Los Angeles Times

A brash yet calm Trump emerges in deposition video

- By Del Quentin Wilber del.wilber@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The braggadoci­o was familiar, but it came without the bombast typically seen on the campaign trail.

Donald Trump bragged about his hotel’s beauty and the power of his brand. He gloated about getting more votes in the Republican primaries than anyone in history and found ways to direct the conversati­on to glowing remarks he received from a Fox News personalit­y.

And when faced with something critical or awkward, the Republican presidenti­al candidate deflected or complained about the media.

But overall there were no pugilistic moments, which is surprising considerin­g the setting. The candidate was being deposed in June by a corporate lawyer representi­ng a well-known restaurate­ur who pulled out of Trump’s new Washington hotel shortly after the candidate last year characteri­zed Mexican immigrants as drug dealers and rapists.

In contrast to his boisterous rallies and combative media interviews, the mogul was subdued, matter-of-fact and calm — his only gestures were a weak smile or shrug, not his typical swirling of hands and pointed insults.

But he defended his remarks about immigrants.

“All I’m doing is bringing up a situation which is very real, about illegal immigratio­n. And I think, you know, most people think I’m right,” he said quietly as he sat at a table, according to a video of the deposition released on Friday. “And I’ve tapped into illegal immigratio­n. I’ve tapped into other things, also.”

The video was released by a District of Columbia Superior Court judge almost two months after transcript­s of the deposition were made public. Though there was nothing surprising in the deposition, Trump’s lawyers fought to seal the video, saying in court papers that they didn’t want the suit being turned into “a three-ring circus that is tried in the media.”

The judge, Brian Holeman, sided with news organizati­ons, including The Times, seeking its release.

“The possibilit­y that excerpts of the video recording may be used in so-called ‘negative attack ads’ in an election campaign is inherently speculativ­e,” Holeman wrote in an order Thursday.

The order is connected with a $10-million lawsuit filed by Trump against chef Geoffrey Zakarian, who had signed a lease to run a restaurant in the billionair­e’s luxury hotel in the Old Post Office Pavilion on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue NW, just down the street from the White House.

When Trump announced his bid for the presidency in June 2015, he drew fire for saying that Mexico is not “sending their best. … They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists.”

Zakarian promptly withdrew from the project, saying in a statement that Trump’s statements “do not in any way align with my personal core values.”

Another famous chef, Jose Andres, also backed out from a project at the hotel. And several other business partners of Trump’s terminated their relationsh­ips or allowed them to expire.

Trump quickly sued the chefs for damages.

Under questionin­g from Zakarian’s lawyer, Deborah Baum, the businessma­n said he had planned what he would say when announcing his candidacy, but hadn’t written down his speech or discussed the contents with anybody ahead of time.

He said that his run for the presidency had not damaged his own businesses and, in one case, may have helped, at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

 ?? CBS News ?? DONALD TRUMP is shown in a June deposition in a suit he filed against chef Geoffrey Zakarian, in which the GOP candidate defended his immigratio­n views.
CBS News DONALD TRUMP is shown in a June deposition in a suit he filed against chef Geoffrey Zakarian, in which the GOP candidate defended his immigratio­n views.

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