RawStory

Arthur Engoron

Maddow: Trump’s unhinged courtroom 'rambling' designed to undermine 'whole legal system'

Donald Trump's critics have been slamming him for his Monday, November 6 testimony in New York State Attorney General Letitia James' civil fraud case against the Trump Organization. The former president, in court, angrily described the case as a politically motivated "witch hunt." And his critics have been lambasting him for making a mockery of the United States' judicial system.

But MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, during a November 6 commentary, argued that the "chaos" he brought to Justice Arthur Engoron's courtroom was by design — as undermining U.S. institutions is part of his game plan.

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Trump whiffed on 'softball' question about his financial accuracy: legal expert

Former President Donald Trump dropped the ball on what should have been an extremely easy layup question about his finances in at his $250 million civil court trial in New York, former Mueller Investigation prosecutor Andrew Weissmann said Tuesday.

Weissmann appeared on MSNBC to explain why Trump's answer might have made the case against him that much stronger, despite the fact that Judge Arthur Engoron has already found him liable for fraud.

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Michael Cohen: Trump mastered the art of the dodge to avoid accountability — until now

Donald Trump's art of the dodge failed him in the New York City courtroom where the future of his eponymous empire hangs in the balance because, as his former attorney Michael Cohen told Raw Story on Tuesday, it revealed his Achilles heel.

"It only took them four hours to get him to crack," said Cohen. "Because he has no stamina."

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Judge Engoron won't discuss shirtless selfie published in his NY high school newsletter

It's a mysterious habeas corpus.

A shirtless photo splashed in an alumni newsletter run by Judge Arthur Engoron is being pilloried by some of former President Donald Trump's faithful, while the judge himself refused to confirm or deny the snap in question was his corpus.

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'He executed us': Alina Habba attacks judge for ruling against 'decent defendant' Trump

Alina Habba, an attorney for Donald Trump, went after New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron on Tuesday because he ruled that her client was liable for damages before his civil fraud trial.

During an interview with right-wing host Charlie Kirk, Habba recalled that the judge had scolded her on Monday after she lost control of Trump on the witness stand.

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The View's Whoopi Goldberg mocks Trump lawyer Alina Habba as a whiny baby

Donald Trump's lawyer, Alina Habba, rushed to the press on Monday afternoon to complain that Judge Arthur Engoron slammed his hands on his desk, reprimanded her and told her to "sit down," which made her feel like he was being mean to her.

Co-host Whoopi Goldberg announced the segment after a discussion about a Broadway smash with Joy Behar.

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Fox News gives Trump lawyer Alina Habba a reality check: 'You're going to be found guilty'

Alina Habba, an attorney for Donald Trump, declared that New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron does not have a "respect for authority" after he cautioned her client during testimony on Monday.

In a Tuesday interview on Fox News, host Bill Hemmer asked Habba about Trump's $250 million fraud trial.

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Former Trump attorney called out on CNN for smearing Judge Engoron

David Schoen, an attorney who represented former President Donald Trump during his impeachment proceedings, appeared on CNN Tuesday morning to discuss his erstwhile client's testimony in the New York civil fraud case — only for anchor Poppy Harlow to swiftly drop the fact-check hammer on him.

"One of the president's attorneys said, 'In 33 years I have not had a witness testify better,'" said Harlow. "Do you agree?"

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'Utter failure' of Trump defense strategy leaves his company 'at an end': MSNBC analyst

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance made the case that, if Donald Trump's attorneys thought letting their client rant and rave in Judge Arthur Engoron's courtroom on Monday was an effective defense strategy, they were sorely mistaken.

Speaking with MSNBC host Jonathan Lemire, the former prosecutor predicted the penalty the former president and his family will pay will be the dissolution of the Trump Organization in the $250 million financial fraud trial.

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Trump’s ‘astonishing admission’ will damage any potential appeal: experts

For those who thought Trump's $250 million New York civil fraud trial was nearing its conclusion after the ex-president delivered combative sworn testimony from the witness stand Monday – especially since the judge ruled in late September Trump was liable for fraud, and likely will have to dissolve his New York businesses – brace yourselves.

Legal experts are offering a preview of what comes next, and there will probably be a lot more, including more Trump on the witness stand.

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Trump got 'rude awakening' after judge pierced his 'force field'

Donald Trump found his status as a former president was no match for a judge's authority inside his own courtroom.

The 2024 Republican presidential frontrunner testified Monday in a New York City courtroom in the $250 million fraud trial against his family owned business, and New York Supreme Court justice Arthur Engoron repeatedly reprimanded Trump for veering off topic and delivering campaign-style rants instead of answering prosecutors' questions – which CNN columnist Stephen Collinson said must have come as a shock.

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Trump's 'train wreck' testimony would have been shut down in a jury trial: legal expert

Donald Trump took the witness stand in his $250 million fraud lawsuit, but MSNBC's Chuck Rosenberg said the former president didn't do himself any favors in court.

Judge Arthur Engoron repeatedly admonished the twice-impeached ex-president to answer the questions as asked by prosecutors and stop giving "irrelevant" testimony more suited to a campaign rally than a courtroom, and the legal analyst told "Morning Joe" that Trump was trying to fight the law on two fronts.

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'Just plain fraud': Former prosecutor says Trump appeals look DOA

Former President Donald Trump and his attorneys are hoping to overturn Judge Arthur Engoron's rulings against the Trump Organization on appeal, but former federal prosecutor Kristy Greenberg said that those hopes appear to be dead on arrival.

Appearing on CNN, Greenberg broke down the Trump team's legal strategy for mounting an appeal by arguing that the valuations listed in financial statements provided to banks were not really to be taken at face value, while also arguing those statements were still good-faith estimates of the former president's properties.

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