Current:Home > reviewsTrump expected to attend New York fraud trial again Thursday as testimony nears an end -Edge Finance Strategies
Trump expected to attend New York fraud trial again Thursday as testimony nears an end
View
Date:2025-04-24 03:09:37
NEW YORK (AP) — He’s been a frustrated observer, a confrontational witness and a heated commentator outside the courtroom door. Now former President Donald Trump is poised to return to his civil business fraud trial again, first to watch and then to serve as star witness for his own defense.
With testimony winding down after more than two months, court officials and Trump’s attorneys and aides have indicated that the Republican 2024 presidential front-runner is expected to show up voluntarily as a spectator Thursday, when his legal team is calling an accounting professor to testify about some financial topics important to the case.
Then Trump himself is scheduled to take the stand Monday, for a second time.
Even while campaigning to reclaim the presidency and fighting four criminal cases, Trump is devoting a lot of attention to the New York lawsuit. The case is putting his net worth on trial, scrutinizing the real estate empire that first built his reputation, and threatening to block him from doing business in his native state.
New York Attorney General Letitia James’s suit accuses Trump, his company and some executives of misleading banks and insurers by giving them financial statements full of inflated values for such signature assets as his Trump Tower penthouse and Mar-a-Lago, the Florida club where he now lives. The statements were provided to help secure deals — including loans at attractive interest rates available to hyperwealthy people — and some loans required updated statements each year.
Trump denies any wrongdoing, and he posits that the statements’ numbers actually fell short of his wealth. He has downplayed the documents’ importance in getting deals, saying it was clear that lenders and others should do their own analyses. And he claims the case is a partisan abuse of power by James and Judge Arthur Engoron, both Democrats.
The former president has regularly railed about the case on his Truth Social platform. “Happy Banks and Insurance Companies, NO VICTIMS, GREAT FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, Perfect Disclaimer Clause - BUT A CORRUPT ATTORNEY GENERAL AND JUDGE!!!” read a typical comment this week.
Trump isn’t required to attend the trial when he’s not on the stand. But going to court affords him a microphone — in fact, many of them, on the news cameras positioned in the hallway. He often stops on his way into and out of the proceedings, which cameras can’t film, to expostulate and to cast various developments as victories.
His out-of-court remarks got him fined $10,000 Oct. 26, when Engoron decided Trump had violated a gag order that prohibits participants in the trial from commenting publicly on court staffers. Trump’s lawyers are appealing the gag order.
James hasn’t let Trump go unanswered, showing up to court herself on the days when he’s there and making her own comments on social media and the courthouse steps. (Lawyers in the case have been told not to make press statements in the hallway, but the former president has been allowed to do so.)
“Here’s a fact: Donald Trump has engaged in years of financial fraud. Here’s another fact: When you break the law, there are consequences,” her office wrote this week on X, formerly Twitter.
While the non-jury trial is airing claims of conspiracy, insurance fraud and falsifying business records, Engoron ruled beforehand that Trump and other defendants engaged in fraud. He ordered that a receiver take control of some of Trump’s properties, but an appeals court has held off that order for now.
At trial, James is seeking more than $300 million in penalties and a prohibition on Trump and other defendants doing business in New York.
It’s not clear exactly when testimony will wrap up, but it’s expected before Christmas. Closing arguments are scheduled in January, and Engoron is aiming for a decision by the end of that month.
veryGood! (979)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- 9 deputies indicted in death of Black inmate who was violently beaten in Memphis jail
- Ray Epps, man at center of right-wing Jan. 6 conspiracy, pleads guilty
- Novels from US, UK, Canada and Ireland are finalists for the Booker Prize for fiction
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Free COVID test kits are coming back. Here's how to get them.
- Mexico president says he’ll skip APEC summit in November in San Francisco
- George R.R. Martin, Jodi Picoult and more sue OpenAI: 'Systematic theft on a mass scale'
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Lisa Marie Presley's Estate Sued Over $3.8 Million Loan
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Biden to announce new military aid package for Ukraine as Zelenskyy visits Washington
- Former fashion mogul pleads not guilty in Canadian sex-assault trial
- There's a lot to love in the 'Hair Love'-inspired TV series 'Young Love'
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Novels from US, UK, Canada and Ireland are finalists for the Booker Prize for fiction
- See Kim Kardashian Officially Make Her American Horror Story: Delicate Debut
- Appeals court takes up transgender health coverage case likely headed to Supreme Court
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Trump says he always had autoworkers’ backs. Union leaders say his first-term record shows otherwise
Son of Ruby Franke, YouTube mom charged with child abuse, says therapist tied him up, used cayenne pepper to dress wounds
'Euphoria' actor Angus Cloud's cause of death revealed
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
DuckDuckGo founder says Google’s phone and manufacturing partnerships thwart competition
Baby, one more time! Britney Spears' 'Crossroads' movie returns to theaters in October
Myanmar state media say 12 people are missing after a boat capsized and sank in a northwest river