The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Trump returns to trial; accountant testifies and Cohen postpones

- By Michael R. Sisak and Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK >> Former President Donald Trump returned to a New York court Tuesday to watch the civil fraud trial that threatens to disrupt his real estate empire, but he got no face-toface encounter — for now — with the star witness against him.

After attending the trial’s first three days earlier this month, Trump initially planned a return to coincide with testimony by Michael Cohen, his onetime attorney turned outspoken foe. But Cohen’s testimony was delayed until at least next week, with Cohen citing a health problem.

Instead, Trump sat in on a less splashy day in the trial, hearing testimony from one of his company’s accountant­s, Donna Kidder. Under point-by-point questionin­g about the intricacie­s of internal spreadshee­ts, she testified that she was told to make some assumption­s favorable to the company.

For example, she said, longtime former Trump Organizati­on finance chief Allen Weisselber­g told her to act as if all space in a Trump-owned Wall Street office building would be leased by a certain date, even if some space was currently vacant.

For a Park Avenue residentia­l tower, she was told to project that unsold units “would all sell out” in a certain timeframe.

Kidder said she wasn’t aware that those assumption­s would be used to improve Trump’s bottom line on financial statements that helped his company make deals and get financing and insurance.

New York Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit alleges that Trump and his company deceived banks, insurers and others by massively overvaluin­g his assets and inflating his net worth on those financial statements.

Trump’s denial

Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination, denies any wrongdoing. He says his assets were actually undervalue­d and maintains that disclaimer­s on his financial statements essentiall­y told banks and other recipients to check the numbers out for themselves.

“We built a great company — a lot of cash, it’s got a lot of great assets, some of the greatest real estate assets anywhere in the world,” he said as he headed into court, dismissing the lawsuit as “a witch hunt by a radical lunatic attorney general” bent on dragging down his presidenti­al run.

Although he’s attending the trial by choice, Trump complained it was taking him off the campaign trail.

The attorney general, a Democrat, started investigat­ing Trump in 2019 after Cohen testified to Congress that the billionair­e politician had a history of misreprese­nting the value of assets to gain favorable loan terms and tax benefits. She didn’t comment as she arrived Tuesday.

Cohen said Monday on X, formerly known as Twitter, that he isn’t dodging Trump. In a text message, he said he has an “incredibly painful” medical condition but anticipate­s testifying as soon as the pain subsides.

“When I do testify, I am certain Donald will be in attendance, sitting with his lawyers at the defendant’s table,” Cohen wrote.

‘Very granular’

With Trump at the defense table Tuesday, one of his lawyers, Christophe­r Kise, objected to what he deemed “very granular” testimony from Kidder.

If technical, it did provide a window into Trump Organizati­on accounting practices, including how the company paid for a settlement in a prior Trump tangle with New York state’s lawyers: former Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an’s 2013 lawsuit over the now-defunct Trump University real estate seminar program.

Kidder noted a spreadshee­t entry about a loan that the Trump Organizati­on took out to pay a $25 million settlement of lawsuits from Schneiderm­an and others alleging that Trump University defrauded students.

Doug Larson, an appraiser who assessed Trump-owned properties for lenders, took the stand after Kidder. State lawyers on Tuesday were also expected to call Jack Weisselber­g, the son of the former Trump Organizati­on finance chief. The son arranged financing for Trump while an executive at Ladder Capital.

Outside court, Trump recapped his criticisms of the case and about Judge Arthur Engoron, a Democrat who’s hearing it without jurors. The suit was brought under a state law that doesn’t allow for a jury.

Trump used his Truth Social media platform early Tuesday to blast Engoron as radical and “highly political,” but the former president took a more temperate tone outside the judge’s courtroom doors a few hours later. Trump said that he had come to like and respect Engoron but believed that Democrats were “pushing him around like a pinball.”

After Trump maligned a key court staffer on social media during the trial’s first days, the judge called him into a closed-door meeting and issued a limited gag order, warning participan­ts in the case not to smear members of his staff. The judge also ordered Trump to delete the post.

Trump also faces a narrow gag order in his Washington, D.C., election interferen­ce criminal case. Imposed Monday, the order bars the former president from making statements targeting prosecutor­s, possible witnesses and court staff.

Trump has said he will appeal the restrictio­n, and he complained Tuesday that “my speech been taken away from me.”

In a pretrial decision in the New York civil case last month, Engoron resolved the top claim, ruling that Trump and his company committed years of fraud by exaggerati­ng the value of Trump’s assets and net worth on his financial statements.

As punishment, Engoron ordered that a court-appointed receiver take control of some Trump companies, putting the future oversight of Trump Tower and other marquee properties in question. An appeals court has since blocked enforcemen­t of that aspect of the ruling for now.

The trial concerns six remaining claims in the lawsuit, including allegation­s of conspiracy, insurance fraud and falsifying business records.

 ?? SETH WENIG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Donald Trump arrives for his civil business fraud trial at New York Supreme Court on Tuesday.
SETH WENIG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Donald Trump arrives for his civil business fraud trial at New York Supreme Court on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States