The trump family is an international crime syndicate

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
People will be lined up to shit on Stinky's grave when he finally dies,not piss.


i would not befoul my feces by letting it come in contact with unhallowed ground...
 

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New York attorney general sues Trump, three adult children for business fraud
New York’s attorney general is suing former President Trump and his three adult children, alleging business fraud.

The civil lawsuit, filed Wednesday in the State Supreme Court in Manhattan, is the culmination of a three-year investigation by the office of Attorney General Letitia James’s (D) into whether the former president’s company misled investors and tax authorities by inflating property values to get investments and subsequently deflating them to get tax and loan benefits.

The attorney general’s office is seeking $250 million in financial penalties and asking the court to, among other things, permanently bar Trump and his children — Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump — from serving as an office or director in any corporation registered or licensed in the state.

The lawsuit also asks the court to bar Trump and the Trump Organization from entering into any real estate acquisition in New York or from applying for loans from any financial institution in the state for five years.

Trump “falsely inflated his net worth by billions of dollars to unjustly enrich himself and to cheat the system, thereby cheating all of us,” James said at a press conference Wednesday.

James also noted that the former president was aided by former longtime Trump Organization executives Allen Weisselberg and Jeffrey McConney.

The group “repeatedly and persistently manipulated the value of assets to induce banks to lend money to the Trump Organization on more favorable terms than would otherwise have been available to the company, to pay lower taxes, to satisfy continuing loan agreements and to induce insurance companies to provide insurance coverage for higher limits and at lower premiums,” James said.

James alleged the conduct was in violation of both state and federal criminal law. Trump and his team engaged in a conspiracy to falsify business records, issue false financial statements, commit insurance fraud, James argued.

She said she’s referred the alleged federal law violations to the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District for New York and the Internal Revenue Service.

Trump has dismissed what he called a “phony years-long crusade” against him and criticized James for the inquiry.

When he appeared before the attorney general’s office for questioning last month, Trump invoked his Fifth Amendment rights and declined to answer questions.

Two of Trump’s children, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr., were subpoenaed along with their father and sat for depositions earlier this year.

An attorney for Trump blasted the decision.

“Today’s filing is neither focused on the facts nor the law — rather, it is solely focused on advancing the Attorney General’s political agenda,” the Trump attorney, Alina Habba, said in a statement.

“It is abundantly clear that the Attorney General’s Office has exceeded its statutory authority by prying into transactions where absolutely no wrongdoing has taken place. We are confident that our judicial system will not stand for this unchecked abuse of authority, and we look forward to defending our client against each and every one of the Attorney General’s meritless claims,” Habba said.
 

Friendly_Grower

Well-Known Member
Ha ha ha ha!

This report if filed under "Paybacks are a MF!"

I can't stop laughing with

1663785608592.jpeg
Michael Cohen
Lawyer

OMG this is someone who not only went under the Trump Bus but also was put back in jail by the then DOJ under orders from Trump and thus violating Mr. Cohen's First Amendment rights.

Please enjoy if you wish.


"It wasn't Rigged you're just a loser!" Ha ha ha!
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
27 LOL


 

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Well-Known Member
Trump appeals judge’s decision to toss lawsuit against Hillary Clinton
Former President Trump on Tuesday appealed the dismissal of his lawsuit against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, according to a new filing.

U.S. District Judge Donald Middlebrooks last month tossed out Trump’s suit against his 2016 presidential opponent, calling it a “political manifesto” with no legal standing. The former president’s legal team has now filed a notice of civil appeal.
Court records show the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida received Trump’s appeal Tuesday, but flagged filing deficiencies in the appeal, including at least one missing signature.

Trump’s suit argued that Clinton, the Democrat National Committee, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan and others “maliciously conspired to weave a false narrative” with accusations of Russian collusion during his 2016 presidential bid — and alleged the former president lost more than $24 million as a result.
Judge rules Trump must sit for deposition in rape accuser’s lawsuit next week
A federal judge has denied former President Trump’s motion to pause the proceedings of a defamation suit against him from a woman who has accused him of rape while appeals over the case play out, setting him up for a deposition next week.

