| Fantasy world Last week, Judge Arthur Engoron handed New York Attorney General Letitia James a huge victory in the state’s civil case against Donald Trump, ruling that the real estate magnate and former president committed fraud by overvaluing his business assets. “In defendants’ world: rent regulated apartments are worth the same as unregulated apartments; restricted land is worth the same as unrestricted land; restrictions can evaporate into thin air…and square footage subjective,” Engoron wrote. “That is a fantasy world, not the real world.”
Though Engoron conceded that square footage can sometimes be overvalued by mistake, generally falling in the realm of 10-20 percent, Trump’s properties were in some cases inflated by 200 percent, which strains credulity.
But that ruling dealt with only one of the seven total claims that James had brought against Trump. Yesterday, the first day of the trial—which will deal with the remaining six—started. Previously, Engoron had “revoked Mr. Trump’s licenses to operate his New York properties,” but now the attorney general is seeking more from Engoron, “asking that he impose the $250 million penalty and that the former president be permanently barred from running a business in New York,” reports The New York Times. The trial will determine Trump’s penalty, both in terms of fines and in terms of the degree to which he will be allowed to continue to do business in New York real estate.
“The substance of Mr. Trump’s defense is that his annual financial statements were merely estimates, and that valuing real estate is more art than science,” reports The New York Times. “The banks to which Mr. Trump submitted his statements, his lawyers argued, were hardly victims: They made money from their dealings with Mr. Trump and did not rely on his estimates.” |