Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Trump defies judge, gives courtroom speech on tense final day of New York civil fraud trial

- By Michael R. Sisak and Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK >> Barred from giving a formal closing argument, Donald Trump wrested an opportunit­y to speak in court at the conclusion of his New York civil fraud trial Thursday, unleashing a barrage of attacks in a six-minute diatribe before being cut off by the judge.

In an extraordin­ary move for any defendant, Trump not only sought to make his own summation but then brushed past a question from the judge about whether he would follow rules requiring him to keep his remarks focused on matters related to the trial.

“I am an innocent man,” Trump protested. “I'm being persecuted by someone running for office, and I think you have to go outside the bounds.”

Judge Arthur Engoron let him continue almost uninterrup­ted for what amounted to a brief personal summation, then cut him off for a scheduled lunch break.

Tumultuous final day

Trump's in-court remarks, which were not televised, ensured a tumultuous final day for a trial over allegation­s that he habitually exaggerate­d his wealth on financial statements, deceiving a bank and insurance companies into giving him plum deals.

Engoron said he hoped to have a verdict by Jan. 31. He is deciding the case because state law doesn't allow for juries in this type of lawsuit.

New York Attorney General Letitia James sued Trump in 2022 under a state law that gives her broad power to investigat­e allegation­s of persistent fraud in business dealings. She wants the judge to impose $370 million in penalties and forbid Trump from doing business in New York.

Adding to the day's tension, the exchanges took place hours after authoritie­s responded to a bomb threat at the judge's house in New York City's suburbs. The scare didn't delay the start of court proceeding­s, and Engoron didn't mention it in court.

Trump, the leading contender for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, has disparaged Engoron throughout the trial, accusing him in a social media post Wednesday night of working closely with James. Both she and Engoron are Democrats.

The court action came days before the presidenti­al primary season kicks off with the Monday's Iowa caucuses.

Battle over remarks

Engoron had rejected an unusual plan by Trump to deliver his own closing remarks in the courtroom, in addition to summations from his legal team. The sticking point was that Trump's lawyers would not agree to the judge's demand that he stick to “relevant” matters and not try to introduce new evidence, make a campaign speech or lob personal attacks at the judge, James or the court system.

After three Trump lawyers delivered traditiona­l closing arguments Thursday, one of them, Christophe­r Kise, asked the judge again whether Trump could speak. Engoron asked Trump whether he would abide by the guidelines.

Trump didn't agree to do so, instead launching into his remarks.

“What's happened here, sir, is a fraud on me,” Trump said, claiming he was being targeted by officials who “want to make sure I don't win again.” He later accused the judge of not listening to him: “I know this is boring to you.”

“Control your client,” Engoron warned Kise.

Engoron then told Trump he had a minute left, let him speak a little more, and then adjourned.

James later said she wasn't bothered by Trump's personal attacks.

“This case has never been about politics or personal vendetta or about namecallin­g,” she said outside court. “This case is about the facts and the law. And Mr. Donald Trump violated the law.”

A lawyer for her office, Kevin Wallace, had argued in court that “fraud was central to the operation” of Trump's business. Wallace asserted that inflating Trump's fortune led to interest rate savings that “kept the company afloat” for a time when it was spending big on various projects, though Kise objected that there was no testimony to that effect.

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