Letitia James

Trump trying to tear down judicial system 'brick by brick' as law closes in: analysis

The fraud trial against Donald Trump appears to be nearing a conclusion, and the former president has stepped up his attacks on the judge as his likely loss becomes more apparent.

Judge Arthur Engoron has already found Trump liable for fraud in the $250 million lawsuit filed by New York attorney general Letitia James, and the ex-president has ranted almost daily on Truth Social against the judge and his rulings and thrown courthouse tantrums aimed at discrediting the legal process, wrote MSNBC columnist Hayes Brown.

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'They're going to go out of business': George Conway dumps on Trump Jr.'s testimony

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," attorney George Conway asserted that Donald Trump Jr's testimony in a Manhattan courtroom on Wednesday did nothing to keep the Trump Organization from eventually being dismantled due to years of financial fraud.

On Wednesday, the former president's namesake took the stand in Judge Arthur Engoron's courtroom and tried to lay blame for the dummied-up valuations of Trump properties on the Trump Organization's accountants while portraying himself as a passive observer.

According to Conway, Trump Jr's testimony probably didn't move Judge Engoron, who has already has ruled he sees criminal conduct by the Trump executives who are at the center of New York Attorney General Letitia James' $250 million civil suit.

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"This isn't going to help," Conway said of the testimony before adding, "The judge can take findings and say, 'I don't believe that he didn't remember that. I don't believe that he was relying on the accountants. The story doesn't make any sense.'"

"It doesn't even matter. he can find beyond a -- all you have to do is find a 50.01 percent, more likely than not, that there was fraud committed, and they knowingly did that," he added. "It's easy to do, and the judge will make credibility findings and say these people are all liars."

Asked if the Trump Org can appeal an adverse ruling, Conway explained, "They probably will get a stay pending appeal, but you have to post a large bond. It may take a couple of years for this to pan out in the appellate courts, but there's already been an interim receiver appointed. They basically can't move assets around, can't hide them — they're stuck."

"That's one of the reasons, I think, why he is so mad.: Donald is upset and showing up at the trial every day," he elaborated. "Basically, he's in financial handcuffs already. Who is going to loan money to these people? They're going to go out of business."

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Psychologist Mary Trump predicts Ivanka is going to throw her father 'under the bus'

She has her own teflon. The truth.

The former president's daughter is expected to take the stand in the Lower Manhattan courtroom as early on Friday and her dad's niece, Mary Trump, is certain that when she does, she won't hold back or try to shield her political force of a father.

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Trump Jr. tells court he had no knowledge of business accounts: 'That's what CPAs are for'

One of the Trump Organization's executive vice presidents and former President Donald Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr., took the stand in the fraud case in New York on Wednesday afternoon.

It was the first time Trump Jr. had stepped foot in the courtroom, though his brother Eric has been present for much of the proceedings and has been largely polite to others present, even shaking hands with Attorney General Letitia James who brought the lawsuit against his family's business, said MSNBC's senior legal correspondent, Laura Jarrett.

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Trump cost banks $168M by inflating his company's worth: fraud trial expert

Trump Organization lenders lost about $168 million because of the former president’s misrepresentation of his corporation’s worth, an expert witness for the prosecution testified Wednesday.

Michiel McCarty Wednesday provided this estimate in the New York City courtroom where Donald Trump faces a $250 million civil suit brought by Attorney General Letitia James, ABC News reports.

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'Bad people, they are bad!' Trump smears political opponents in rambling endorsement

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday delivered a rambling endorsement of Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves in which he ranted that "bad people" were trying to defeat him at the polls.

In a video posted on his Truth Social website, the former president praised Reeves as a "fighter" while also casting aspersions on those who wanted to unseat him.

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'It's optics': Alina Habba slams court for dismissing Ivanka but not Trump sons

Alina Habba, an attorney for Donald Trump, slammed a New York court and prosecutors on Wednesday because her client's children were being forced to testify in a $250 million fraud trial.

During an interview on Real America's Voice, host Gina Loudon accused the court of conducting a "banana republic style" trial.

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'Enemies around every corner': Trump family reportedly reeling from trials and spotlight

Former President Donald Trump's litany of civil and criminal proceedings in multiple jurisdictions and the political fallout from his controversial presidency have taken a toll on his adult children, according to a new Washington Post report.

"The presidency was painful for everyone in the family on some level. You have subpoenas, legal bills, investigations, testimony, terrible news stories, the constant spotlight," an unnamed source close to the Trump family told the Post. "They grew up famous, but it wasn’t like that. They’d never experienced any of that."

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Trump’s rhetoric echoes a fascist commitment to a destructive and bloody rebirth: expert​

Former President Donald Trump’s rhetoric has regularly bordered on the incitement of violence. Lately, however, it has become even more violent. Yet both the press and the public have largely just shrugged their shoulders.

As a political philosopher who studies extremism, I believe people should be more worried about this.

Mark Milley, the outgoing chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, is guilty of “treason,” Trump said in September 2023, just for reassuring the Chinese that the U.S. had no plans to attack in the waning days of the Trump administration. And for this, Trump says, Milley deserves death.

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Trump rages as judge considers fine for illegal profits

Donald Trump raged as the judge overseeing his civil fraud trial considers punishing fines that pose an existential threat to his business empire.

His legal team argued in court Tuesday that disgorgement – fining Trump for illegally profiting from fraudulent financial statements – should be off the table, but Judge Arthur Engoron strongly disagreed, but the former president insisted that was unfair because he wasn't even familiar with the term.

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'Leave my children alone': Trump launches new attack on judge as sons prepare to testify

Donald Trump attacked the judge overseeing his New York fraud trial in an overnight post ahead of testimony from his two eldest sons.

The former president's adult sons Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump – who are both executive vice presidents at the Trump Organization – are expected to testify back to back on Wednesday in the civil trial overseen by New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron, and his concern was apparent in the 2:28 a.m. post on Truth Social.

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'Something's up': Morning Joe and Mika speculate about Donald Trump Jr.'s erratic behavior

Donald Trump's two adult sons are scheduled to testify in the $250 million civil fraud trial, and MSNBC's Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski cringed at the prospect of his namesake son taking the stand.

Both men are executive vice presidents for the Trump Organization, but the "Morning Joe" co-hosts expressed concern about Donald Trump Jr.'s erratic behavior in video rants he posts online attacking his father's enemies.

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Trump used rich celebrity listicle to prove he had the cash to buy Buffalo Bills: report

The paper former President Donald Trump provided to prove he had the dough to buy the Buffalo Bills was a Forbes Magazine listicle of rich celebrities, according to a new report.

The strange financial filing was revealed Tuesday in the New York City civil courtroom where Trump and his family are being tried for fraud by Attorney General Letitia James, the Associated Press reports.

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