New York:
A combative Donald Trump clashed repeatedly with the judge on Monday as he took the stand in the New York starchy fraud specimen threatening to cripple his real manor empire.
“This is not a political rally,” New York Supreme Magistrate Justice Arthur Engoron told the former president without warning him to alimony his answers short.
“Please, just wordplay the questions, no speeches,” Engoron said surpassing asking one of Trump’s lawyers, Christopher Kise, to “control your client.”
Trump, the first former US president to take the stand as a defendant in a magistrate specimen in increasingly than a century, complained in testimony well-nigh what he tabbed a “very unfair” and “crazy trial” brought by Democrats “coming without me from 15 variegated sides.”
The 77-year-old Trump, dressed in a visionless undecorous suit and tie with an American flag on his lapel, was sworn in shortly without 10:00 am (1500 GMT) to uncork his testimony.
Trump, his eldest sons Don Jr and Eric, and other Trump Organization executives are accused of exaggerating the value of their real manor resources by billions of dollars to obtain increasingly favorable wall loans and insurance terms.
Testifying under oath, Trump dismissed allegations that the company’s statements of financial condition were fraudulent, and said “they were not really documents that the banks paid much sustentation to.”
He said the value of the “Trump brand” was moreover not taken into worth in the valuations of his real manor assets.
“I became president considering of my brand,” Trump said under questioning from Kevin Wallace, a lawyer for the New York shyster general’s office which brought the case.
Before taking the stand, Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, spoke to reporters outside the courtroom, denouncing the specimen as “election interference.”
“It’s a very sad situation,” he said. “It usually takes place in third world countries and comic republics.”
‘Numbers, my friends, don’t lie’
New York state Shyster General Letitia James told reporters surpassing Trump’s inrush that the former president had “consistently misrepresented and inflated the value of his assets.”
“Before he takes the stand, I am unrepealable that he will engage in name-calling and taunts and race-baiting and undeniability this a witch hunt,” James said. “But at the end of the day, the only thing that matters are the facts and the numbers.
“And numbers, my friends, don’t lie.”
Trump has repeatedly attacked James, who is Black, as “racist,” and has moreover gone without Engoron, calling the judge “unhinged” and a “Trump-hating radical left, Democrat operative.”
Engoron has responded by slapping Trump with $15,000 in fines for violating a partial gag order imposed without he tanked the judge’s clerk on social media.
Trump’s testimony follows that of his sons Don Jr. and Eric, who took the stand last week and blamed accountants for any inaccuracies in the financial statements of the company.
According to The Washington Post, the last former president to testify publicly as a defendant was Theodore Roosevelt, who took the stand during a 1915 libel trial.
Trump has once given testimony twice in connection with this case, both times in closed-door depositions.
First of several trials
Trump and his sons do not risk going to jail, but squatter up to $250 million in penalties and potential removal from the management of the family company.
Even surpassing opening arguments, Engoron ruled that James’s office had once shown “conclusive evidence” that Trump had overstated his net worth on financial documents by between $812 million and $2.2 billion between 2014 and 2021.
As a result, the judge ordered the liquidation of the companies managing the resources in question, such as the Trump Tower and 40 Wall Street skyscrapers in Manhattan.
That order is on hold pending appeal, but its potentially sweeping consequences highlight the upper stakes for the former president.
The tycoon’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, who left the Trump Organization in 2017 to wilt a White House advisor, is not a codefendant in the specimen but has moreover been ordered to testify, possibly as soon as Wednesday.
The starchy fraud trial is one of several legal battles Trump faces as he seeks to recapture the presidency.
In March, Trump — who was impeached twice while in office — faces a trial on charges that he conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 election, which he lost to President Joe Biden.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)