Letitia James

Trump facing a 'knockout punch' as time runs out on his legal delay tactics: experts

On Monday, Donald Trump will be in a Manhattan courtroom where he will likely find out how quickly the hush money case being prosecuted by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg will proceed before a jury, while he also faces a deadline to come up with nearly a half billion dollar appeals bond after losing a financial fraud case.

According to a former impeachment counsel to the House Judiciary Committee and a Florida state attorney, this could be the week when the former president's fortunes come crashing down despite all of his delay tactics.

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Trump faces two legal crises in New York, possible seizure of assets at stake

Donald Trump faces twin legal crises on Monday in New York, where he could see the possible seizure of his storied properties over a massive fine as he separately fights to delay a criminal trial even further.

The 77-year-old real estate magnate, who has once again clinched the Republican nomination despite facing a raft of legal charges, has already been hit by heavy fines in two civil cases.

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'Don't like': Trump has a problem with how Fox News is covering his fraud case

Donald Trump on Sunday took to social media to attack a conservative network that has often had his back: Fox News.

Trump, who has had a hot-and-cold relationship with the right-wing media giant owned by the Rupert Murdoch family, posted his attack on Truth Social. The social network the ex-president created is rumored to be ready for a public offering, which could inject much-needed funds into Trump's accounts as he struggles to come up with bond money in a fraud case in which he was ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars.

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'Not quite accurate': Legal expert corrects Eric Trump on fraud bond claims

Eric Trump is spreading false information about his father's bond in the fraud case in which the former president was ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars.

Trump, who earlier in the day told Fox News that top insurance executives laughed when he asked for more than $400 million in bond money for his father, later took to social media to make a similar complaint about the size of the bond.

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'He’s so close to getting it': Eric Trump buried for whining about being laughed at

If Eric Trump was looking for some sympathy over his family being unable to find anyone willing to back a half-billion-dollar appeal bond by Monday, he won't find too many shoulders to cry on if he checks out X, formerly known as Twitter.

During a Sunday morning appearance on Fox News with host Maria Bartiromo, Donald Trump's middle son went on an extended rant about the unfairness of the penalty after the Trump Organization was found guilty of committing financial fraud by Judge Arthur Engoron.

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'Actually not true': Fox News destroys Trump claim that fraud bond is 'unprecedented'

Fox News host Eric Shawn pointed out that Donald Trump's claim that his New York fraud bond is unprecedented was simply "not true."

During an interview with former federal prosecutor Alex Little, Shawn noted that Trump had repeatedly made the claim about the $454 million bond.

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Trump poised to face his two 'greatest and longest-held fears': NYT's Haberman

The way the rest of Donald Trump's life will pan out will be in play in New York City on Monday when, as the New York Times' Maggie Haberman put it, the former president will be forced to deal with his "greatest and longest-held fears."

At issue for the former president will be a decision in a Manhattan courtroom on when to proceed with a trial where he faces 34 charges of falsifying business records brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg while at the same time the clock is running out on his attempts to come up with a nearly half-billion dollar appeals bond related to his conviction on financial fraud charges

According to the Times' Haberman and Ben Protess, if there are two things Trump fears, it is jail time and having his entire fortune wiped out and being viewed by the public as broke.

ALSO READ: 11 ways Trump doesn’t become president

With the clock ticking and no indication that the former president is getting any closer to finding a savior to back his bond that will prevent New Yor Attorney General Letitia James from quickly seizing his assets, the NYT report notes, "Unless Mr. Trump strikes an 11th-hour deal, Ms. James could freeze his bank accounts, and begin the long and complicated process of seizing some of his properties. And barring Mr. Trump’s lawyers achieving an improbable legal triumph, the judge in his criminal case could set a trial date for as soon as next month."

Calling what the former president faces on Monday "twin threats," the report adds they "crystallize two of Mr. Trump’s greatest and longest-held fears: a criminal conviction and a public perception that he does not have as much cash as he claims."

According to one longtime associate of Trump, the knowledge that the public will see him as anything less than filthy rich is one of the former president's greatest nightmares.

Former Trump casino executive Jack O’Donnell explained, "If Trump uses one thing to score the game, it has always been money. If he has more money than someone, he is winning and the other person is losing. And if someone has more money than Trump, he has the fear that someone will say he is losing to that person.”

In one candid interview in June, Trump admitted he has always dreaded facing a criminal indictment by lamenting: "Nobody wants to be indicted. I don’t care that my poll numbers went up by a lot. I don’t want to be indicted. I’ve never been indicted. I went through my whole life, now I get indicted every two months.”

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'Drop-dead date': Legal expert predicts when Judge Engoron will address Trump wealth claim

Donald Trump will soon be taken to task regarding his boast about having almost $500 million, a move that contradicted arguments his attorneys are making in court, according to a former prosecutor.

