Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump’s lawyers want a mistrial in his NY civil fraud case, claim the judge is biased

- BY MICHAEL R. SISAK

NEW YORK — Lawyers for Donald Trump asked for a mistrial Wednesday in the New York civil fraud case that threatens the former president’s real estate empire. His team accuses the judge of tainting the proceeding­s with “tangible and overwhelmi­ng” bias.

In urging Judge Arthur Engoron to stop the case immediatel­y, they argued he had irreparabl­y harmed Trump’s right to a fair trial through “astonishin­g departures from ordinary standards of impartiali­ty.” They cited his rulings against their client as well as the prominent role played by the judge’s chief law clerk.

Engoron gave lawyers who are presenting New York Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit until Thursday to decide whether they will file a response before he rules.

Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination, has long complained about Engoron, a Democrat. Trump was incensed by a gag order that judge imposed last month at the start of the trial and by a pretrial ruling that could force Trump to surrender control of some marquee properties.

Testifying last week, Trump assailed Engoron as an “extremely hostile” judge and the trial as “very unfair.”

Trump’s lawyers compiled weeks of complaints into their 30-page court filing seeking a mistrial. “The only way to maintain public confidence in a truly independen­t and impartial judiciary and the rule of law is to bring these proceeding­s to an immediate halt,” they wrote.

Engoron mentioned the mistrial request only briefly in court Wednesday as defense lawyers continued calling witnesses.

James’ office said in a statement that Trump was “trying to dismiss the truth and the facts, but the numbers and evidence don’t lie.” It said Trump “is now being held accountabl­e for the years of fraud he committed and the incredible ways he lied to enrich himself and his family. He can keep trying to distract from his fraud, but the truth always comes out.”

James, a Democrat, alleges Trump, his company and top executives exaggerate­d his wealth by billions of dollars on his financial statements by inflating property values. The documents were given to banks, insurers and others to secure loans and make deals. James is seeking more than $300 million in what she says were ill-gotten gains. She wants the defendants, who include Trump sons Donald Jr. and Eric Trump, banned from doing business in New York.

Before the trial, Engoron ruled Trump and other defendants committed fraud by exaggerati­ng his net worth and the value of assets on his financial statements. The judge ordered that a receiver take control of some of Trump’s assets. An appeals court is keeping them in his control for now.

Trump’s lawyers had suggested for weeks that they would ask for a mistrial, first raising the issue after the conservati­ve news site Breitbart News published a citizen complaint in early November that accused Engoron’s chief law clerk, Allison Greenfield, of violating court rules by making monetary donations to Democratic causes. Many of those contributi­ons were made when Greenfield, a Democrat, was running for a judicial position in 2022.

Greenfield, who sits alongside Engoron in the courtroom, has been a flashpoint since the trial started Oct. 2. Trump made a disparagin­g social media post about her on the trial’s second day, leading Engoron to impose a limited gag order barring participan­ts in the case from smearing court staff.

Engoron fined Trump $15,000 for twice violating the order and expanded it on Nov. 3 to include Trump’s lawyers after they complained in court about Greenfield passing notes to Engoron. Trump lawyer Christophe­r Kise said he felt like he was “fighting two adversarie­s.” The judge said he had “an absolutely unfettered right” to her advice.

In their mistrial motion, Trump’s lawyers accused Engoron of letting Greenfield act as “a de facto co-judge,” and they questioned whether her political leanings were influencin­g what they perceived as a “demonstrab­le pro-Attorney General and antiTrump/big real estate bias.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/SETH WENIG, POOL ?? Judge Arthur Engoron, right, and principal law clerk Allison Greenfield sit on the bench Oct. 17 during former President Donald Trump’s civil business fraud trial at New York Supreme Court in New York.
AP PHOTO/SETH WENIG, POOL Judge Arthur Engoron, right, and principal law clerk Allison Greenfield sit on the bench Oct. 17 during former President Donald Trump’s civil business fraud trial at New York Supreme Court in New York.

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