The Commercial Appeal

Judge OKs settlement in Trump U lawsuits

- DOUG STANGLIN AND NICK PENZENSTAD­LER

A federal judge in San Diego on Friday approved an agreement under which President Donald Trump will pay $25 million to settle long-simmering lawsuits over his now-defunct Trump University.

The decision ends nearly seven years of legal battles with customers who claimed they were misled by failed promises to learn Trump’s secrets of real estate success.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel in San Diego settles two class-action lawsuits and a civil lawsuit by New York.

Even before last year’s presidenti­al campaign, Trump vowed never to settle but changed his position after the election, saying he did not have time for a trial. Under terms of the settlement, he admits no wrongdoing.

In a statement, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an said the settlement will provide relief and “hopefully much-needed closure” to the “victims of Donald Trump’s fraudulent university.”

He said the plaintiffs “waited years for compensati­on while President Trump refused to settle and fought us every step of the way — until his stunning reversal last fall.”

The lawsuits alleged Trump University offered seminars that were more like infomercia­ls, pressuring customers to spend more and, in the end, failing to deliver.

The settlement, which affected about 6,000 former Trump University students, included a $1 million penalty paid to New York state for violating its education laws — the program called itself a “university” despite offering no degrees or traditiona­l education.

Curiel approved a preliminar­y settlement in December, and attorneys in the

case predicted the former students would get at least 80 percent of their money back, based on the roughly 3,730 claims submitted, the Associated Press reported.

Curiel considered a last-ditch effort by a Florida litigant, Sherri Simpson, that could have derailed the settlement effort. Simpson’s attorneys filed motions in court this week claiming she was confused by the initial class-action notificati­ons. She sought to preserve her rights to pursue treble and punitive damages against Trump separately from the class action.

As part of Friday’s ruling, Simpson will likely receive about $15,000. She purchased the extended “elite” level program through Trump University for $35,000 to be paired with a mentor who would teach Trump’s secret real estate investment strategies.

Simpson said she relied on Trump’s own words throughout the fall, quoting him saying that he would never settle the “case I could have settled very easily, but I don’t settle cases very easily when I’m right . ... I don’t settle cases. I don’t do it because that’s why I don’t get sued very often, because I don’t settle, unlike a lot of other people.”

Simpson said she and a partner got little for the tuition money — the videos were 5 years old, the materials covered informatio­n that could be found for free on the internet, and her mentor didn’t return calls or emails.

“I would like an admission that he was wrong, an admission that, ‘Oops, maybe I didn’t handle it as well as I should have, I didn’t set it up as well as I should have, that I didn’t maintain it or oversee it as well as I should have,’ ” Simpson told AP this week. During the election, she appeared in two antiTrump campaign ads.

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