TRUMP CONVICTED

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Report: Trump spent $50 million in donor money on legal bills in 2023

The New York Times reports Trump spent around $50 million in donor money on legal bills and investigation-related expenses in 2023 alone. Lisa Rubin and Temidayo Aganga-Williams join to discuss that and more.
 

CCGNZ

Well-Known Member
More on the stolen passwords and much more! Lindsey's political career is over after he testifies against Trump!

Jan 30, 2024
Sen. Graham 'threw Trump under the bus' in special grand jury testimony, book says

Investigative journalists Michael Isikoff and Daniel Klaidman join Morning Joe to discuss their new book 'Find Me the Votes: A Hard-Charging Georgia Prosecutor, a Rogue President, and the Plot to Steal an American Election'.
Of course he's having issues inside,don't like him but it shows he still has a bit of a conscience left,he supposedly hugged the DA Willis after, this guy was mentored by John McCain and now supports a man Sen McCain despised and Trump dissed in massive proportions, the affinity he held for McCain must have been eating him up and the Grand jury testimony brought out that conflict he harbors. Trump isn't liked/loved/respected,he's feared due to his base and all these politicians could go con and get face Primary challenge by standing up to this BS and in the end be respected or revered and maybe even return to politics w/a golden reputation; or wuss out and get on board and sell out to hold on to power in the present tense and be reviled in history's light when this ship sinks.Sadly this lot of R pols. are the 1919 Chi. Sox,the "Say it aint so Joe",sellouts who laid down to throw the World Series.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Of course he's having issues inside,don't like him but it shows he still has a bit of a conscience left,he supposedly hugged the DA Willis after, this guy was mentored by John McCain and now supports a man Sen McCain despised and Trump dissed in massive proportions, the affinity he held for McCain must have been eating him up and the Grand jury testimony brought out that conflict he harbors. Trump isn't liked/loved/respected,he's feared due to his base and all these politicians could go con and get face Primary challenge by standing up to this BS and in the end be respected or revered and maybe even return to politics w/a golden reputation; or wuss out and get on board and sell out to hold on to power in the present tense and be reviled in history's light when this ship sinks.Sadly this lot of R pols. are the 1919 Chi. Sox,the "Say it aint so Joe",sellouts who laid down to throw the World Series.
In South Carolina Lindsey is finished politically if he testifies against Trump, he will be primaried, Donald will be in prison, but there will be rivals that will use it against him. Trump will attack him for being gay before it's over and that will be the end of him as far as the republican base is concerned.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Trump must still cough up at least $90M in E. Jean Carroll verdict — and soon — even though an appeal means she has to wait for it

Donald Trump's appeal of his $83.3 million verdict in the E. Jean Carroll trial may keep the money out of her pocket for a year or more, but the former president stills has to cough up at least $90 million — and soon.

The dominos for Trump's big, looming outlay — covering damages plus court-mandated interest — are already falling or poised to fall.

The first was the January 26 verdict itself.

A federal jury sitting in Manhattan found that Trump defamed Carroll in 2019 by calling her a liar after she told the world he'd sexually assaulted her. The bulk of the jury award, $65 million, was punitive damages after Trump kept calling Carroll a liar, even during the trial.

The next domino? Clearing up any lingering post-verdict legal squabbles. That includes Trump's claim this week that the verdict should be tossed because Carroll's lead lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, was employed at the same national law firm as the judge — for two years, 30 years ago.

Once all post-verdict squabbles are settled, the final legal domino is expected to fall, triggering a payment clock to start ticking.

US District Judge Lewis Kaplan is set to issue a written judgment. That's a one-paragraph order directing Trump to pay his damages. Here, as an example, is the judgment Kaplan issued after last year's Carroll verdict, the one that ordered he pay $5 million in damages.

Only when that judgment is filed is the trial officially over, allowing Trump's side to appeal, as his lawyers have promised to do.

Trump will have 30 days after the judgment to pay up
Once there's a judgment, Trump will have 30 days to pay his damages, though an appellate court will almost certainly allow Trump to forgo paying Carroll directly until the appeal is decided.

Trump would have to set the money aside, though, and he can choose to do so in the form of either cash or bond.

Last time around, for the $5 million verdict, Trump went with cash.

Judge Kaplan allowed Trump to deposit roughly $5.5 million into a court-managed account. (The sum included a 9% buffer to guarantee Carroll gets any interest she's entitled to for having to wait for the money.)