U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled on Wednesday that Trump’s argument did not meet the legal threshold required for a stay to be issued. Trump has been pushing for the United States to be substituted in E. Jean Carroll’s lawsuit against him because the comments Trump made denying her claim and criticizing her happened while he was president.

Carroll has accused Trump of raping her at a Manhattan department store in the 1990s. Trump has countered by accusing Carroll of lying and making remarks criticizing her appearance.

Trump requested that proceedings in the defamation case that Carroll filed in response be paused while the D.C. Court of Appeals weighs whether Trump was acting in his official capacity as president when he criticized Carroll, but Kaplan ruled that Trump has not demonstrated a likelihood to succeed on the merits of his argument.
Kaplan wrote in his ruling that the court could rule either way on the question, but Trump did not give a reason for him to conclude that the ruling will be in his favor.
He also found that Trump failed to show a meaningful threat of irreparable injury if a stay is not put in place.

Trump had argued that he should have immunity from the suit under the Westfall Act, which protects government employees from civil lawsuits if they are acting in their capacity as government officials. But the question as to whether Trump was acting in his capacity as president is unresolved.
Kaplan also found that a stay would cause irreparable injury to Carroll. He said Trump appears to be attempting to delay the case as much as possible, and 20 months have already passed from when Kaplan initially denied Trump’s motion to substitute the United States for him in the lawsuit.

“The defendant should not be permitted to run out the clock on the plaintiff’s attempt to gain a remedy for what allegedly was a serious wrong,” Kaplan said.

Roberta Kaplan, Carroll’s attorney, said in a statement that they are pleased with the ruling against Trump’s requested stay. Roberta Kaplan said they also look forward to filing a lawsuit against Trump under New York’s Adult Survivors Act, a law that Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) signed in May to create a one-year window for those who experienced sexual assault to file civil lawsuits against abusers regardless of when the abuse happened.
That window will open in late November.

Alina Habba, an attorney for Trump, said in a statement that Carroll’s case is baseless.
“We look forward to establishing on the record that this case is, and always has been, entirely without merit,” she said.
Trump’s deposition is now set for next Wednesday.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Trump appeals judge’s decision to toss lawsuit against Hillary Clinton
Former President Trump on Tuesday appealed the dismissal of his lawsuit against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, according to a new filing.

U.S. District Judge Donald Middlebrooks last month tossed out Trump’s suit against his 2016 presidential opponent, calling it a “political manifesto” with no legal standing. The former president’s legal team has now filed a notice of civil appeal.
Court records show the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida received Trump’s appeal Tuesday, but flagged filing deficiencies in the appeal, including at least one missing signature.

Trump’s suit argued that Clinton, the Democrat National Committee, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan and others “maliciously conspired to weave a false narrative” with accusations of Russian collusion during his 2016 presidential bid — and alleged the former president lost more than $24 million as a result.
Judge rules Trump must sit for deposition in rape accuser’s lawsuit next week
A federal judge has denied former President Trump’s motion to pause the proceedings of a defamation suit against him from a woman who has accused him of rape while appeals over the case play out, setting him up for a deposition next week.

U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled on Wednesday that Trump’s argument did not meet the legal threshold required for a stay to be issued. Trump has been pushing for the United States to be substituted in E. Jean Carroll’s lawsuit against him because the comments Trump made denying her claim and criticizing her happened while he was president.

Carroll has accused Trump of raping her at a Manhattan department store in the 1990s. Trump has countered by accusing Carroll of lying and making remarks criticizing her appearance.

Trump requested that proceedings in the defamation case that Carroll filed in response be paused while the D.C. Court of Appeals weighs whether Trump was acting in his official capacity as president when he criticized Carroll, but Kaplan ruled that Trump has not demonstrated a likelihood to succeed on the merits of his argument.
Kaplan wrote in his ruling that the court could rule either way on the question, but Trump did not give a reason for him to conclude that the ruling will be in his favor.
He also found that Trump failed to show a meaningful threat of irreparable injury if a stay is not put in place.

