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Arthur Engoron

Letitia James ready to seize Trump buildings if he can't pay $355M fine: report

New York Attorney General Letitia James is ready to seize former President Donald Trump's iconic New York City buildings if he can't come up with the cash to pay his $355 million civil fraud fine, a new report shows.

"If he does not have funds to pay off the judgment, then we will seek judgment enforcement mechanisms in court, and we will ask the judge to seize his assets," James told ABC News.

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Trump warned that outbursts and lawyer games will be 'shut down' at hush money trial

Donald Trump may have to be on better behavior at his upcoming criminal fraud trial than he was at the civil fraud case that cost him $354 million.

The former president is scheduled to stand trial starting March 25 in Manhattan on 34 counts of fraud, falsifying business records and intent to conceal another crime, including state and federal election laws, as part of his hush money payoff to adult movie actress Stormy Daniels.

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Trump may quickly regret getting Judge Cannon to delay classified docs case: expert

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner on MSNBC's "The 11th Hour" believes the events that take place on March 1st will determine if the criminal case against Trump for stashing top-secret government documents at Mar-a-Lago will go to trial before the 2024 election.

Judge Aileen Cannon has already met separately behind closed doors with both prosecutors and Trump’s defense team to determine what additional classified materials can be shared with the former president as part of discovery.

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MAGA salad bar and a 'Champale fountain!' Spoof fundraiser trolls Trump's money problems

A MAGA salad bar and a Champale fountain at the presidential library and steakhouse — at $10,000 a plate, how could you say no to this, sadly, likely fake invite to a Donald Trump fundraiser?

These wild attractions appear on a satirical invitation to a Save America fundraiser hosted in Florida on Feb. 16, that has been seen by tens of thousands of tickled X users.

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Trump hasn't got a chance of appealing 'bulletproof' fraud case: ex-White House counsel

Former President Donald Trump is unlikely to have any success appealing the civil fraud decision handed down against him in New York last week, former White House ethics special counsel Norm Eisen told CNN on Monday.

Judge Arthur Engoron found Trump liable for more than $350 million in fines for systematically inflating his company's property valuations, and also temporarily limited his ability to do business in the state of New York. Trump attorney Alina Habba has already vowed to appeal the decision.

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Alina Habba whines Hunter Biden hasn't 'been touched' as Trump faces court judgments

Former President Donald Trump's attorney Alina Habba took to Fox News on Monday to complain about the more than $350 million civil judgment issued against her client in the New York civil fraud case — and suggested that President Joe Biden's embattled son Hunter has been ignored by prosecutors while all this was going on.

"Nobody is above the law?" Habba told anchor Martha MacCallum, quoting New York Attorney General Letitia James' statements on the case. "I would just like these left-winging [district attorneys] and [attorney generals] to show us that.... I’m inviting you to show me that no one is above the law, while we have Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, and all of his friends up in D.C. in the Deep State that have not been touched."

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Trump threw money away on fraud trial witnesses — and got played: biographer

David Cay Johnston, one of Donald Trump's biographers, wrote for The New Republic on Monday that the hefty fine in the New York fraud case is of the former president's own making.

According to Johnston, Trump made bad — and expensive — deals as he built his defense. And they came back to bite him.

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Trump faces even more crippling fines as new lawsuits head to court

Before Justice Arthur Engoron released his verdict in his civil fraud case, many legal experts predicted that Donald Trump would get clobbered financially. And that's exactly what happened.

On Friday afternoon, Engoron ordered Trump pay almost $355 million. When interest is factored in, that figure increases to $450 million.

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Analyst confesses fear that Trump might sell classified documents to pay legal costs

A legal analyst is concerned that the damages Donald Trump was hit with in the fraud trial only compounds his financial problems — and presents a major security threat.

On Monday, Allison Gill of "Mueller, She Wrote" joined with co-host Dana Goldberg on "The Daily Beans" and called the fraud trial fine of $355 million a "doozy."

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Former ethics czar trashes lawyer's claim that Trump fraud ruling is 'illegitimate'

In a 16-page paper, former Ethics Czar, impeachment lawyer and longtime legal analyst Norm Eisen destroyed arguments that Judge Arthur Engoron's verdict and fine for Donald Trump and his company is "illegitimate."

On Friday, Trump was ordered to pay $354.9 million for a decades-long scheme that involved artificially inflating the size and value of properties and other assets, garnering him favorable treatment at banks.

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'Apprentice' winner warns Trump will face more trials: 'Don't expect Donald to change'

A former employee of the Trump Organization — and a winner of "The Apprentice" TV show — says ex-president Donald Trump could be dragged into court again because he won't change his behavior in the wake of being fined $354 million in New York A.G. Letitia James' fraud case against him.

After the verdict was handed down by Judge Arthur Engoron, who also banned Donald Trump from running businesses in New York for three years, Trump called the trial a "witch hunt" and the outcome "illegal."

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Trump fraud verdict could deal 'devastating' blow to Truth Social: NYT reporter

One byproduct of the massive fraud verdict leveled against former President Donald Trump last week could be a death blow to his Truth Social platform, according to New York Times investigative reporter Susanne Craig.

Appearing on MSNBC on Monday, Craig was asked about Trump potentially paying for the massive fines leveled against him by Judge Arthur Engoron by using equity from Truth Social.

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Trump-loving trucker quickly backtracks from threat to boycott NYC to protest fraud ruling

Donald Trump-loving trucker "Chicago Ray" has already backed down on his threat to boycott New York City to protest the penalty in the ex-president's fraud trial.

The truck driver posted a TikTok video threatening to refuse deliveries to the city to protest judge Arthur Engoron imposing a $354 million fine against the former president and banning him from doing business in the state for three years, but "Chicago Ray" has now taken down the post.

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