A source familiar with the case, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to do so publicly, told Business Insider that Trump's $5.5 million was still there, pending the outcome of his appeal of that first verdict. An appellate court is set to eventually decide whether Carroll gets all, some, or none of that $5.5 million.

This time around, Trump can again ask the judge to let him set Carroll's second, much higher damages award aside in a court-managed account. There, it would sit pending appeal, just like the $5.5 million from the first verdict.

If the judge says no — and $90 million is a lot for a court to babysit — Trump would have to secure Carroll's money through what's called an appeal bond.

A bond would be a lot more expensive
Taking into account interest and other fees, including the potential need to secure an irrevocable letter of credit from a bank, Trump taking the appeal-bond route could bring his total outlay to $100 million and beyond.

A surety company could make Trump provide an extra 10 percent of collateral, and would require he pay a bond premium of anywhere from $250,000 to $1 million. A surety executive who spoke on condition of anonymity said the premium was money Trump would never see again.

Such a large bond could probably be handled only by one of the surety giants — such as Travelers Insurance, Liberty Mutual, Chubb, or JP Morgan Chase, said the expert, whose employer doesn't allow press statements.

That pending fraud verdict could complicate things
Here's an added wrinkle.

Within days, a Manhattan judge is set to issue a verdict in the New York attorney general's nearly five-year effort to hold Trump accountable for business fraud at the Trump Organization.

The judge has already ruled that Trump exaggerated his net worth by $2 billion or more a year in a decade's worth of annual financial statements he issued to banks.

Among the penalties the attorney general is hoping for in the upcoming verdict are a payment of $370 million and a five-year ban on Trump applying for loans from any New York-registered financial institution.

A costly AG verdict and a ban on borrowing would limit Trump's options when it comes to setting aside Carroll's damages. He may have to rely on the cash he has on hand to cover both massive verdicts — or even start selling assets.

Lawyers for Carroll and Habba did not immediately respond to requests for comment on this story.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
He is not alone, I posted the historian's brief on the 14th amendment thread, a nice read and a sort of Cole's notes for the SCOTUS so they get the intentions of the framers right. If they wanna use history, then they will get it, textual arguments too and originalist thought. The federalist society is onside along with the liberals and there is a mighty headwind blowing! Mitch wants Trump gone and if they are anybody's judges, they are Mitch's.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Looks like Yabba Dabba do is out of a job......wonder why......imo i think of 83.3mil reasons why?



and what law firm is gonna go after this appeal idk....

better pay up Orange potato head.......
So he has to cough up the $83M and probably another $10-30M to give the law firm that represents him, because you know they will want it up front.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
and i have a strange feeling he doesn't have it, and i really don't think any law firm in they're right mind would even take it up......guess we'll see on that part
The house of cards could fall soon, cashflow problems bring most businesses down, but he is already down, we will see if he is also out. He will need to milk the base and every dollar he gets is one the republicans don't and none of his money will be used on the election except to primary his GOP enemies.
 

Offmymeds

Well-Known Member
The house of cards could fall soon, cashflow problems bring most businesses down, but he is already down, we will see if he is also out. He will need to milk the base and every dollar he gets is one the republicans don't and none of his money will be used on the election except to primary his GOP enemies.
Biden is reportedly ready to spend $ 250,000,000 in the last three months of the campaign.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Still totaling up the bill and maybe looking into the new allegations of more fraud.


New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron, who oversaw the three-month bench trial, had previously said he aimed to issue his verdict in the case by the end of January.

That's no longer the plan. The written verdict is now expected to hit the electronic court docket on or around February 5, according to the source, an insider who spoke to BI on condition of anonymity.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Still totaling up the bill and maybe looking into the new allegations of more fraud.


New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron, who oversaw the three-month bench trial, had previously said he aimed to issue his verdict in the case by the end of January.

That's no longer the plan. The written verdict is now expected to hit the electronic court docket on or around February 5, according to the source, an insider who spoke to BI on condition of anonymity.
Well, dang. And here I was, ready for another shot of schadenfrede-induced endorphins as a pick me up for the evening. Oh well I guess I'll have to do it the old fashioned way. :bigjoint:
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Well, dang. And here I was, ready for another shot of schadenfrede-induced endorphins as a pick me up for the evening. Oh well I guess I'll have to do it the old fashioned way. :bigjoint:
It might not be good news for Trump, delay could mean new information came to the judge's attention. Just a few more days until Donald's doomsday in court.
 
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