Trump had argued that he should have immunity from the suit under the Westfall Act, which protects government employees from civil lawsuits if they are acting in their capacity as government officials. But the question as to whether Trump was acting in his capacity as president is unresolved.
Kaplan also found that a stay would cause irreparable injury to Carroll. He said Trump appears to be attempting to delay the case as much as possible, and 20 months have already passed from when Kaplan initially denied Trump’s motion to substitute the United States for him in the lawsuit.

“The defendant should not be permitted to run out the clock on the plaintiff’s attempt to gain a remedy for what allegedly was a serious wrong,” Kaplan said.

Roberta Kaplan, Carroll’s attorney, said in a statement that they are pleased with the ruling against Trump’s requested stay. Roberta Kaplan said they also look forward to filing a lawsuit against Trump under New York’s Adult Survivors Act, a law that Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) signed in May to create a one-year window for those who experienced sexual assault to file civil lawsuits against abusers regardless of when the abuse happened.
That window will open in late November.

Alina Habba, an attorney for Trump, said in a statement that Carroll’s case is baseless.
“We look forward to establishing on the record that this case is, and always has been, entirely without merit,” she said.
Trump’s deposition is now set for next Wednesday.
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New York AG asks court to increase monitoring of Trump’s business as fraud suit proceeds
New York Attorney General Letitia James’s (D) office on Thursday urged a state judge to appoint an independent party to monitor the Trump Organization’s upcoming financial submissions, suggesting the Trumps cannot be trusted to honestly submit the information to its lenders as James’s fraud lawsuit proceeds.

James filed a civil suit in the New York Supreme Court’s Manhattan division last month against members of the Trump family and their business, alleging they misleadingly inflated property values for years for tax and loan benefits.

Thursday’s motion also asks the judge to prevent the Trump Organization from restructuring its business or moving assets without court approval, raising concerns that Trump executives are already doing so to shield the business from an unfavorable decision in the case.
“Our investigation uncovered the fact that Donald Trump and the Trump Organization engaged in significant fraud to inflate his personal net worth by billions of dollars to illegally enrich himself and cheat the system,” James said in a statement.

“Since we filed this sweeping lawsuit last month, [former President] Donald Trump and the Trump Organization have continued those same fraudulent practices and taken measures to evade responsibility,” she continued. “Today, we are seeking an immediate stop to these actions because Mr. Trump should not get to play by different rules.”

The filing alleges the same day James’s office announced the fraud suit, the Trump Organization registered a new business entity in New York that was incorporated in Delaware about a week prior.

“Beyond just the continuation of its prior fraud, the Trump Organization now appears to be taking steps to restructure its business to avoid existing responsibilities under New York law,” the suit states.

Trump attorney Alina Habba called James’s filing “another stunt” in a statement to The Hill.

“The [Office of the Attorney General]’s filing is nothing more than a thinly-veiled attempt to keep this case with Justice Engoron rather than have it transferred to the Commercial Division where it belongs,” Habba said. “We have repeatedly provided assurance, in writing, that the Trump Organization has no intention of doing anything improper. This is simply another stunt which Ms. James hopes will aid her failing political campaign.”

The attorney general’s filing said that assurances Trump’s attorneys about the new entities were not “concrete” enough.
James’s office also argued that ongoing misconduct at the Trump Organization is likely, “Given the centrality of a particular cast of characters in the fraudulent conduct…and the continued role of many of them in the closely held Trump Organization.”

Thursday’s motion also accuses the former president and Eric Trump of refusing service of the complaint filed last month, asking the judge to allow the attorney general’s office to serve them electronically.

The former president and other members of his family have denounced James’s suit as politically motivated, pointing to her past promises to go after the Trump family’s business practices.
James’s filing of the suit last month marked the culmination of her office’s three-year investigation into the Trump Organization.

She is seeking $250 million in financial penalties and an order permanently barring Trump and three of his children — Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump — from serving as an officer or director in any New York corporation.
 

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Well-Known Member
Too lazy to find the private citizen thread.

Trump sits for deposition in rape accuser’s defamation case
Former President Trump on Wednesday sat for his scheduled deposition in a defamation case brought by E. Jean Carroll, who accused Trump of raping her in the 1990s.

Trump’s attorneys repeatedly attempted to delay the case, but a spokesperson for Carroll’s attorneys said the former president ultimately appeared as scheduled.

