Stamford Advocate

Trump loses appeal, must testify in New York civil probe

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NEW YORK — Former President Donald Trump must answer questions under oath in the New York attorney general’s civil investigat­ion into his business practices, a state appeals court ruled Thursday, rejecting his argument that he be excused from testifying because his answers could be used in a parallel criminal probe.

A four-judge panel in the appellate division of the state’s trial court upheld Judge Arthur Engoron’s Feb. 17 ruling, which enforced subpoenas requiring that Trump and his two eldest children — Ivanka and Donald Jr. — give deposition testimony in Attorney General Letitia James’ probe.

“The existence of a criminal investigat­ion does not preclude civil discovery of related facts, at which a party may exercise the privilege against self-incriminat­ion,“the appellate panel wrote, citing the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on and other legal protection­s for witnesses.

Lawyers for the Trumps agreed in March that they would sit for deposition­s within 14 days of an appellate panel decision upholding Engoron’s ruling. They could also appeal the decision to the state’s highest court, the Court of Appeals, delaying the matter and the Trumps’ potential testimony indefinite­ly.

A message seeking comment was left with lawyers for the Trumps.

James lauded the ruling, which came just two weeks after the appellate panel heard oral arguments in the case. She tweeted that her investigat­ion “will continue undeterred because no one is above the law.“

“Once again, the courts have ruled that Donald Trump must comply with our lawful investigat­ion into his financial dealings,” James said in a written statement. “We will continue

to follow the facts of this case and ensure that no one can evade the law.”

James has said her investigat­ion has uncovered evidence Trump’s company, the Trump Organizati­on, used “fraudulent or misleading” valuations of assets like golf courses and skyscraper­s to get loans and tax benefits. Ivanka and Donald Trump Jr. have both been executives in the Trump Organizati­on and are among their father’s most trusted allies.

The appellate panel, in its ruling, described the investigat­ion as focusing on whether the Trumps “committed persistent fraud in their financial practices and disclosure­s.”

Trump, a Republican, denies the allegation­s and has said James’ investigat­ion in part of a politicall­y motivated “witch hunt.”

In appealing Engoron’s subpoena ruling, his lawyers argued that James, a Democrat, was engaging in “selective prosecutio­n.” The appellate panel rejected that, saying the investigat­ion was on solid legal footing and that the Trumps showed no evidence they or their company were “treated differentl­y” than other companies under similar scrutiny.

A lawyer for the Trumps, Alan Futerfas, told the appellate panel in oral arguments on May 11 that James appeared to be using civil subpoenas to get around a New York law that requires immunity for people testifying before a criminal grand jury.

Judith Vale, arguing on behalf of James’ office, countered there was ample evidence from the civil investigat­ion to support subpoenas for the Trumps’ testimony.

She also cited legal precedent allowing the attorney general’s office to do so, and said the Trumps could always invoke their Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion — as Trump’s son Eric did hundreds of times in a 2020 deposition.

Appellate Court Judge Rolando T. Acosta appeared to agree with that position, foreshadow­ing Thursday’s ruling as he questioned Futerfas from the bench.

Anything Trump says in a civil deposition in James’ investigat­ion could be used against him in the criminal probe being overseen by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

Last summer, spurred by evidence uncovered by James’ office, the DA’s office charged the Trump Organizati­on and its longtime finance chief, Allen Weisselber­g, with tax fraud, alleging he collected more than $1.7 million in off-the-books compensati­on. Weisselber­g and the company have pleaded not guilty.

Thursday’s appellate court ruling was the latest in a flurry of legal activity involving Trump and the attorney general’s investigat­ion in the last few weeks.

Last week, Trump paid $110,000 in fines and met several other conditions as he seeks to end a contempt of court order Engoron issued on April 25 after he was slow to respond to another subpoena from James seeking documents and other evidence.

On Monday, James’ office said it had subpoenaed Trump’s longtime executive assistant, Rhona Graff, and planned to question her under oath next week in the probe.

Meanwhile, a federal judge in New York is expected to rule soon in a lawsuit Trump filed against James in December in an attempt to shut down her investigat­ion. Trump’s lawyers want an injunction to halt the probe. James’ office is seeking to throw out the lawsuit.

At a May 13 hearing in the federal case, a lawyer for James’ office said it was “nearing the end” of the probe and that “there’s clearly been a substantia­l amount of evidence” to support a civil enforcemen­t proceeding, although a final determinat­ion hasn’t been made.

Since James’ investigat­ion is civil in nature, she could end up bringing a lawsuit and seeking financial penalties against Trump or his company, or even a ban on them being involved in certain types of businesses.

That’s what happened in January when a judge barred ex-drug company CEO Martin Shkreli from the pharmaceut­ical industry for life.

 ?? Joe Maiorana / Associated Press ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally at the Delaware County Fairground­s on April 23 in Delaware, Ohio. Trump must answer questions under oath in the New York attorney general’s civil investigat­ion into his business practices, a New York state appeals court ruled Thursday.
Joe Maiorana / Associated Press Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally at the Delaware County Fairground­s on April 23 in Delaware, Ohio. Trump must answer questions under oath in the New York attorney general’s civil investigat­ion into his business practices, a New York state appeals court ruled Thursday.

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