Judge issues gag order after Trump’s comments on
court clerk in civil trial
The second day of Trump’s trial got off to another
combative start after Trump branded the case a ‘fraud’ and ‘scam’
Dominic
Rushe and agencies
Tue 3 Oct
2023 15.37 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/oct/03/trump-new-york-fraud-trial-update
The judge
overseeing Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial issued a gag order on Tuesday after
the former president made comments about the judge’s clerk.
“Consider
this statement a gag order forbidding all parties from posting, emailing or
speaking publicly about any of my staff,” the judge, Arthur Engoron, said on
Tuesday afternoon. “Personal attacks on members of my court staff are
unacceptable, inappropriate and I will not tolerate them in any circumstances.
“Failure to
abide by this order will result in serious sanctions.”
The second
day of Trump’s trial got off to another combative start after Trump branded the
case a “fraud” and a “scam” and pledged to take the stand in his own defense.
Asked if he
would testify in the case, Trump said: “Yes, I will. At the appropriate time I
will be.”
But Trump’s
comments about Engoron’s law clerk, the attorney Allison Greenfield, proved a
step too far. Over lunch Trump attacked Engoron’s clerk in a social media post,
linking to a picture of her with the Democratic Senate majority leader, Chuck
Schumer. He called her “Schumer’s girlfriend” and said she “is running this
case against me. How disgraceful! This case should be dismissed immediately.”
The post on
Trump’s Truth Social platform was deleted on Engoron’s orders.
The case
threatens to dismantle parts of the former US president’s business empire and
sharply curtail his ability to do business in New York.
Trump, the
frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, is accused along
with his two sons and nearly a dozen business associates of inflating the value
of his assets by billions of dollars to secure more favorable loan and
insurance terms.
Trump has
denied wrongdoing and his lawyers have said they will appeal.
The
Democratic state attorney general, Letitia James, is seeking at least $250m in
fines, a permanent ban against Trump and his sons Donald Jr and Eric from
running businesses in New York and a five-year commercial real estate ban
against Trump and the Trump Organization.
On Tuesday
the court heard from Donald Bender, Trump’s longtime accountant and formerly at
Mazars USA. Prosecutors made their case that the Trumps had withheld
information from their accountants as they inflated the worth of their assets.
Bender said he became aware that “there were certain appraisals we hadn’t seen
for certain years”.
The trial
comes a week after Engoron ruled that Trump committed fraud and canceled
business certificates for companies that control the crown jewels of his
portfolio, including Trump Tower and 40 Wall Street in Manhattan. Engoron said
he would appoint receivers to oversee their dissolution.
Trump
attended the trial on Monday, entering the courtroom with his trademark glower
and a retinue of Secret Service agents after being waved past police who
hand-searched the bags of reporters and members of the public in attendance.
He sat
hunched over the defendant’s table and occasionally spoke to his lawyers as
Kevin Wallace, an attorney with James’s office, accused him of “lying year
after year” in financial statements he provided to lenders and insurers from
2011 to 2021.
Trump’s
lawyer Christopher Kise said during his opening statement that Trump’s
valuations actually understated the value of his assets and were based on the
business acumen that allowed him to build “one of the most successful real
estate empires in the world”.
On Tuesday,
Trump reiterated his vitriol against James, calling for her to be sanctioned
and for the judge to “terminate” his fraud finding. “This entire case should be
thrown out and dismissed,” he added in a post on his social media website.
Trump has
in recent months used his mounting legal problems as fundraising fodder for his
presidential campaign, saying without evidence that Democrats are using sham
court cases to prevent him from retaking the White House.
Neither his
quartet of pending criminal cases nor the attorney general’s lawsuit have
diminished his commanding lead over rivals in the race for the Republican
presidential nomination, polls show.
Trump has
been criminally charged in Washington over his efforts to undo his loss in the
2020 election, in Georgia over moves to reverse vote tallies there, in Florida
over his handling of classified documents upon leaving office and in New York
over hush-money payments to a porn star.
He has also
denied wrongdoing and pleaded not guilty in all four cases.
Reuters contributed to this article


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