“We’re pleased that on behalf of our client, E. Jean Carroll, we were able to take Donald Trump’s deposition today. We are not able to comment further,” the spokesperson said.

Carroll is suing Trump for allegedly defaming her by casting doubt on her credibility and demeaning her appearance, including during a 2019 interview with The Hill in which Trump said Carroll was “totally lying” and “not my type.”
Trump’s attorneys have argued the former president’s statements are covered by a federal law that gives broad legal immunity to government employees.

A federal appeals court handed Trump a partial victory on that argument, but the case’s fate could rest on an impending local court decision in Washington, D.C., which was asked to determine whether Trump was acting “outside the scope” of his presidency under D.C. employment law while making the statements.

Carroll’s attorneys first revealed Trump’s scheduled deposition in a Sept. 30 filing made as part of that legal battle.
A federal judge last week denied the former president’s motion to pause the proceedings made weeks before his deposition.

“As we have said all along, my client was pleased to set the record straight today,” Trump attorney Alina Habba said in a statement to The Hill.

“This case is nothing more than a political ploy like many others in the long list of witch hunts against Donald Trump.”
Carroll has also said she will file an additional suit against Trump next month for the alleged sexual assault itself once a new New York law takes effect.

The law will provide individuals with a one-year window to bring forward sexual offense complaints previously barred by the state’s statute of limitations.
 

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Trump Org. CFO will spill tax fraud to New York jury, prosecutors say
Convicted ex-Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg will give the “inside story” of how the company allegedly used years-long tax fraud scheme to boost executive pay, Manhattan prosecutors said Monday.

The teaser came during opening remarks in the firm’s long-awaited New York Supreme Court criminal trial — one case in an increasingly complex web of legal woes for former President Donald Trump. The former president is not involved in the case, but the charges could lead to financial penalties for the Trump Organization if a jury finds it engaged in a 15-year scheme to pay Weisselberg off the books.

“This case is about greed and cheating, cheating on taxes,” Susan Hoffinger, the chief of investigations for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, told the court on Monday. “The scheme was conducted, directed and authorized at the highest level of the accounting department.” Weisselberg’s testimony “will give you the inside story of how he conducted this tax scheme.”

In opening statements, Hoffinger detailed allegations that Trump personally paid private school tuition for Weisselberg’s grandchildren and signed a lease for the top lieutenant’s Upper West Side apartment overlooking the Hudson River, because he wanted him to live in Manhattan rather than commuting from Long Island.

Trump Corp. attorney Susan Necheles, meanwhile, tried to insulate the former president and urged the jury not to let their opinions of Trump cloud their judgment. “You must not consider this case to be a referendum on President Trump or his politics,” she said. “It started and it ended with Allen Weisselberg. Allen Weisselberg did this.”

Weisselberg pleaded guilty in August to all 15 counts he faced, including tax fraud and larceny. Now he’ll play star witness in the expected month-long trial, where prosecutors must convince a jury that Trump Org. units — the Trump Corporation and Trump Payroll Corporation — share responsibility for concealing $1.76 million in compensation.

Necheles claimed Weisselberg was only implicating the company to avoid a lengthy prison sentence. If he fulfills his plea agreement and testifies truthfully, he is expected to be sentenced to five months on Rikers Island. Should he violate the deal, he could face up to 15 years in prison.
“The prosecutors had him paraded in front of cameras in handcuffs. Mr. Weisselberg realized he was facing not just public humiliation, but a potential jail sentence that could be years long,” she said. “I will ask you to consider the extreme pressure he is under.”

Prosecutors said Weisselberg and corporate defendants also dodged taxes by reporting some of his bonuses as being paid to an independent contractor rather than an employee. They also failed to disclose that he lived in New York City, allowing him to avoid paying local income taxes.

Weisselberg reported directly to Trump for 35 years, Hoffinger said. And Trump so confided in him that he made Weisselberg a trustee when he became president and put his personal assets in a trust. The fraudulent tax practices came to an end after Trump became president, prompting the company to clean up its act out of concern for increased scrutiny, the assistant DA said.