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner went on The Legal Breakdown, where he talked about all the possibilities of what could happen in the Trump fraud case in which he was ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars.

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'This has been different': Trump insider alarmed that Letitia James is plunging ahead

The very fact that New York Attorney General Letitia James is plunging ahead with paperwork to seize assets belonging to Donald Trump to satisfy a nearly half-billion dollar judgment is 'derailing" the former president's delay strategy and is causing no small amount of alarm among insiders.

According to a report from CNN, the former president has been remarkably successful at using the courts to forestall being brought to justice but the financial fraud ruling by Judge Arthur Engoron is not playing out like his multitude of other legal problems.

Noting the avalanche of Trump Truth Social posts on Friday about his worth and the money he needs for his appeal bond due by Monday, CNN is reporting they reveal a "... reality that has pushed Trump’s company and personal finances to the brink with just two days remaining to land a solution."

ALSO READ: 11 ways Trump doesn’t become president

One problem, the report notes, is that even if the former president has the $400 million he boasted about in an early morning Friday posting, it doesn't come near enough to the total he needs.

"He consistently pegged the number during legal proceedings at $400 million and, barring any recent and unreported cash infusion, a person familiar with his finances confirmed that remains roughly where his cash holdings stand," CNN is reporting before adding, "The $464 million decision levied in the verdict, and the bond Trump is scrambling to secure to forestall potential seizure of his properties, would require cash or cash equivalent of roughly $557 million based on industry practice. And at least some of the money Trump does have is tied up in loan agreements that include terms requiring him to have tens of millions of dollars in cash on hand."

According to a GOP lawmaker close to the Trump camp, until now the former president has seemed invulnerable but AG James' plan to have liens in place if the bond is not posted has changed the game.

“I think the whole thing is b------t,” they explained. “But it had gotten to the point where it seemed like nothing will ever stick to him, so this has been different.”

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Top Trump funder admits 'donor fatigue' as his campaign lags behind Biden’s fundraising

Former President Donald Trump may be the presumptive 2024 Republican nominee, but his third bid for the White House is already at a significant financial disadvantage compared to President Joe Biden's reelection operation.

According to a recent Politico report, the ex-president is blocking off entire days on his calendar to call donors and ask them for help shoring up his campaign's infrastructure with less than eight months to go before Election Day. Former Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Georgia), a top Trump fundraiser, admitted that trying to build up the ex-president's war chest is an arduous task.

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'Little chance' Trump will be saved by appeals court from asset seizure by Monday: report

Any hope that Donald Trump has that a judge in the New York State Appellate Division will give him more time to come up with the nearly half-billion dollar— or a reduced amount — he needs for his appeals bond related to financial fraud due on Monday should be put to rest.

According to a report from the Washington Post, with New York Attorney General Letitia James already poised to start grabbing Trump properties and raid his bank accounts if he misses his deadline, the former president is running out of time and the court's normal scheduling does not favor his immediate needs.

As the Post is reporting, "The appeals court generally issues rulings on Tuesdays and Thursdays, so there is very little chance it will act by Monday on Trump’s request to waive the bond requirement, adding, "If it doesn’t, and if Trump doesn’t post a bond by then, legal experts say there is nothing preventing James from calling on the New York City sheriffs or on city marshals to begin seizing his assets."

ALSO READ: Here's why conservative elites are bailing on Trump now

The report goes on to state that Trump's on-hand cash will likely be the first asset to be seized before the long arduous process of taking his properties and then auctioning them off is set in motion.

According to one expert, AG James will likely hold off on grabbing properties, waiting for the appeals court to weigh in.

As Nikos Passas of Northeastern University put it, "She doesn’t want to be accused of being overly aggressive and unfair.”

Stewart Sterk, a professor at Cardozo School of Law, added: "Once she has that judgment lien, what she can do is foreclose on that judgment lien and essentially mandate a sale of the properties to satisfy the judgment.”

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'They can go after any assets': AG James to grab Trump’s bank accounts before real estate

New York Attorney General Letitia James has made it clear that if the courts don't intervene in her plans to seize former President Donald Trump's assets, she will begin that process as soon as Monday. And it's likely she'll start with his cash.

In a Friday report, Politico's Erica Orden broke down how James would begin with her asset seizure. Assuming Trump's appeal for a last-minute stay is unsuccessful, the New York Attorney General's office would then seek Judge Arthur Engoron's approval to access the former president's bank accounts.

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'He was lying to me': Trump biographer recounts how ex-president misled him about loans

He reportedly keeps lying and never learns his lessons.

Donald Trump biographer Tim O'Brien, appearing on MSNBC's "The Last Word" with Lawrence O'Donnell, recounted a time when he was walking and talking at Mar-a-Lago with former President Donald Trump more than decade before he'd run for office.

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