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Arthur Engoron

'Wow': Trump lawyers send 'crazy' reply after Judge Engoron asks about possible perjury

Attorneys for former President Donald Trump in his $370 million civil fraud trial Wednesday called Judge Arthur Engoron’s demand for information about Allen Weisselberg’s potential perjury plea deal “unprecedented, inappropriate and troubling."

Engoron Monday demanded information about a New York Times report that Weisselberg may have perjured himself during testimony given in the civil fraud trial, but attorney Clifford Robert retorted he had no reason to do so.

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N.Y. judge might set Trump up to commit yet another crime after fraud case: report

If Trump continues doing business in New York, he could be criminally prosecuted, according to a Newsweek report.

Syracuse University College of Law professor Gregory Germain told the outlet that former President Donald Trump would be committing a crime should the appeals court uphold Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron's September decision to prevent the ex-president's companies from continuing to do business in the empire state.

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Engoron urged by prosecutors not to delay Trump ruling after perjury plea deal report

The New York Attorney General’s office urged Arthur Engoron Wednesday not to delay ruling on the $370 million civil fraud case against former President Donald Trump after the judge raised questions about possible perjury during the trial, court records show.

Engoron Monday demanded information about a New York Times report on Allen Weisselberg’s possible perjury plea deal with the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, which the report suggested was linked to testimony the former Trump Organization chief financial officer gave on the stand.

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Weisselberg may have perjured himself a second time — and Michael Cohen wants answers

It has been over two years since reports dropped that Donald Trump's chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, was suspected of lying to investigators about former Trump attorney Michael Cohen.

Now that the longtime Trump CFO is being investigated for another act of perjury, Cohen wants to know about Weisselberg's previous act of perjury.

CNN reported in August 2021 that four people familiar with prosecutors' thinking told them about Weisselberg, who was given a plea deal with the condition that he testified under oath and told the truth. He would only be sent to prison for five months for his role in a decades-long tax scheme at the Trump Organization.

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Trump 'caught in a trap of his own making' and running for president made it worse: report

Donald Trump is facing another potentially ruinous penalty for decades of bank fraud, after he was socked with $83 million in penalties for sexually abusing and defaming E. Jean Carroll, and his status as the Republican presidential frontrunner could make it impossible to borrow money to pay off those judgments.

New York Supreme Court justice Arthur Engoron is still considering how much to penalize the former president in the civil fraud trial, but he signaled that might run even higher than the $370 million sought by attorney general Letitia James, and state laws would put Trump in a sudden and perilous cash crunch, reported The Daily Beast.

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'Yikes': Expert says N.Y. judge 'not letting either side off the hook' in Trump fraud case

Donald Trump and N.Y. A.G. Letitia James were both given the same order on Tuesday, and it stood out to MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin.

Trump has been awaiting the decision in the civil fraud case, in which he and his adult sons were accused of manipulating the figures for his real estate empire as a means to get better loans and superior taxation treatment. N.Y. A.G. Letitia James has sought $370 million in damages and the elimination of Trump's rights to business in the entire state.

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'Lied under oath in my courtroom': Judge Engoron email suggests massive penalty for Trump

Judge Arthur Engoron — who is overseeing proceedings in former President Donald Trump's civil fraud trial in New York — may be considering a harsher-than-expected penalty for Trump as he prepares to issue a final ruling in the bench trial.

The Daily Beast recently reported that Engoron was alarmed by a New York Times article from earlier this month about Allen Weisselberg, who was the former chief financial officer for the Trump Organization, planning to plead guilty to perjury for allegedly lying on the stand.

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Trump 'better get his act together' or risk being demolished by D.C. jury: CNN analyst

Donald Trump’s courtroom dramatics aren’t going to fly in a criminal courtroom in Washington D.C. after his presidential immunity defense was overwhelmingly shot down down by the district’s appellate court, a CNN legal analyst said Tuesday.

Former federal prosecutor Elie Honig issued his warning to the former president on the heels of breaking news that the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously voted to slap down his primary defense in his criminal case linked to the U.S. Capitol riots on Jan. 6, 2021.

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Trump 'can’t easily sell' off his assets to pay the millions he owes: biographer

Faced with having to pay writer E. Jean Carroll $88.3 million in total damages as the result of two separate trials related to sexual assault and defamation, Donald Trump is facing an overwhelming cash crunch should Judge Arthur Engoron also slam him with millions more in penalties in the still-to-be-concluded financial fraud trial.

In an interview with former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance, former Trump biographer Tim O'Brien speculated that the former president has approximately $600 million that he can tap into — but he could be looking at penalties close to $460 million that would devastate the former president if he is forced to pay up.

O'Brien, who has investigated Trump's financial status for years, claimed losing all that cash would be "a tough pill to swallow, even for somebody with Trump’s resources."

Speaking with Vance, O'Brien stated Trump may be worth close to the $3.1 billion that outsiders have estimated, but coming up with money will be no easy task and E. Jean Carroll's legal team may have to force the issue once all Trump's appeals are exhausted.

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"Only about $600 million or so of that amount is in highly liquid holdings like cash. He can’t easily sell his stakes in some real estate ventures, so he’ll have to extract the payment from his cash hoard, most likely," he explained. "But he’ll hate having to do that and will resent it. So, lawyers and prosecutors may have to file liens against some of his assets so E. Jean Carroll can be paid.

The biographer also suggested Trump fears losing his fortune more than he fears the prospect of jail time looming in the Georgia RICO trial and the two federal cases being brought by special counsel Jack Smith.

"That’s because massive amounts of money aren’t in play in those cases – just possible prison time. But I don’t think that means Trump still doesn’t fear and resent the possible outcomes in the federal and state cases; he certainly does. He’s afraid of being found guilty and of serving time; hence the carping about being a victim and all of the performance art targeting judges and the system," he stated before adding, "At its core, however, is fear. The system finally caught up to Trump — in his 78th year. It’s also still unclear whether he might successfully run the clock out on those prosecutions."

You can read more here at Vance's Substack platform.

NY prosecutor who defeated Trump lays out 'key elements' of his successful 'playbook'

Tristan Snell successfully prosecuted Trump University while he was an assistant attorney general in the office of New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, securing a $25 million verdict in 2017. Now, Snell is sharing his strategies in hopes of other prosecutors defeating Trump in both civil and criminal court.

In a recent essay for the Daily Beast, Snell said winning against the former president in the courtroom requires adhering to four "key elements" that include "courageous leadership, a stoic refusal to be distracted or daunted by Trump’s counterattacks and diversions, dogged and comprehensive investigation and devotion to savvy communication not only in court filings but with the media and the public."

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'Unhinged' Trump is panicking that Jan. 6 trial will be the end of him: insiders

Despite all of his bravado and claims that his trials are solidifying support among conservatives for his presidential re-election bid, Donald Trump is reportedly raging that a conviction — particularly one involving his conduct around the Jan. 6 insurrection — will doom his chances of winning.

According to a report from Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei of Axios, Trump is convinced a guilty verdict in the case being heard by Judge Tanya Chutkan before the general election will end his political career as voters — particularly any independents who might be leaning towards him — will drop him like a hot rock.

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