If convicted, the company could be fined $1.6 million. The corporations are charged with nine felony counts, including criminal tax fraud, conspiracy and falsifying business records.

The case is one of a slew of legal threats bearing down on the former president. Also in New York, Attorney General Tish James brought a lawsuit against Trump, his children and his company last month, accusing them of large-scale fraudulent financial practices.
That suit charges Trump falsely inflated his assets for more than a decade and seeks to bar him and his family members from engaging in real estate transactions or serving as officers of any business in New York.

A separate Justice Department investigation into Trump’s handling of classified documents led to an FBI raid of his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, where reams of documents were seized.

A broader criminal investigation by the Manhattan DA into Trump’s business practices also remains open, though it stalled early this year when Bragg declined to bring charges against Trump personally. Bragg was in the courtroom for Monday’s opening argument.

Prosecutors hoped to compel Weisselberg to cooperate with that broader probe, but he did not agree to do so as part of his plea deal.
Weisselberg reported directly to Trump for 35 years, Hoffinger said. And Trump so confided in him that he made Weisselberg a trustee when he became president and put his personal assets in a trust. The fraudulent tax practices came to an end after Trump became president, prompting the company to clean up its act out of concern for increased scrutiny, the assistant DA said.

If convicted, the company could be fined $1.6 million. The corporations are charged with nine felony counts, including criminal tax fraud, conspiracy and falsifying business records.

A broader criminal investigation by the Manhattan DA into Trump’s business practices also remains open, though it stalled early this year when Bragg declined to bring charges against Trump personally. Bragg was in the courtroom for Monday’s opening argument.
Prosecutors hoped to compel Weisselberg to cooperate with that broader probe, but he did not agree to do so as part of his plea deal.
 

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Chief Justice Roberts temporarily shields Trump tax records from House
The Supreme Court on Tuesday temporarily halted a House panel from accessing the financial records of former President Trump ahead of their expected release.

The move, which comes in response to an emergency request Trump filed on Monday, was ordered by Chief Justice John Roberts, who handles emergency matters arising in the District of Columbia. Roberts requested a response by Nov. 10.

The latest development comes after a lower court cleared the way for the House Ways and Means Committee to obtain the records of Trump and his businesses from the Treasury Department as part of a long-running legal battle.

During Trump’s presidency, the department resisted the committee’s request, but later agreed to comply after the Biden administration entered office.

Federal law mandates that tax returns are generally confidential unless an exception applies, one of which includes a written request by the House Ways and Means Committee. The issue in Trump’s litigation in large part turns on whether this exception is constitutional.

The latest phase of litigation arose last year when Trump asked a federal judge in D.C. to block the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) from handing over his records, citing his privacy concerns and challenging the constitutionality of the House committee’s request.

U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden, a Trump appointee, dismissed Trump’s suit late last year. His ruling was later affirmed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, which last week rejected Trump’s request to rehear the case, prompting his turn to the Supreme Court.

In court papers filed to Roberts on Monday, Trump’s lawyers reiterated his claim that the House panel’s pursuit of the records is legally invalid.

“The Committee’s purpose in requesting President Trump’s tax returns has nothing to do with funding or staffing issues at the IRS and everything to do with releasing the President’s tax information to the public,” they wrote.

The committee maintains that it requires the records — six years of Trump’s tax returns and eight years of his businesses — to inform its review of the IRS’s presidential audit process.

Delayed long enough to get under the wire.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Chief Justice Roberts temporarily shields Trump tax records from House
The Supreme Court on Tuesday temporarily halted a House panel from accessing the financial records of former President Trump ahead of their expected release.

The move, which comes in response to an emergency request Trump filed on Monday, was ordered by Chief Justice John Roberts, who handles emergency matters arising in the District of Columbia. Roberts requested a response by Nov. 10.

The latest development comes after a lower court cleared the way for the House Ways and Means Committee to obtain the records of Trump and his businesses from the Treasury Department as part of a long-running legal battle.

During Trump’s presidency, the department resisted the committee’s request, but later agreed to comply after the Biden administration entered office.

