Donald Trump, known his whole life for ruthless approach to real estate, set to answer for fraud in historic Monday testimony
Back in 1975, an up-and-coming real estate tycoon unknown to most New Yorkers said a successful proprietor had to be ruthless to get ahead.
“To make it in this city as a landlord, you’ve got to fight everything that’s done, practically,” a 29-year-old
“This isn’t the real estate business. This is combat. It’s like being in the infantry.”
Almost a half-century later, Trump on Monday will be forced to account for the relentless methods he employed as a developer to cheat the system and boost his bottom line by billions in historic testimony at his
The former president — and current frontrunner in the 2024 race — is expected to face a day-long public grilling about his tenure at the
The stakes couldn’t be higher for Trump, with the case cutting to the core of the real estate kingpin narrative he rode to the
On the line is the power to ever again lead a company in
“He’s never had anything like this happen to him before. I mean, he’s always gotten out earlier than this,”
“When I knew him, he lied about everything, really,” Res said. “How much money he had, how many apartments he sold in
Trump will find himself in the unusual position of having to provide simple “yes” or “no” answers to questions about his notorious tendency to lie and exaggerate. He’ll be unable to rely on personal attacks as a defense in a courtroom with officials regularly on the receiving end of his ire. And it will see him go under oath before the world’s media as he’s leading
At the root of the case are annual financial statements that reflected Trump’s net worth from 2011 to 2021, most of which Judge
The ruling on the AG’s top fraud claim was based solely on evidence Trump does not dispute, showing he exaggerated his worth by up to
If the ruling is upheld on appeal, Trump could lose control of marquee properties in his portfolio, like his sawtooth high-rise
Still to be determined is how much he and his crew should have to pay back and whether they committed six other crimes in New York’s penal code relating to the conspiracy underlying the valuation scheme and insurance fraud.
Whether to persuade banks to lend him more than they should, brokers to agree to coverage at higher limits and lower premiums, or Forbes to place him high on its
The bogus figures were tallied by Trump’s convicted finance chief,
The
Weisselberg, still loyal to his longtime boss since becoming a felon, told the court on
“He would say, ‘I’m actually not worth
Trump’s sons sought to pin the blame on outside accounting firm
Having personally overseen their construction, the AG says Trump knew well that sky-high price tags for his eponymous assets were based on lies, like claiming his chandelier-filled
Team Trump is expected to begin their defense case after Ivanka is called as the state’s last witness on Wednesday. She was previously a defendant in the case but won dismissal on appeal for time-barred claims.
Trump’s lawyers have argued that valuing buildings is an art, not a science. He has also claimed that banks got richer by doing business with him and that he never defaulted on loans. He said his statements contained a disclaimer advising banks to do their own due diligence.
Engoron — who heard from an expert last week that estimated Trump’s lies cost financial institutions a neat
The victims, the judge found, were honest brokers of “all shapes and sizes.”
“The next borrower, or the one after that, might default, and if its [statements] are false, the lender might unfairly be left holding the bag,” Engoron wrote on
Though Trump’s liberty is not at stake — Engoron’s pretrial ruling determined he and his crew committed crimes, but the case is civil and does not carry prison time — his decision to attend the trial seven times so far makes clear the case is of profound personal importance.
While notorious for going on the attack against his critics, Trump has been especially furious over the proceedings, drawing a gag order for attacking the judge’s principal law clerk. He’s been fined
The indignant former president has looked watchful and animated at the defense table during testimony, at times appearing outraged. He was last seen storming out
“The significance is obvious,” Cohen said Sunday. “His finances represent his id, ego and superego all mashed into one narcissistic sociopath.”
The civil fraud case is one in a gulf of legal challenges encircling the 77-year-old Trump ramping up in tandem with his campaign. He faces 91 felonies in four criminal matters and a slew of lawsuits demanding hundreds of millions in damages.
In his 1975 interview with The News — when he presided over thousands of properties owned by his father across four boroughs — Trump celebrated a court win challenging rent stabilization rates he said didn’t enrich landlords enough.
He was described as proudly recalling to The News a friend’s observation “that he probably spent more time in courts than any businessman his age.”
That might still be true.
©2023 New York Daily News. Visit nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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