadlocked on six of the most serious charges.
OK, so three things you need to understanding right off the bat.
a) He was always going to get some serious sentencing based on the charges they didn't get a hung jury on. (Reason calls those hung jury charges "the most serious" - with the misleading implication that those he WAS convicted on were therefore trivial by comparison. But they weren't.)
b) A hung jury is not an acquittal. Reason is going to go off the rails (more than once) with this.
c) Charges that result in a hung jury can be retried.
2) He got twenty years for this. We're going to refer to that as "his original sentence."
Now, Reason wants to paint this as an example of "acquitted conduct sentencing" - but it's not. Because A) he wasn't acquitted; and B) without getting into specifics, the charges he WAS convicted of would easily have gotten him 20yrs in prison. Meaning he didn't "bake the charges on," as Reason speciously claims.
And contrary to Reason's claim that Judge Scola "was explicit that Esformes' 20-year sentence was in part based on the charges for which a jury did not reach a verdict" - you don't actually get that from the transcript they cited. Instead, it's more of the judge saying, "Why would you waste the Court's time on retrying these when he ALREADY got 20 years even without a conviction on the hung charges, you guys aren't happy with that?"
BUT, in fact, THEY WERE. The DOJ conceded that if Esformes lost on appeal of the charges for which he WAS convicted/sentenced, that they'd dismiss the hung charges. Meaning they were happy with his 20yr sentence, assuming it didn't get overturned on appeal.
Assuming this guy stayed locked up for 20 years.
That's what they wanted. If this guy succeeded on appeal, they were going to pull these hung jury charges out of the drawer and play that card on him.
Reason then deceptively tries to make hay out of this point:
3) "I don't know what more you are going to get out of the case if you try those additional counts"
Scola is right on this point. He basically said, "He's already got 20 years, he's likely not going to get more than that even if convinced of the other charges - and you're OK with that. So why bother?"
This is what Reason (and First Step) want to twist into "acquitted conduct sentencing" - but they can't.
What I'm sure Scola (and the DOJ) didn't anticipate was Trump commuting the original sentence. When Trump did, Scola got his answer. And the effect was essentially the same as if Esformes had succeeded on appeal.
The DOJ didn't get their 20 years. Plain and simple. And they still had charges against him they could seek retrial on. They were NOT, as Reason falsely claims, "already sentenced and commuted."
This point is VERY clear. They couldn't have been sentenced or commuted. In a way, what Reason is trying to do here is use "acquitted conduct sentencing" in the other direction. Arguing - but in no way substantiating - that it definitely occurred in order to claim that the hung jury charges were sentenced (and therefore commuted) when they weren't.
"If you walk through the facts, it's clearly double jeopardy," Jessica Jackson
No, that's clearly moronic. Double Jeopardy means to be charged with a crime that you've already been acquitted of. Not to be charged with a crime that you weren't and can be retried for.
Go back to Keeping up with the Kardashians, Jess.
The root of the legal issue here—whether or not judges should be able to sentence defendants for crimes they weren't convicted of
Well, they didn't - and you've not spent ONE WORD of this article arguing otherwise - so clearly this article had no legal issue root in the first place.
Because it's BS. Idiotic or Narrative-Driven, doesn't really matter. BS either way.
Did these charges come from multiple sets of facts? If there was only one crime, the hung jury charges shoul be considered dead.
No, they come from multiple charges derived from the same crime.
This reminds me of the Central Park Five. They were convicted of crimes other than the rape of a young woman. But when DNA testing showed someone else had raped her, they were not retried on the other counts, including beating a bikeriding schoolteacher with a pipe that one kid had brought from home.
Because they had already served the max sentence for those crimes.
Is it ok for the defense to tell the jury that acquitting/hanging on some crimes will still allow the judge to sentence them for those same crimes?
No, it's not. A criminal trial jury doesn't take it into consideration, nor should they - it'd be grossly prejudicial. It'd be as screwed up as saying, "If you find him guilty of murder, you'll be taking away the breadwinner of his family and condemning them to poverty."
Who cares. That's totally irrelevant. The only question for the jury with regard to the verdict is: "did prosecution prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the crime."
Trump sure is sympathetic to fraudsters and assorted thieves.