Federal law mandates that tax returns are generally confidential unless an exception applies, one of which includes a written request by the House Ways and Means Committee. The issue in Trump’s litigation in large part turns on whether this exception is constitutional.

The latest phase of litigation arose last year when Trump asked a federal judge in D.C. to block the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) from handing over his records, citing his privacy concerns and challenging the constitutionality of the House committee’s request.

U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden, a Trump appointee, dismissed Trump’s suit late last year. His ruling was later affirmed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, which last week rejected Trump’s request to rehear the case, prompting his turn to the Supreme Court.

In court papers filed to Roberts on Monday, Trump’s lawyers reiterated his claim that the House panel’s pursuit of the records is legally invalid.

“The Committee’s purpose in requesting President Trump’s tax returns has nothing to do with funding or staffing issues at the IRS and everything to do with releasing the President’s tax information to the public,” they wrote.

The committee maintains that it requires the records — six years of Trump’s tax returns and eight years of his businesses — to inform its review of the IRS’s presidential audit process.

Delayed long enough to get under the wire.
that's ok, it will ALL come out, and the fact that everyone will know he's been living on a thin margin for a long time will be the least of his problems, although it will embarrass the fuck out of him, and maybe shut him the fuck up for at least a day or two
 

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Jury shown Weisselberg lease signed by Trump himself

Former President Trump signed the lease of an Upper West Side apartment used by former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, prosecutors showed the jury at the company’s criminal tax fraud trial on Tuesday, Bloomberg reported.

The lease represents part of the prosecution’s efforts to show that the Trump Organization and its executives engaged in a years-long scheme to avoid taxes — one that was sanctioned by the highest echelons of the company, according to Bloomberg.

Weisselberg, the prosecution’s central witness, reportedly received a $6,500-a-month apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and $10,000 for moving fees from the Trump Organization.

The lease shown to jurors on Tuesday noted that the apartment was meant to be leased by Weisselberg or other company employees and was signed by Trump himself, Bloomberg reported.

The Trump Organization has been indicted on accusations of providing company executives with perks to evade taxes. The former president himself is not charged in the case, although the presiding judge said last week that Trump and his three adult children may be called to testify.

However, the trial was brought to a halt later on Tuesday after Trump Organization controller Jeffrey McConney, the prosecution’s first witness, tested positive for COVID-19.
 

Bagginski

Well-Known Member
“We have repeatedly provided assurance, in writing, that the Trump Organization has no intention of doing anything improper. This is simply another stunt which Ms. James hopes will aid her failing political campaign.”
The Trump Organization having readily provided written (yet worthless) assurances of their harmless intentions on many prior occasions, no one’s impressed….
 

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Trump’s Efforts to Hide Cash From NY AG Shot Down in Court
Donald Trump’s desperate attempts to escape the wrath of the New York Attorney General were halted Thursday when a state judge there took the remarkable step of putting the former president’s company under court supervision—and preventing the billionaire from quietly shifting his money to avoid paying millions in fines.

Justice Arthur F. Engoron intervened at the AG’s request, ordering the appointment of an independent monitor to ensure that the company can’t secretly move assets out of the law enforcement agency’s reach or keep issuing fraudulent financial statements.

“There’s going to be a monitor,” he said in a Manhattan courtroom midday Thursday.

The Trump Organization—the real estate company that propelled Trump into international fame—and its family leadership are accused of engaging in a blatant and long-running bank and tax fraud scheme. Documents filed in court meticulously describe how Trump and the adult family members he made executives there—Don Jr., Ivanka, and Eric—persistently inflated the size and value of property to snag better bank loans and claim bigger tax breaks. They now face a $250 million lawsuit from New York AG Letitia James which seeks to cripple the corporation.

She hopes to put the Trumps on trial in 2023, just as Trump is expected to pursue his political ambitions in a return to the White House.

Trump has already taken actions that indicate he might be doing exactly what the AG fears: playing corporate games to avoid accountability.

In recent weeks, he opened a new corporation in the shell company capital of Delaware, comically called “Trump Organization II.” And on Wednesday, he filed a state lawsuit in Florida’s Palm Beach County against the AG’s office trying to keep it from ever accessing any funds he shelters in a legal entity known as a “trust.” The lawsuit seeks a judicial order “declaring that James has no jurisdiction over the assets of a Florida revocable trust.”

