Marin Independent Journal

Judge issues limited gag order, tells Trump to delete disparagin­g post

- By Michael R. Sisak, Bobby Caina Calvan and Jennifer Peltz

Rebuking Donald Trump, a state court judge imposed a limited gag order Tuesday in the former president's civil business fraud trial and ordered him to delete a social media post that publicly maligned a key court staffer.

Judge Arthur Engoron told all participan­ts in the case not to smear court personnel, warning of “serious sanctions” if they do.

“Personal attacks on members of my court staff are unacceptab­le, not appropriat­e, and I will not tolerate them,” Engoron said after complainin­g — without naming names — about a defendant's ”disparagin­g, untrue and personally identifyin­g post about a member of my staff.”

A few hours earlier, Trump had posted a photo of Engoron's principal law clerk, Allison Greenfield, posing with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., at a public event. Trump, the Republican front-runner for president in 2024, has repeatedly cast the trial as a political attack by New York's Democratic attorney general, Letitia James.

Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform that it was “disgracefu­l” that Greenfield was working with the judge in the courtroom, adding to complaints he'd made outside court Monday.

The post apparently sparked a series of closeddoor courtroom discussion­s, involving Trump and lawyers for both sides, during what's usually a lunch break. By the time the gag order was issued, Trump had deleted the post — as Engoron ordered, according to the judge.

As for Schumer, a spokespers­on called the post “pathetic” and said the senator

doesn't know Greenfield and is in photos with thousands of constituen­ts.

Aside from that sideshow, James' attorney questioned an accountant Tuesday in an effort to build the state's case that Trump and others at his company had full control over the preparatio­n of misleading and false financial statements at the heart of their case.

The state's lawsuit alleges that Trump and his business chronicall­y lied about his wealth on financial statements given to banks, insurers and others.

Also Tuesday, Engoron set the record straight about a comment that the ex-president had touted as an important victory.

The judge had suggested on Monday that testimony about Trump's 2011 financial statement might be beyond a 2014 time limit for claims in this case. Trump's legal team has argued that the time limit cuts off most of the claims.

But Engoron ruled last week that all the claims were allowable under the statute of limitation­s, and he made clear Tuesday that the trial isn't “an opportunit­y

to relitigate what I have already decided.” He said that at the trial's early stage, he's inclined to give both sides considerab­le leeway to connect older evidence to claims in the lawsuit.

Trump denies any wrongdoing and again branded the case “a scam” on Tuesday.

He and lawyers have said his financial statements were legitimate representa­tions of the worth of unique luxury properties, made even more valuable because of their associatio­n with him. The defense also emphasizes that the financial statements bore disclaimer­s saying that they weren't audited and that others “might reach different conclusion­s” about his financial position if they had more informatio­n.

Accountant Donald Bender continued testifying Tuesday about his years preparing those statements from figures that Trump's company supplied.

In some years, he said, the Trump Organizati­on failed to provide all documents necessary for producing the statements, despite

attesting in letters to the accounting firm that it had provided all financial records and hadn't “knowingly withheld” relevant data.

“They were not giving all of the documents that we needed,” Bender testified, explaining that “there were certain appraisals out there for a number of years that we had never seen.”

During cross-examinatio­n, Bender acknowledg­ed he missed a change in informatio­n about the size of the former president's penthouse at Trump Tower.

Defense lawyer Jesus M. Suarez seized on that, telling Bender that Trump was sitting through the trial and his company and employees were “going through hell” because “you missed it.”

Bender said he couldn't be faulted.

“We didn't screw it up. The Trump Organizati­on made a mistake, and we didn't catch it,” he said.

After the session ended with another closed-door discussion among Trump, James and their lawyers, Trump emerged saying that he'd be back for a third day Wednesday.

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks to the media before entering the courtroom at New York Supreme Court in New York on Tuesday.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Donald Trump speaks to the media before entering the courtroom at New York Supreme Court in New York on Tuesday.

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