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Arthur Engoron

Trump will get 'little to no leash' from strict judge at E. Jean Carroll trial: expert

Donald Trump is attending his second defamation trial involving journalist E. Jean Carroll, but an expert said Tuesday he might be wasting his time.

Most of the basic facts in the case have already been decided after a jury found last year that Trump had sexually abused Carroll and then defamed her after leaving office. The latest trial will determine the penalties he must face for defamatory comments he made while serving in the White House — and the judge likely won't tolerate any outbursts from the former president.

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'I don't know anything': Trump responds to question on bomb threat at Judge Engoron's home

Donald Trump was asked about the bomb threat on Judge Arthur Engoron on the final day of his fraud trial in New York.

Trump popped into a Casey's gas station where he grabbed a few boxes of pizza when CNN's Kate Sullivan asked Trump if he had any reaction to police responding to the threat on the day of the closing arguments.

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New York judge knew he'd been played by Trump: legal analyst

Legal analyst Lisa Rubin was in the New York courtroom last week during the final day of Donald Trump's fraud trial. She explained that it became undeniable that the presiding judge, Arthur Engoron, knew that the ex-president "played" him.

As Trump begins to attack a new judge, this time in the E. Jean Carroll case, there's a new opportunity for a new Trump target.

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Trump lawyer's latest controversial immunity argument had a purpose: ex-prosecutor

When Donald Trump's attorney argued that the former president should be immune from any prosecution as long as he wasn't removed from office over it, the world laughed, but a former prosecutor said Saturday that the argument could have had a purpose.

Trump's attorney specifically claimed that Trump could issue an order to have Seal Team 6 kill his political opponent and, as long as he isn't impeached over it, he can never be prosecuted.

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Judge Engoron's 'last-minute question' at fraud trial hints at bad news for Trump: expert

In a series of posts on X, formerly known as Twitter, MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin confessed that an out-of-the-blue question that Judge Arthur Engoron posed to one of the prosecutors working for New York Attorney General Letitia James seemed to imply that he may come down hard on Donald Trump's ability to conduct business in New York.

While a central focus of the case involving financial fraud perpetrated by executives of the Trump Organization is the $370 million fine requested by AG James, there is also the strong possibility the Trump Org could cease to exist.

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George Conway: Trump's latest meltdown will come back to bite him at E. Jean Carroll trial

Appearing on MSNBC early Saturday morning, conservative attorney George Conway predicted that Donald Trump's antics in Judge Arthur Engoron's courtroom on Thursday will haunt him if he shows up at the second E. Jean Carroll defamation trial set to start next week.

Speaking on MSNBC's "The Weekend," Conway said that Trump's meltdown during closing arguments when Engoron gave him a window to speak did not go unnoticed by Judge Lewis A. Kaplan who will likely keep the former president on a short leash if he shows up.

'There were two separate cases, one was the case that was tried, the defamation he engaged in against E. Jean Carroll after he was president," he began. "This is the one, this is the first case they would've brought that got held up because he claimed that the federal law prevented the lawsuit and then he later claimed that he was immune to it because he was president."

"And the first trial, where he had the opportunity to testify but did not, was where E. Jean Carroll presented her story and the story of the women who she told, just like within a day or two after the rape, and then the jury found, and Trump refused to show up to rebut that she was raped that day."

ALSO READ: ‘Official’ Trump calendar omits a critical detail

"And so, he is precluded —there is a doctrine called collateral estoppel: if you lose an issue once to a party, you can't relitigate it," he explained. "So basically, E. Jean Carroll's lawyers are saying, they made a motion to exclude all sorts of things that he wants or that he might try to do to relitigate it. Also to make sure that Trump does not pull the kind of crap that he pulled the other day in court across the street."

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Trump had no defense for 'cooking the books' in fraud trial: legal expert

For all of his bluster and accusations at his $370 million financial fraud trial, at the end of the day the fact that Donald Trump "cooked the books" is what will end up costing him when Judge Arthur Engoron renders his final verdict regarding the Trump Organization.

That is the opinion of conservative lawyer George Conway who appeared on MSNBC's new "The Weekend" show featuring co-hosts Symone Sanders-Townsend, Michael Steele and Alicia Menendez.

Invited to address the closing arguments in the trial where Judge Engoron has already ruled the former president is guilty of fraud. Conway was asked what played out in the courtroom as the trial concluded.

"The New York case is interesting because, unlike the other, the four criminal cases, his freedom is not on the line here: his fortune is on the line and his businesses are on the line," he explained. "What the judge has already found based upon, frankly, undisputed evidence, is that he cooked the books. He cooked his own books and then he presented the books to lenders and insurers and so on and so forth."