In court on Thursday, assistant attorney general Kevin Wallace stressed the importance of having Justice Engoron clamp down on the company, citing "ongoing fraudulent activities at the Trump Organization.” He argued that the AG’s office needs to have “general visibility” into the company so that it doesn’t become an empty shell by the time a trial ends—and it potentially has to pay millions in fines.

“It's not appropriate for us to take this matter to trial... and now we're looking for the first time at what a restructured company might look like,” he said.

Meanwhile, Christopher M. Kise, a Florida lawyer representing the Trump Organization, chalked up the entire lawsuit as a “manufactured bill of grievances,” given that the AG was pursuing a claim against the company that was never made by its supposed victims—its major lender and accounting firm, Deutsche Bank and Mazars USA, respectively.

“There is zero public interest here,” Kise said. “The attorney general is representing Deutsche Bank, Mazars... these corporate titans have... some of the best attorneys in the country… they've never complained.”

Kise tried to cast any valuation issues as mere disagreements—the kind of dispute that happens every day in business. But Engoron wasn’t having any of it, zeroing in on just one of Trump’s baldfaced lies.

In his first round of questions, Engoron began by asking if Kise knew the size of the Trump Tower triplex in Manhattan. Kise said no. The judge then turned to the AG’s office lawyers, who explained how building plans show it’s 11,000 square feet—and yet Trump filed documents claiming it was actually three times that size, roughly 30,000 square feet.

“Could that be a good faith disagreement?” Engoron asked.

“It certainly could be,” Kise shot back.

Engoron then highlighted how the Trump Organization benefited handsomely from that lie, having the AG’s office explain how the 20,000 square foot addition of nonexistent space blew up the real estate’s listed value according to the company’s own then-chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg.

“It led to a variation of what Mr. Weisselberg described as, give or take, $200 million,” Wallace said.

Engoron said that discrepancy "by itself is enough to justify the appointment of a monitor."

At this point, this lawsuit is one of a half dozen legal actions threatening the politically powerful Trump family. Trump himself could be hit with federal criminal charges for keeping classified information at his Florida oceanside estate of Mar-a-Lago, as well as state criminal charges for trying to intimidate a Georgia elections official into reversing his electoral loss there in 2020. Meanwhile, the company is currently defending itself at a criminal trial in Manhattan that accuses it of dodging taxes by showering executives with corporate luxury benefits off the books.

However, the AG’s lawsuit strikes at the heart of Trump’s image—and his wallet. James is attempting to kill the company by bleeding it dry. She’s seeking to hit it with a quarter billion dollars in fines and prohibit the company from operating in New York or raising money in what has become the financial capital of the world.

In court papers, the Trump Organization decried the lawsuit as a blatant campaign to “generate extensive press coverage on the eve of an election,” calling the attempts to exert control over Trump’s real estate empire a “politically motivated attempt to nationalize a highly successful private enterprise.”

Since the lawsuit was filed, the Trumps have scrambled to limit the potential damage by trying to get Justice Engoron kicked off the case. They’ve argued the case should be in New York state court’s commercial division rather than with Engoron, who typically presides over civil matters.

However, Engoron has refused to budge, saying he is best prepared to judge these issues given that he’s already intimately familiar with the AG’s investigation of the Trump Organization that led to the lawsuit. The Trumps spent three years trying to dodge deposition interviews with investigators and refusing to turn over documents, and it was Engoron who repeatedly had to issue court orders forcing them to comply with the AG’s subpoenas.

Just yesterday, Engoron issued yet another order rejecting their demands that he step aside, writing that “judicial economy strongly militates keeping this case with this court, which will continue to preside over it ‘without fear or favor.’”
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

BREAKING: Trump THREATENS Judge Arthur Engoron AGAIN After DEVASTATING INJUNCTION is GRANTED

67,015 views Nov 4, 2022
Donald Trump issued a deranged statement threatening Judge Arthur Engoron after Judge Engoron Issued a preliminary injunction order requiring an independent monitor review all Trump financial disclosures and representations.
 
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