Current:Home > MyTestimony ends in Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial, but the verdict isn’t expected until next month -Secure Horizon Growth
Testimony ends in Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial, but the verdict isn’t expected until next month
View
Date:2025-04-16 04:00:38
NEW YORK (AP) — After 10 weeks, 40 witnesses and bursts of courtroom fireworks, testimony wrapped up Wednesday in former President Donald Trump’s civil business fraud trial. But a verdict is at least a month away.
Closing arguments are set for Jan. 11, and Judge Arthur Engoron has said he hopes to decide the case by the end of that month. The case threatens to disrupt the 2024 Republican front-runner’s real estate empire and even stop him from doing business in his native state.
The verdict is up to the judge because New York Attorney General Letitia James brought the case under a state law that doesn’t allow for a jury.
“In a strange way, I’m gonna miss this trial,” Engoron mused aloud Wednesday before the last hours of testimony, which were about accounting standards.
James’ lawsuit accuses Trump, his company and key executives — including sons Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump — of deceiving banks and insurers by giving them financial statements that padded the ex-president’s wealth by billions of dollars.
The suit claims the documents larded the value of such prominent and and personally significant holdings as his Trump Tower penthouse in New York and his Mar-a-Lago club and home in Florida, as well as golf courses, hotels, a Wall Street office building and more.
The defendants deny any wrongdoing, and Trump has made that vehemently clear on the witness stand, in the courthouse hallway, and and in frequent comments on his Truth Social platform.
“A total hit job,” he railed Wednesday in an all-caps post that reiterated his complaints that there was “no jury, no victim.” Both James and the judge are Democrats, and Trump casts the case as a partisan attack.
Trump not only testified but voluntarily sat in on several other days of the trial. He wasn’t there Wednesday to see testimony conclude. James, who has attended with some regularity, watched from the courtroom audience.
Trump took a significant legal hit even before the trial, when Engoron ruled that he engaged in fraud. The judge ordered that a receiver take control of some of the ex-president’s properties, but an appeals court has frozen that order for now.
The trial concerns remaining claims of conspiracy, insurance fraud and falsifying business records. James is seeking penalties of more than $300 million and wants Trump to be banned from doing business in New York.
The trial gave the court and onlookers a view into Trump’s properties — sometimes quite literally, as when a real estate broker played a drone video of Mar-a-Lago while testifying for the defense.
Much of the testimony consisted of deep dives into loan underwriting, property appraisal methods and financial practices. For every magazine-like photo of a Trump property, there were many pages of accounting rules or lines of charts and spreadsheets.
The proceedings also featured extensive and sometimes fiery testimony from the former president. Three of his adult children and his former fixer-turned-foe Michael Cohen also took the stand.
Trump’s out-of-court comments became an issue in the trial, spurring a gag order that barred all the participants from commenting publicly on the judge’s staff. The order, which Trump has decried and his attorneys are appealing, came after he maligned the judge’s principal law clerk.
___
Associated Press writer Michael R. Sisak contributed.
veryGood! (4271)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- College football schedule today: Games, scores for Saturday's Week 1 top 25 teams
- The Vistabule DayTripper teardrop camper trailer is affordable (and adorable)
- Watch as shooting star burns brightly, awes driver as it arcs across Tennessee sky
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 7 killed, dozens injured in Mississippi bus crash
- Border arrests are expected to rise slightly in August, hinting 5-month drop may have bottomed out
- 2024 fantasy football sleepers: Best value picks for latest ADP plays
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- The Vistabule DayTripper teardrop camper trailer is affordable (and adorable)
Ranking
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Look: Texas' Arch Manning throws first college football touchdown pass in blowout of CSU
- Man charged with murder in connection to elderly couple missing from nudist ranch: Police
- 2024 fantasy football sleepers: Best value picks for latest ADP plays
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Open Call
- Clay Matthews jokes about why Aaron Rodgers wasn't at his Packers Hall of Fame induction
- RFK Jr. sues North Carolina elections board as he seeks to remove his name from ballot
Recommendation
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
4 men fatally shot in Albuquerque; 1 person in custody
Here are the average Social Security benefits at retirement ages 62, 67, and 70
Summer camp lets kids be kids as vilifying immigration debate roils at home
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
Linda Deutsch, AP trial writer who had front row to courtroom history, dies at 80
The Week 1 feedback on sideline-to-helmet communications: lots of praise, some frustration
Mega Millions winning numbers for August 30 drawing: Did anyone win $627 million jackpot?