Letitia James

Trump allies say he's resigned to estate seizure — but expects SCOTUS to return it: report

Trump may be planning to let his properties be seized by New York Attorney General Letitia James, with the intention to fight to get them back at the Supreme Court.

Faced with a $464 million civil judgment after losing the business fraud case brought by James, Trump's attorneys have now told the court that he has no way to obtain the bond necessary to cover it while he appeals the ruling, which opens up the possibility James could seize his properties.

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What happens if Trump can’t get a $454 million loan?

Lawyers for Donald Trump on March 18, 2024, told a New York court that the former president has been unable to secure a US$454 million bond as he appeals a New York civil fraud ruling against him.

Their “diligent efforts” reportedly involved approaching about 30 bond companies, which all said “no.”

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Trump has '464 million reasons' to sell out to a 'scary' foreign patron: legal expert

Donald Trump is moving closer to having his properties seized if he's unable to pay a $464 million fraud judgment or secure the same amount for a bond required to appeal, according to a legal expert.

The former president says he approached 30 insurers but found none of them willing to post the bond, and some of his friendly right-wing media commentators have noticed that no wealthy Republicans have stepped forward to offer their assistance either, and MSNBC legal analyst Andrew Weissmann told "Morning Joe" that seems to be a sign that Trump's business empire was more "fragile" than it appears.

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Fox News host mocked for lamenting lack of billionaires offering to help Trump post bond

Donald Trump is appealing the $454 million civil judgement that was leveled against him after he was found liable in New York for financial fraud, but must pay a bond of the same amount while his appeal is still being considered. But according to his attorneys, none of the 30 entities they reached out to would serve as an underwriter for the bond.

Now, New York Attorney General Letitia James is threatening to seize Trump's assets if the bond is not posted by this Monday, prompting right-wing radio personality and Fox News weekend host Mark Levin to wonder where all the pro-Trump billionaires are.

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Trump uncorks multi-post early-morning meltdown on 'Crazed, Trump Hating, Rogue Judge'

Former President Donald Trump uncorked a lengthy early-morning rant about Judge Arthur Engoron as he struggles to come up with money to post bond to appeal the massive New York fraud verdict leveled against him.

Posting on his Truth Social page, the former president raged at New York Attorney General Letitia James for filing a business fraud lawsuit against the Trump Organization and he accused Engoron of being her "puppet."

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Why Trump’s $464M bond failure could make him a ‘massive national security risk’

National security, legal, and political experts are lining up to sound the alarm about the potential national security risks swirling around Donald Trump, and those warnings are getting stronger.

One month after Trump descended the Trump Tower escalator in 2015 to announce his run for president, CNN reported on the real estate mogul's repeated claims of great wealth. At one point Trump told supporters he was worth "well over $10 billion." At other points Trump says, "I'm very rich," and "I'm really rich." CNN's John King noted, "some voters see this as a virtue, in the sense that they think politicians are too beholden to special interests."

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'Those are his babies': Ex-Trump aide names properties he would be 'devastated' to lose

A former spokesperson for Donald Trump revealed he has a handful of real estate properties that he considers his "babies" — and if New York Attorney General Letitia James seized them, it would leave the former president "devastated."

Stephanie Grisham, who served as White House communications director from July 2019 until April 2020, was talking to CNN's Erin Burnett Monday after Trump's lawyers revealed they have been unable to secure a bond to cover the $464 million in damages he owes after being found liable for fraud.

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'Practically impossible': Trump lashes out hours after revelation he can't pay $464M bond

Donald Trump hit back Monday night after his lawyers revealed he couldn't pay his $464 million fraud trial bond.

In a post to Truth Social, he claimed that it wasn't that he couldn't find a company willing to underwrite a bond of that amount of money — it's that no company possibly could.

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'I'm confident': Alina Habba says she expects Trump's $464M debt will be dismissed

Donald Trump's attorney Alina Habba is banking on the $464 million civil debt racked up in the New York fraud case being thrown out.

"Despite the fact that witnesses frankly had said that they were great clients, we all made money, they did nothing wrong, we got slammed with this egregious number, and I'm confident we'll overturn it," she said during an interview with the online podcast X22 Report, which was reported by Newsweek.

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Judge smacks down Trump's 'presence-of-counsel' defense in hush money trial

New York state Supreme Court Judge Juan M. Merchan ruled Monday that former President Donald Trump cannot use a "presence-of-counsel" defense at his upcoming hush money trial.

Trump has asked the court for permission to claim he committed 34 felony counts during the "presence" of lawyers and believed the actions were legal. However, Trump did not intend to relinquish attorney-client privilege as required in a traditional advice-of-counsel defense.

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'N.Y. state padlock on Trump Tower': Expert says Trump is at 'next-to-last step' from ruin

Attorneys for Donald Trump declared Monday that he is unable to secure the $464 million bond due in his New York fraud case, saying that turning over the entire amount is "a practical impossibility" — and that development could lead to his New York empire becoming property of the state, a legal expert said.

New York Attorney General Letitia James could put a "padlock" on Trump Tower, legal analyst Glenn Kirschner told MSNBC, effectively locking the former president out of his iconic Fifth Avenue building and making it the property of New York.

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'Thoughts and prayers': Trump critics pile on after admission he can't get bond money

"I was told Trump was a billionaire and that's why he should be president," was just one of the scathing responses to a filing from Donald Trump's lawyers revealing that he has been unable to come up with the nearly $500 million needed to appeal his financial fraud settlement.

Early on Monday morning, the former president's attorneys told the court that "posting a full undertaking" of the bond "is a practical impossibility," as Trump races the clock to keep New York Attorney General Letitia James from going after his assets.

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Trump's attack on children of immigrants and 'poisoned blood' flipped back on his kids

Donald Trump's weekend threat of a "bloodbath" if he is not re-elected in November received the bulk of attention from the press and critics, but on Monday morning the panel on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" also made note of his attacks on immigrants and their children.

Speaking in Ohio before a crowd of his rabid fans, the former president ranted about immigrants, stating, "I don’t know if you call them people. In some cases, they’re not people in my opinion. But I’m not allowed to say that because the radical left says that’s a terrible thing to say.”

Noting the former president previously claimed, "They let — I think the real number is 15, 16 million people into our country. When they do that, we got a lot of work to do. They’re poisoning the blood of our country,” Morning Joe co-host Joe Scarborough pointedly remarked that four out of five of Trump's children are the product of his marriages to immigrants Ivana Trump (Don Trump Jr., Ivanka and Eric) and Melania Trump (Barron).

Trump's fifth child, Tiffany, came from his union with Marla Maples. She recently married Lebanese businessman Michael Boulos.

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