Unconventional trial judge could remove Trump from his NY empire
New York Attorney General Letitia James set out to prove that Donald Trump had committed fraud. Trump took the stand to assail James. Lawyers on both sides screamed that their opponents were out of line and wasting time.
When 11 weeks of chaotic courtroom wrangling ended Wednesday, the fate of Trump’s civil fraud trial began to move behind the scenes and into the hands of Arthur Engoron, the unconventional New York judge overseeing the case. And because the judge will decide the verdict — there is no jury — he will determine the future of Trump’s role in his family business.
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Engoron ruled before the trial began that Trump had fraudulently inflated his net worth, and announced an initial round of punishments. That blow recast the trial as a battle over how steep a penalty the former president would face. James has indicated that she may press for a fine above the $250 million she originally sought, concluding that he reaped more ill-gotten gains than was once thought. She has also asked the judge to bar Trump from running a business in the state, banishing him from the world that made him famous decades ago.
The attorney general’s arguments seemed to persuade the judge, and under the powerful New York law underpinning the case, he has broad authority to punish Trump. His decision is expected as soon as next month, after closing arguments in court.
Yet Engoron might have already erred when he issued that initial punishment of Trump, ordering that some of his New York companies be dissolved.
The decision set off a firestorm and appeared to imperil much of Trump’s New York empire. But interviews with legal experts and a review of court rulings suggest that the judge may have lacked the authority to dissolve the companies.
An appeals court last week granted Trump’s request to pause the punishment so it could consider Engoron’s ruling. That could presage a more thorough assessment of the judge’s decision-making throughout the trial; Trump’s lawyers have placed their hopes on an appeal.
The trial is the product of a lawsuit that James filed last year against Trump, his adult sons and their family business, accusing them of fudging the value of his assets on years of annual financial statements they provided to banks and other lenders.
James contended that the statements were so inflated that the Trumps had defrauded the banks. Her case hinged on years of documentary evidence and the testimony of the Trumps themselves, who acknowledged a role in creating the statements.
Despite the trial’s hinging on spreadsheet cells, accounting rules and financial arcana, it took on a distinctly schoolyard atmosphere: Trump stormed out of the courtroom one day, a witness answered his mobile phone while on the stand, Kise likened James’ team to the Kremlin and one of the attorney general’s lawyers snapped at Kise for issuing “a bunch of ridiculous objections.”
Engoron presided over the ruckus, often looking like an exasperated parent gently trying to restore order while defusing tension with self-deprecating humor. He dispensed birthday wishes to lawyers and once remarked, “I’m not as dumb as I look.”
Trump, a Republican, took aim at the judge, who, like James, is a Democrat. He portrayed them both as members of a left-wing cabal out to derail his latest run for the presidency. In the courtroom, Kise repeatedly accused the judge of bias. On social media, Trump took aim at Engoron’s family; court officials later said that numerous antisemitic threats had been made against the judge.
The former president and his defense team also attacked Engoron’s law clerk, landing them in trouble with the judge, who imposed a limited gag order to prevent them from speaking ill of court staff. Trump twice violated the order, resulting in $15,000 in fines.
Things are now likely to get a lot worse for Trump. With the courtroom portion of the trial concluding, Engoron, who has appeared sympathetic to James’ case from the beginning, is poised to impose a sweeping array of punishments.
In addition to the financial penalty, Engoron could institute five-year bans blocking Trump and his company from striking commercial real estate deals in New York or seeking loans from banks chartered in the state. Most notably, Engoron could permanently bar Trump from running a company in New York, a move that would essentially erase the former president from much of his company’s operations.
“He’s going beyond what the statute seems to allow,” said David W. Lowden, a lawyer who for decades specialized in commercial transactions. Lowden said that while many observers had predicted that the ruling would crush Trump’s New York operations, it might ultimately be a simple bureaucratic irritation, resolvable through paperwork.
Other experts noted that the judge’s order applied to all 10 or so of Trump’s New York companies that have this special type of business certificate, not just the much smaller subset implicated in James’ complaint. Imposing a punishment on a company not accused of wrongdoing most likely runs afoul of various legal principles, the experts said.
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