Los Angeles Times

Judge blocks Trump videos’ release

The GOP presidenti­al nominee gave the two deposition­s because of a lawsuit over his defunct university.

- By Greg Moran

SAN DIEGO — A federal judge here has decided that he will not allow the release of videotaped deposition­s of Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald J. Trump in connection with a class-action lawsuit against the defunct Trump University real estate program.

U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel — a target of Trump’s repeated scorn — also rejected a bid by Trump’s lawyers to get the lawsuit dismissed, a ruling that clears the way for a trial that could be costly for the candidate.

Several media organizati­ons had sought release of Trump’s two videotaped deposition­s, taken in December and January. Transcript­s of the testimony have been released, but Trump’s lawyers fought the effort to make the videos themselves public.

Curiel said there is legitimate public interest in having the videos released, but he sided with Trump’s lawyers, who had said releasing the videos would generate so much publicity that it would bias potential jurors.

The judge wrote that there was “every reason to believe the release of the deposition videos would contribute to an ‘on-going’ media frenzy that would increase the difficulty of seating an impartial jury.”

Full deposition transcript­s provide the public with an ample amount of informatio­n about what Trump said under oath, Curiel ruled.

Among other things, the transcript­s show that Trump was not able to identify instructor­s who taught the seminars. One of the central fraud claims in the suits — Trump is facing two separate class actions over the business — is that customers were duped by claims that Trump “handpicked” instructor­s for the seminars.

Trump has argued the lawsuits are baseless, and that most customers who signed up — with prices ranging from about $2,000 to as much as $35,000 for ex-

tended programs — were satisfied. His lawyers contend that the claims of “hand-picked” instructor­s and gleaning the “secrets” of Trump’s real estate empire were nothing more than common sales “puffery.”

In portions of Trump’s testimony that have been released, he acknowledg­ed he plays on people’s fantasies.

Curiel, in denying the motion to dismiss the case, said that was a question for a jury to decide, and that the plaintiffs had presented enough evidence to get the claim to trial.

The lawsuit filed in 2013 is a civil racketeeri­ng or RICO claim, alleging mail and wire fraud in promoting and selling Trump University, which wasn’t accredited as a school. Trump’s lawyers argued the case would expand the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­ons Act too far, but Curiel also turned aside that claim.

Under the civil RICO law, a winning side can recover triple the monetary damages — a potentiall­y huge bill for Trump, because the class action covers thousands of Trump University customers in all 50 states.

In May, Trump called Curiel “a very hostile judge” and a “hater of Donald Trump” in an 11-minute attack at a San Diego rally. Later, he said the Indiana born judge’s Mexican heritage and membership in a Latino lawyers associatio­n posed a conflict with Trump’s positions on illegal immigratio­n and promise to build a wall on the Mexican border.

Those comments drew criticism from Republican leaders, and Trump promised to stop talking about the case.

Trial on one of the cases — which covers customers in California, Texas and Florida only — is set for late November.

‘Release of the deposition videos ... would increase the difficulty of seating an impartial jury.’ — U.S. District Judge Gonzalo

Curiel

 ?? Molly Riley AFP/Getty Images ?? DONALD TRUMP speaks in Ashburn, Va., on Tuesday. The Republican presidenti­al nominee gave videotaped deposition­s in December and January in connection with a lawsuit over his defunct Trump University.
Molly Riley AFP/Getty Images DONALD TRUMP speaks in Ashburn, Va., on Tuesday. The Republican presidenti­al nominee gave videotaped deposition­s in December and January in connection with a lawsuit over his defunct Trump University.

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