Arthur Engoron

Denied: Judge refuses to delay Trump's hush money trial while he opposes gag order

Justice Cynthia S. Kern denied Donald Trump's request to delay his hush money trial while he appeals a limited gag order.

In a hearing on Tuesday, attorneys for Trump said the gag order should be revoked because the former president wants to publicly respond to witnesses Michael Cohen and Stormy Daniels. Trump also wishes to comment on Judge Juan Merchan's daughter, who works for a political consulting firm. He wants to claim that the charges against him are politically motivated.

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'Buckle up': MSNBC legal analyst says Trump's pre-court week 'will be nutty'

Donald Trump has less than a week to stop his New York election interference trial over the hush money he's accused of giving to adult film star Stormy Daniels in 2016. On Monday, jury selection begins in the case.

He's already filed a blitz of motions to stop or delay the trial, none of which has managed to halt the case from moving forward. In a new lawsuit filed Monday, Trump is suing Judge Juan Merchan over the gag order he issued and then expanded. Meanwhile, Trump is telling supporters on Truth Social that he may not follow the gag order and that it would be a "great honor" to be jailed like Nelson Mandela.

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'Man, that's desperate': Experts blast Trump's latest 'frivolous tactic' to avoid trial

Donald Trump filed a lawsuit against Judge Juan Merchan Monday to challenge a gag order that blocks him from attacking family members of court staff in the soon-to-start hush money trial — including the judge's own daughter, The New York Times reported Monday.

Consequences of breaking the order include being held in criminal contempt of court, which could result in a large fine or short jail sentence.

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'They had a duty': Experts erupt over Trump lawyers' potential 'deception' on fraud bond

Donald Trump's lawyers may have made misrepresentations to the court regarding the former president's bond in his civil fraud case, and legal experts are looking out for what comes next.

ProPublica reported on Friday that Trump's attorneys "had told the appellate court it was a 'practical impossibility' to get a bond for the full amount of the lower court’s judgment, $464 million."

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'Put his behind in jail': MSNBC host pounces on Trump after new 'unhinged' judge attack

Reacting to a three-part Truth Social post where Donald Trump lashed out at Judges Arthur Engoron, Lewis Kaplan and Juan Merchan on Saturday — calling all three "corrupt" — a visibly frustrated Michael Steele demanded to know why the former president hasn't been jailed for making threats.

Steele, the former head of the Republican National Committee who now co-hosts MSNBC's "The Weekend," claimed that enough is enough after Trump has been on the receiving end of multiple judicial gag orders which he has subsequently ignored.

After co-host Alicia Menendez bluntly called Trump's latest Truth Social diatribe "unhinged," Steele grew aggravated when legal analyst Chuck Rosenberg claimed that the judges were being cautious.

ALSO READ: A criminologist explains why keeping Trump from the White House is all that matters

That led to Steele's outburst.

"What is it that these judges don't get with Donald Trump at this point, with the gag orders, with the imposing of penalties to check his rogue behavior," he began. "I don't get it. The man is now putting out subtle threat warnings to this judge, getting his base — we've already had how many incidents now where rogue members of his base have gone off and done stupid stuff. Nancy Pelosi's husband, et cetera. I don't get it. Tell me, what am I missing? What is America missing that the courts just can't shut this man up?"

After Rosenberg defended the judges' inaction, Steele was still not satisfied.

"I don't know what evidence we need, short of something horrific happening to one of these judges or a member of their family or someone on their staff, that then people will go, 'Oh, maybe we should just put his behind in jail to shut him up,' but that's just my reaction," he fumed.

Watch below or at the link.

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Trump launches new attack on E. Jean Carroll — then compares himself to Nelson Mandela

Saturday afternoon, just hours before he is set to appear at a gala fundraiser in Palm Beach, Donald Trump lashed out at three New York judges in a three-part furious rant about how he has been treated by the legal system.

Along the way, he also attacked New York writer E. Jean Carroll who successfully sued him for defamation and was awarded $91 million in damages over two trials.

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Billionaire who floated Trump's $175 million fraud bond says he 'didn't charge enough'

The billionaire white knight who swooped in to cover the $175 million surety civil fraud bond to assist Donald Trump is feeling a little buyer's remorse for assessing such bargain basement fees.

On April 1, former President Donald Trump via billionaire Don Hankey, who owns the Knight Speciality Insurance Company (KSIC), reportedly met the obligation to secure the $175 million bond before the deadline while he fights the $464 million disgorgement ruling made by Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron.

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‘Good news’: Mary Trump says ‘spotlight’ now being put on uncle’s bond deal

Mary Trump said Friday she applauds New York Attorney General Letitia James for vetting the $175 million bond her uncle former President Donald Trump tried to file in his civil fraud trial.

Trump also skewered Don Hankey — "the king of the subprime auto loan" who backed the bond James now seeks to investigate — in the most recent issue of The Good In Us.

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House Dems introduce law to name Miami prison after Trump

Some House Democrats proved willing this week to honor former President Donald Trump's legacy with the official dedication of a government building in his name: a Florida federal prison.

Reps. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) and Jared Moskowitz (D-FL) on Friday will introduce legislation to rename Federal Correctional Institution, Miami — where Trump's former adviser Peter Navarro is currently incarcerated — as the Donald J. Trump Federal Correctional Institution, according to CBS News' congressional correspondent Scott MacFarlane.

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Expert says Letitia James has two ways to get 'not yet public' Trump bond information

New York Attorney General Letitia James wants answers on how former President Donald Trump's bond in the civil fraud case is structured — and she is strategizing multiple avenues to get the information she needs, wrote legal expert Lisa Rubin on X.

"Earlier today, the New York Attorney General filed a motion seeking more information about Trump's $175 million bond in their case," wrote Rubin. "But they're also apparently going at the issue sideways as well through a letter sent to Judge Arthur Engoron tonight."

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Judge schedules a hearing to find out if Trump's bond sponsor is properly backed

Judge Arthur Engoron responded to a brief filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James asking for financial information that can confirm the company that insured Donald Trump's bond was solvent.

Donald Trump was found liable for damages of $454 million, which ballooned after interest. He then asked the court to reduce the bond amount to $175 million, and the court agreed. He then secured a bond sponsor from the Knight Speciality Insurance Company.

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'Absurdity and foolishness': Eric Trump has MAGA meltdown over challenge to $175M bond

Former President Donald Trump's son Eric suffered a MAGA meltdown Thursday after New York Attorney General Letitia James raised concerns about his father's $175 million bond.

Eric Trump took to X to sputter outrage that James wanted proof that the insurer backing Trump's $464 million civil fraud ruling is "financially sound."

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Trump accused by prosecutor of withholding information during $464M civil fraud trial

New York Attorney General Letitia James accused former President Donald Trump of withholding information during his civil fraud trial and demanded more information about former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg's recent perjury plea, court records show.

James filed Thursday a letter to Justice Arthur Engoron requesting a monitor be allowed to investigate the matter, citing an email about the Trump Tower triplex — which was reported to be three times its actual size — the Attorney General says she never received.

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