Business Day

No-one steps up to post Trump’s bond

- Luc Cohen

Donald Trump has so far been unable to obtain a bail bond that would allow him to appeal against a $454m judgment against the former US president in a New York civil fraud case without posting the full amount himself, his lawyers say.

Trump must either find the cash or post a bond to prevent the state ’ s authoritie­s from seizing his properties, while he appeals justice Arthur Engoron’s February 16 decision ordering him and co-defendants to pay $464m in penalties and interest for misstating property values to dupe lenders and insurers.

In a court filing on Monday, the Republican presidenti­al candidate’s lawyers urged a midlevel state appeals court to delay enforcemen­t of the judgment, arguing the amount was excessive. They said the defendants had so far approached 30 surety companies through four separate brokers to obtain a bond.

“Enforcing an impossible bond requiremen­t as a condition of appeal would inflict manifest irreparabl­e injury on defendants,” Trump’s lawyers wrote.

The lawyers asked that he instead be allowed to post a $100m bond while he appealed against the judgment.

A bonding company would be on the hook for any payout if Trump loses his appeal and proves unable to pay.

Trump’s lawyers included a statement by Gary Giulietti, an executive with insurance brokerage the Lockton Companies, which Trump has hired to help get a bond.

Giulietti wrote that a bond for the full $464m “is not possible under the circumstan­ces presented”, noting that many sureties would not issue bonds above $100m and were willing to accept only cash or securities — not real estate — as collateral.

Trump denied wrongdoing in the case, which was brought by New York attorney-general Letitia James in New York state court in Manhattan.

Trump earlier this month posted a $91.6m bond to cover an $83.3m defamation verdict for the writer E Jean Carroll while he appeals, in a case that arose from him branding her a liar after she accused him of raping her decades ago.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Donald Trump
/Reuters Donald Trump

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