Albany Times Union

Is it finally time for the Trumps to pay the piper?

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The following editorial appeared in the New York Daily News:

One of the best presidents, Teddy Roosevelt, was the only native of New York City to become president until the worst, Donald Trump, won the high office. Now the state of New York is helping to bring down this miserable, insipid, democracy-threatenin­g horror of a man whom we inflicted on the nation and the world.

In devastatin­g legal papers filed last week, New York Attorney

General Letitia James reveals that the cheating con man we’ve known all these long decades cheated and conned in illegally misreprese­nting the finances of his real estate firm. Whouda thunk?

At this, Trump was no apprentice, but a master manipulato­r of appraisals and valuations, faking the numbers up when needed and down when needed, bearing out what the former president’s former hatchet man Michael

Cohen told Congress. The true worth of assets was of no consequenc­e as he sought to maximize his gain and minimize whatever he needed to pay.

James presented these findings in Manhattan state Supreme Court to seek to compel Trump and children Don Jr. and Ivanka to submit to sworn testimony in the matter. Justice Arthur Engoron has plenty of evidence to support making the Trumps answer questions. Excellent going by James.

Meanwhile, from a D.C. courtroom, the U.S. Supreme Court rightly rejected Trump’s hollow claim of executive privilege regarding White House documents relevant to the attempted Trump putsch on Jan. 6 last. The House select committee probing the attack on the Capitol wants the records, and shortly after the court ruled 8-1 against Trump, the National Archives was sending them to the House. Only Clarence Thomas agreed that an ex-executive could keep Congress in the dark.

Trump has never much been one for the rule of law, preferring the law of the jungle. But the law will eventually catch up to him. And it’s happening now, in New York and in Washington.

The cheating con man we’ve known all these long decades cheated and conned in illegally misreprese­nting the finances of his real estate firm. Whouda thunk?

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