Arthur Engoron

'Historic': Ex-White House lawyer believes Cohen is immune to Trump's main line of attack

Michael Cohen has nothing to lose when he faces down Donald Trump — and the showdown is going to be "historic," an ex-White House attorney who's worked closely with the man said.

Norm Eisen, who worked with Cohen during the first impeachment case against the former president that involved allegations of foreign interference in the 2016 election, believes him to be a 'truth teller" — and the fact that he's spent time in prison already means Trump's team's potential attacks on him are vastly weakened.

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Judge Engoron under investigation over 'very troubling' talk with lawyer about Trump case

The New York judge who ordered Donald Trump to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in a civil fraud case is now under investigation, according to a report.

Justice Arthur Engoron's decisions are under a microscope after a local attorney said he had a conversation with the jurist about issues related to the former president's recent legal matter.

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'Precisely zero evidence': Analyst relentlessly fact-checks Trump's latest courthouse rant

Donald Trump raged Tuesday outside the Manhattan courtroom where he faces a criminal hush money trial and spurred one indignant CNN analyst to blast the former president for what he described as a torrent of false and misleading claims.

Daniel Dale told anchor Jake Tapper he has grown tired of addressing Trump's claim that the four criminal trials he faces were orchestrated by President Joe Biden as part of a political witch hunt.

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'Honey hush': Alina Habba skewered for claiming judges try to make her look incompetent

Former President Donald Trump's lawyer Alina Habba claimed Tuesday she has been made to look incompetent by judges and that fellow Trump attorney Todd Blanche, recently scolded for "losing all credibility," had been subjected to the same treatment.

During an appearance on Newsmax, Habba defended the questionable performance of Trump's lead attorney in his criminal hush money case during a hearing over 10 possible violations of his limited gag order.

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Trump makes extra concessions on $175M bond in $450M civil fraud case: analysis

Former President Donald Trump accepted five new conditions demanded by New York Attorney General Letitia James in order to get his controversial $175 million bond accepted in his civil fraud case, according to a new analysis.

"The new conditions were needed, prosecutors argued, because they didn’t trust the financial health of the insurance company, Knight Specialty Insurance, who posted the bond for Trump.Josh Fiallo of The Daily Beast writes. "They noted that Knight had violated federal law on multiple occasions and that they relied on risk-transfer practices to artificially bolster the surplus it used to cover Trump’s bond."

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Alina Habba reappears in Trump courtroom — as Fox News questions absence of family members

Alina Habba, an attorney for Donald Trump, angrily lashed out at New York Attorney General Letitia James after she moved to have the former president's $175 million bond revoked following a civil fraud judgment.

Habba spoke after the testy hearing ended with both sides finally agreeing that the bond would be accepted.

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Trump gets a win in hearing over fraud trial bond

Donald Trump's attorneys reached an agreement with Attorney General Letitia James' office in court Monday — leading to Judge Arthur Engoron agreeing to accept the $175 million bond in his civil fraud case.

At issue was James' concern that the bond offered by Knight Specialty Insurance Company had a Charles Schwab account owned by Trump as collateral — while Trump still had access to the funds in it.

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Judge Engoron 'dubious' of Trump's $175M bond agreement at revocation hearing

New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron reportedly appeared "dubious" Monday about a scheme to raise a $175 million bond so that Donald Trump could appeal a fraud ruling against him.

Engoron ordered the hearing after New York Attorney General Letitia James asked to revoke the bond because she had doubts that insurance company Knight Specialty Insurance could legitimately put it up. Engoron indicated that Knight Specialty Insurance Company would have to prove it could assure bond payment.

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Letitia James may start 'seizing Trump's properties' as he sits in criminal trial: expert

As Donald Trump sits in criminal court facing 34 felony charges for purported financial records violations stemming from an attempt to bury a story about an alleged affair with an adult film actress, he may also face a separate prosecutor seizing his real estate holdings, according to a legal expert.

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner published a "Justice Matters" video on Saturday in which he covers a recent filing by New York A.G. Letitia James, who sued Trump in a civil case for business fraud based on his chronic exaggeration of assets to get better loan terms. Specifically, the ex-prosecutor noted how James recently urged state Judge Arthur Engoron to reject the $175 million bond that Trump has posted in his civil fraud case, citing trustworthiness and competency concerns with the institution that agreed to bond him.

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Judge urged by prosecutors to reject Trump's civil fraud bond as lacking 'trustworthiness'

New York Attorney General Letitia James is urging state Judge Arthur Engoron to reject the $175 million bond former President Donald Trump is posting in his civil fraud case.

According to MSNBC legal analyst Adam Klasfeld, James' filing says that Trump's bond fails to meet "requirements of trustworthiness and competence" and should therefore be held "without effect."

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'Lack of remorse is a negative': Expert says Trump trial conduct will be back to haunt him

Former President Donald Trump could be digging himself a deeper hole by making no effort to appear remorseful about his actions in the Manhattan hush money trial, wrote former impeachment counsel Norm Eisen for The New York Times.

Trump is charged with felony business fraud for his alleged concealment of hush payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels, which Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg argues was a scheme to interfere with voters in the 2016 election. Trump denies these allegations, including that the affair happened in the first place — but furthermore, he has raised eyebrows for showing disrespect to potential jurors.

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Criminal tax evasion complaint filed as Trump heads back to court

As Donald Trump heads back to a Manhattan courtroom where he is facing 34 felony counts related to allegedly paying off an adult film star before the 2016 presidential election, a new possible criminal investigation into income tax evasion is rearing its head.

At the center of the criminal complaint filed with the Department of Justice (DOJ) by watchdog Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) is a mysterious $50 million loan that has been listed by the former president in his disclosures to the court that may or may not exist.

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'Absurd': Expert predicts Trump's last-minute fraud bond will be rejected

Donald Trump's last-minute filing Monday night states that the bond he's offered up in his civil fraud case now has "substantial financial credibility" — but experts aren't so sure.

Trump's $175 million bond, which would allow him to put seizures of his property on hold while he appeals the verdict that hit him with $454.2 million in damages earlier this year, was initially knocked by New York Attorney General Letitia James, who claimed its source — Knight Specialty Insurance Company — was not properly licensed in New York state.

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