The Sun (Lowell)

Trump spent $76M over last two years on attorneys

- The Associated Press

Donald Trump’s storied business career is checkered by bankruptci­es and blunders. His investment in Eli Bartov, a New York University accounting professor, looms as another failed venture.

Trump’s Save America political action committee paid Bartov nearly $930,000 last year as an expert witness in the New York attorney general’s civil fraud case that threatens the former president’s real estate empire, according to new Federal Election Commission filings.

Bartov bombed. New York Supreme Court Judge Arthur Engoron declared in December the professor’s testimony proved only that “for a million or so dollars, some experts will say whatever you want them to say.”

An Associated Press analysis of new Federal Election Commission filings shows the payments to Bartov are among $54 million in legal expenditur­es made last year by Trump’s political fundraisin­g machine. The spending came as Trump has been battling multiple lawsuits and dozens of felony charges in four criminal cases.

Save America accounted for the bulk of the payments, with 84% of the committee’s spending going toward legal costs.

Coupled with FEC data from 2022, AP’S review found that Save America,

Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and his other fundraisin­g organizati­ons have devoted $76.7 million to legal fees over the two years. The hefty sum underscore­s the legal jeopardy Trump faces as he marches toward securing the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination.

Richard Briffault, a professor at Columbia Law School in New York who specialize­s in campaign finance regulation and government ethics, said that while the legal expenses are large, they’re unlikely to hamper Trump’s run for the White House.

“He seems to be able to raise a lot of money, so I wouldn’t really worry about the long term impact on his campaign,” Briffault said.

Trump has denied any wrongdoing and he’s blasted the lengthy list of felony charges and lawsuits as partisan attempts to upend his presidenti­al bid. The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment on the legal spending.

Several of his most prominent lawyers have surpassed $5 million each in payments, all footed by the former president’s campaign donors, according to the FEC filings. Alina Habba, whose New Jersey-based law firm represente­d Trump in the sexual assault and defamation suit brought by advice columnist E. Jean Carroll, has earned the most, $6 million.

Trump suffered a stinging loss in the Carroll case. Juries awarded her more than $88 million. And the criminal cases carry greater political and personal risk for him. Even as the former president drains his campaign coffers to pay for his personal attorney fees, he’s sought to transform the legal woes into an opportunit­y by portraying himself as the victim of a corrupt justice system.

Reporters and cameras often show up in large numbers when he makes a courtroom appearance, as he’s done in the Carroll and New York fraud cases, and he seizes the stage to pound the message that his political enemies are aiming to silence him and his supporters.

“It’s a terrible thing that’s happening here,” Trump told reporters in early November after exiting the courtroom where the New York fraud case was being held. “I think it’s a very sad day for America.”

Trump is battling two sets of federal charges over his retention of classified records at his Mar-alargo resort in Florida and for his alleged role in seeking to undermine the 2020 election.

He faces state charges in Georgia that he illegally schemed to overturn the election in the state. And he has been charged by New York City prosecutor­s with making hush money payments during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign to keep a sexual relationsh­ip from becoming public.

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