RawStory

Arthur Engoron

Judge gives Trump attorney rope to hang himself: 'Talk about how great the Trump Org is'

New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron ruled that attorneys for Donald Trump could use public relations materials from his website in his $250 million fraud trial.

The New York Attorney General's office objected on Monday after attorneys for Trump presented a PowerPoint slide called "The Trump Story" while Donald Trump Jr. was on the stand.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's attorneys will begin calling witnesses in fraud trial – here's what to expect

Donald Trump's attorneys will start calling witnesses Monday in the New York fraud trial, with his namesake eldest son being the first expected to take the stand.

Defense attorneys submitted a list of up to 127 witnesses who could take the stand, although it's not clear how many actually will, but Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump and former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg will likely return to the stand after previously testifying during the prosecution's case, reported Forbes.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump lawyers hinting at 'nuclear option' as fraud trial enters second phase: report

As Donald Trump's $250 million Manhattan financial fraud trial enters its second phase where the former president's defense team begins to call witnesses, Trump lawyers are hinting at making a major filing that one court observer describes to The Daily Beast as the "nuclear option."

On Monday, Donald Trump Jr. will take the stand in an effort to stem the bleeding in a case that Judge Arthur Engoron has already ruled indicates financial fraud perpetrated by the former president and executives at his Trump Organization.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump unloads on 'puppet judge' immediately after decrying 'viciousness' in fraud trial

Former President Donald Trump on Sunday unloaded on New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron ahead of the testimony of Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump.

Using his Truth Social platform, Trump called himself a "victim of a corrupt legal system that is being used by those surrounding Crooked Joe Biden."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's courtroom 'moments of rage' are blowing up his lawyer's appeal plans: legal expert

Donald Trump's courtroom outbursts and volatility when he took the stand in the $250 million financial fraud trial being held in Judge Arthur Engoron's courtroom will cripple his legal team's efforts to win an appeal after the trial concluded.

That is the opinion of Columbia University law professor John C. Coffee Jr., speaking with the New York Times.

From the moment the former president took the stand he was combative, argued with the judge, made personal attacks on the courthouse employees and New York Attorney General Letitia James and had to be admonished by Judge Engoron who, in one instance, pleaded with Trump attorney Christopher Kise to "control' his client.

According to Coffee, appeals court judges don't take kindly to trial participants wildly attacking judges and the judicial system, which will undercut the inevitable Trump legal team appeal in a case where Engoron has already ruled there is evidence of guilt.

According to the Washington Post report, Coffee suggested Trump "may be working against his team’s efforts to build the most effective appeal by focusing so much of his own energy on attacking Engoron."

RELATED: Why Trump’s three courtroom tactics have been a total 'bust': columnist

In an interview, Coffee predicted, "I think Trump’s rather volatile performance … [and his] occasional moments of rage does hurt him, because judges basically respect the judiciary and don’t like to be insulted by defendants.”

You can read more here.

Why Trump’s three courtroom tactics have been a total 'bust': columnist

In a Sunday, November 12 column by Los Angeles Times Washington columnist Doyle McManus, he argues ex-President Donald Trump's strategy to portray himself as a martyr amid his four indictments may have "cemented his hold on the Republican presidential nomination," but "as a legal strategy, it's been a bust."

The MAGA hopeful's three courtroom tactics — to denounce, disrupt, delay – have not helped any of his cases, McManus emphasizes.

Keep reading... Show less

'I'm gagged': Alina Habba complains on Fox News because she can't attack judge's clerk

Alina Habba, general counsel for Donald Trump, complained on Sunday after a judge placed a limited gag order on her and her client.

In an interview on Fox News, host Maria Bartiromo falsely claimed Attorney General Letitia James could talk about the fraud case against Trump, but "President Trump is not allowed to say anything." In fact, Trump and Habba have been ordered not to attack Justice Arthur Engoron's clerk.

Keep reading... Show less

'A stupid strategy': Trump's sending his kids into a 'perjury trap' in fraud trial return

During an appearance on MSNBC on Sunday morning, former Donald Trump lawyer Michael Cohen agreed with host Katie Phang that it is reckless for Donald Trump to make his children take the stand again in the $250 million Trump Organization financial fraud trial.