ALSO READ: How Trump's campaign visits cost local police departments

'His argument is, 'Well, they got all our money back, they weren't actually defrauded,' when the truth of the matter is, you cannot have fake books," he elaborated. "Even if you're a private company because people sometimes will have to rely on those books. And it's a privilege to do business either as a New York incorporated corporation or as a foreign corporation, out of state corporation, that has the right to do business in New York. That's a privilege and you can't abuse that privilege the law says, by cooking your books."

"Basically, his problem is he has no defense to the fact that he cooked the books and so, you know, that's why he has all this bluster," he added. "He can be put out of business, basically. The court has the power to basically revoke his ability, his corporate status."

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Time to end 'special treatment' for Trump after fraud trial courtroom rant: ex-prosecutor

Reacting to Donald Trump's frantic rant in Judge Arthur Engoron's courtroom on Thursday, when the judge allowed him to speak while not under oath during closing arguments, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance claimed the former president should no longer get any more free passes in the courtroom.

Writing on her Civil Discourse Substack platform, the ex-prosecutor stated there was nothing normal about a judge letting someone on trial make a statement during closing arguments and that Trump took advantage of it to spew lies aimed at riling up his fans.

As Vance explained, after that outburst, it is time for the judges in all of his cases to stop extending Trump extra courtesies just because he once served as president.

ALSO READ: Donald Trump’s un-American ploy for criminal immunity

"Other parties don’t get this sort of special treatment in court. Trump shouldn’t have received it either," she wrote. "Predictably, it did no good. It did not prevent Trump from continuing to complain that he was being treated unfairly. He went straight out of courtroom, only to tell the press that the case was a “fraud on me.” Judge Engoron may have concluded that with no jury in the box to be prejudiced by Trump’s ravings, it was easier to just let him have his way for the moment. But with Trump, no good deed goes unpunished."

She then added, "It’s time for the courts to stop giving Trump special treatment. To stop walking delicately and gingerly lest he claim foul play when he is merely subjected to procedures anyone else in his position would be held accountable to. The courts, charged with delivering justice, need to stop being afraid of Trump."

Adding that no judge should allow "Trump to speak in court, and under no circumstances to a jury, unless he’s on the witness stand, testifying under oath," she added, "No more opportunity for the toddler to throw a temper tantrum that would lead to anyone else in his position being held in contempt. If judges mean for it to continue to exist, it’s time for them to show Trump that he is not above the law, not any longer."

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Trump's fraud trial stunt was just used against him in another case: expert

Donald Trump may be proud of a stunt he pulled at his civil fraud trial during closing arguments, but one legal expert pointed out Friday that the former president is already paying a price in another major case.

Trump, who is currently facing several criminal indictments, had his day in court for his alleged civil fraud. During the end of that trial, however, he snuck his way into delivering parting words based on his political agenda, something Justice Engoron previously vowed he wouldn't let happen.

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Trump's rant at end of trial could doom his appeal in fraud case: report

Donald Trump put his New York real estate empire in jeopardy when he broke into a 5-minute rant in the middle of his $370 million civil fraud trial, legal experts told the Messenger Friday.

That’s because, according to Columbia University Law Professor John Coffee, the case is most like headed to an appellate court that will likely be less than pleased with his closing argument antics.

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Trump spent weeks 'rehearsing' his courtroom rant that judge quickly shut down: insiders

Donald Trump's closing argument rant at his fraud trial Thursday that was abruptly cut off by Judge Arthur Engoron was weeks in the making, according to close associates of the former president.

According to a report from Rolling Stone, while the former president's legal team was wrangling with Judge Engoron over what he would be allowed to say as the $370 million financial fraud trial wrapped up, Trump was testing out soundbites on friends and associates.

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Trump shamed for treatment of Melania while she tended to dying mother

"The View" co-host Ana Navarro busted Donald Trump's latest excuse to try to delay his New York fraud judgment.

The former president's attorneys had asked Justice Arthur Engoron to delay closing arguments in the trial, which had been scheduled for Thursday, to be paused until at least the end of the month after the death of his mother-in-law, and Navarro ripped the request as disingenuous.

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'The public is angry': Trump tries to whip up fury as fraud penalties loom

Donald Trump claimed victory in a New York fraud trial he has already lost and issued some thinly veiled threats against the judge, New York Attorney General Letitia James, and court clerk he's barred from discussing.

The former president defied Justice Arthur Engoron, who had barred him from delivering closing arguments or making a campaign speech, and issued a six-minute tirade Thursday against James and proclaimed he was the victim of a political attack, and he elaborated on those themes of persecution the following morning on social media.

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