Letitia James

'Jurors aren't blind:' Expert warns Trump's rants will be held against him

Juries don't like the unruly behavior Donald Trump and attorney Alina Habba are exhibiting in court, a MSNBC legal expert argued Wednesday.

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance took to the airwaves to dissect Trump and Habba's antics in the federal New York City courtroom where the former president faces off against E. Jean Carroll, the writer he's been found liable of sexually abusing and defaming.

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Trump's courtroom antics amount to 'throwing rocks at the judge': attorney

Donald Trump’s declaration Wednesday that he would “love” Judge Lewis Kaplan to toss him from his defamation trial is best compared to the actions of a playground bully, a legal expert argued Wednesday.

“Throwing rocks at the judge, so to speak, disrupting his courtroom, is very unlikely to help him legally,” attorney Renato Mariotti said on CNN Wednesday afternoon.

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Trump's muttering 'in the presence of the jury' riles judge in defamation case

U.S. District Court Judge Lewis A. Kaplan warned former President Donald Trump after he spoke out in front of a jury hearing a defamation case against him Wednesday.

On the second day of the trial, writer E. Jean Carroll testified about how she had been defamed after Trump denied raping her.

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'Past catching up with him': Morning Joe busts Trump's bellyaching about legal woes

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough brutally shut down Donald Trump's moaning and groaning about being forced to travel in inclement weather from his defamation trial to campaign in New Hampshire.

The former president took an evening flight from New York City to campaign in the early Republican primary state after choosing to watch jury selection in the defamation case filed by the woman he was found liable for sexually abusing, and the "Morning Joe" host jumped all over Trump for whining that no candidate had ever been treated as badly as him.

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The Republican base wants the election to be about Trump's alleged crimes: GOP strategist

Republican strategist Scott Jennings told CNN on Wednesday that he believes the GOP base actually wants the 2024 election to be focused on the alleged crimes committed by former President Donald Trump.

Jennings' remarks came after CNN played a clip of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis warning that the election will be all about Trump's legal troubles if the GOP again makes him the nominee.

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Trump lawyer Alina Habba blames mysterious 'demonic plan' for ex-president's court cases

Alina Habba told a group of nearly 90,000 prayer warriors Sunday that the many court cases of Donald Trump were the work of Satan, new video shows.

Habba appeared on the Arc of Grace Ministries’ live broadcast to detail her battle to save America’s justice system from what she described as a nefarious foe.

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Judge orders E. Jean Carroll jurors to use assumed names and not tell family about service

With writer E. Jean Carroll's defamation trial against former President Donald Trump now underway, U.S. District Judge Lewis F. Kaplan is taking the security of jurors seriously.

Politico legal reporter Erica Orden tweeted Tuesday that Kaplan instructed his jury that it was to be an "anonymous jury," meaning no one — other jurors, reporters, attorneys and even Kaplan — would know their names.

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Trump's prospective jurors admit to being election deniers at defamation trial

At least two prospective jurors were admitted election deniers in Donald Trump's second defamation trial brought by writer E. Jean Carroll.

During the first day of jury selection on Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan quizzed the prospective jurors about personal connections to Carroll or Trump.

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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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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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Judge hits Trump with massive bill over failed attempt to sue New York Times

Former President Donald Trump has been ordered to pay nearly half a million dollars to The New York Times to cover legal fees involved in a lawsuit he filed against them, Times reporter Susanne Craig revealed Friday.

The lawsuit, which was filed against The Times, Craig and her fellow reporters David Barstow and Russ Buettner, along with the ex-president's niece Mary Trump, alleged that the paper conspired in an "insidious plot" to obtain Trump's tax returns.

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Trump exposed as 'legal terrorist' in review of thousands of court documents

A lengthy review by Politico's Michael Kruse of court documents involving Donald Trump reveals that the former president has for decades used the legal system as a cudgel against adversaries, despite his current protestations that the system is horrifically biased against him.

"He spent most of his adult life molding [the legal system] into an arena in which he could stake claims and hunt leverage," writes Kruse. "It has not been for him a place of last resort so much as a place of constant quarrel. Conflict in courts is not for him the cost of doing business — it is how he does business. Throughout his vast record of (mostly civil) lawsuits, whether on offense, defense or frequently a mix of the two, Trump has become a sort of layman’s master in the law and lawfare."

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