With Donald Trump Jr. expected to be the first witness on Monday as the Trump legal team mounts its defense, Trump's former "fixer" claimed it made no sense to put Don Jr., Eric and Ivanka in the position of possibly perjuring themselves when Judge Arthur Engoron has already ruled there was fraud in the case.

Keep reading... Show less

Donald Trump Jr. already dug himself into a hole before his Monday fraud trial appearance

Donald Trump Jr's expected return to the stand in a Manhattan courtroom on Monday as the first witness in defense of the Trump Organization caught up in a $250 million fraud trial was dismissed as a waste of time by a former U.S. Attorney.

Appearing on MSNBC, former prosecutor Barbara McQuade was asked what Donald Trump's oldest son will have to offer as he appears before Judge Arthur Engoron on Monday, and the ex-U.S. Attorney claimed it would be close to worthless because of his testimony last week when he was grilled by the prosecution.

"Well, it's really interesting," she told MSNBC host Ayman Mohyeldin. "One is because this is now the direct testimony, they can provide the narrative they want to tell: they are not simply responding and reacting to questions by the attorney general, this is going on the offensive and providing the narrative they want to."

"But I think it's going to be very difficult for Donald Trump Jr. to really have a lot of credibility here," she quickly added. "His whole strategy, when he testified previously, was to distance himself from knowledge about these things. That it was all about the accountants, I don't really pay much attention to this, sure, maybe I signed off on these things."

"But remember, he gave that press conference at the end of his testimony where he said 'I relied on accountants to do, wait for it, accounting,'" she continued. "It's going to be difficult for him, I think, to now say anything with any authority, other than to repeat what he's already said."

Watch below or at the link:

MSNBC 11 12 2023 07 21 58 youtu.be

Ivanka's fraud trial memory lapse claims undercut by former Trump White House official

During an appearance on MSNBC on Saturday afternoon, Stephanie Grisham stated she was highly skeptical that Ivanka Trump suddenly has the memory lapses she kept invoking when she testified in Judge Arthur Engorons's courtroom last Wednesday.

According to the former Donald Trump communications official, that is not the Ivanka she knew when they both worked in the Trump White House.

Pressed by host Alex Witt, "I know that your work with Melania [Trump] puts you in really perhaps the best position of former staffers to understand the family dynamic. So would you say this went according to expectation?"

"Yeah, I mean obviously, she [Ivanka] tried to get out of doing it many, many times stating that it was the middle of a school week and that was an undue hardship for her," Grisham replied. "Once she got there, she was poised, she answered things, you know, in the way that she does."

RELATED: 'Broken doll' Ivanka buried for covering for Donald Trump's crimes

"I don't buy that she doesn't recall things," she then asserted. "Ivanka Trump is a very, very smart woman and has an amazing memory. I used to actually always marvel about that when I worked with her."

"So the talking about not recalling kind of rang a little not true to me," Grisham told the host. "But her behavior was exactly the opposite of her father's and that is what I saw the entire time I was with them."

Watch below or at the link:

Keep reading... Show less

Questions raised about the origins of Stefanik's Trump trial letter

On Friday, Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) formally filed an ethics complaint against Judge Arthur Engoron in support of Donald Trump who, along with his Trump Organization, is under siege in a $250 million financial fraud trial.

While some legal analysts think the complaint will go nowhere because it is not grounded in the law, MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin claims that may be true, but it will cast a cloud over the trial and its outcome possibly long after it has concluded.

Keep reading... Show less

'She knows better': Ex-FBI counsel shames Elise Stefanik for attacking Trump judge

Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik (NY) should "know better" than to take aim at the New York judge presiding over Donald Trump's civil fraud case, a former top Justice Department official and FBI general counsel says.

The former prosecutor attacked Stefanik as one of Trump's many enablers in government for a bias complaint against Judge Arthur Engoron.

Keep reading... Show less

Prosecutors hoped Ivanka's 'own ignorance' would help them finish Trump: expert

Reflecting on Ivanka Trump's repeated claims that she couldn't remember key details when she was an executive representing the Trump Organization while on the witness stand on Wednesday, one legal expert claimed prosecutors were rolling the dice hoping she would make a critical admission because she didn't know any better.

In an interview with Newsweek, attorney Paul Golden noted that, if the $250 million financial fraud trial was being presented before a jury, prosecutors working for New York Attorney General Letitia James would have concluded their cross-examination with another witness who would offer up more explosive testimony.

Keep reading... Show less