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fraud
2023-11-13 16:15:00
Don Jr.’s answers to questions by his dad’s lawyers have been filled with testimony gushing over the former president — including saying his father might find “sexiness in a real estate project.”
“My father has been very good at, in his career, finding value … the sexiness in a real estate project, seeing things that others mightn’t see or envision,” the eldest Trump son said.
“He created things that are now commonplace in luxury developments,” Don Jr. said. “He was really a visionary when it came to those things.”
“We’re one of the few companies out there that have assets and world class assets in all of the buckets of real estate development,” he said at another point. “It’s from years of doing thing better than others.”
The former first son also said it helped his dad when he, Eric and Ivanka took on more responsibility at the company because Trump Sr. didn’t like to travel.
“If there’s one thing my father doesn’t like to do, it’s travel,” he testified.
The comments came just as the defense team started showing a presentation titled “The Trump Story” which laid out the family history going back to Don Jr.’s great-grandfather.
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Arrest and Courtroom Drama in Donald Trump’s Civil Fraud Trial
2023-10-18 20:03:00
NEW YORK (AP) — A woman was arrested Wednesday following she stood up at Donald Trump’s New York civil fraud trial and walked toward the front of the courtroom where the former president was sitting.
The woman, later identified as a court employee, retreated following a court officer told her to return to her seat. A short time later, officers escorted the woman out of the Manhattan courtroom and arrested her. She was charged with contempt of court for disrupting a court proceeding, state court spokesperson Lucian Chalfen said.
“None of the parties were ever in any danger,” Chalfen said.
Chalfen said the woman had been yelling out to Trump that she wanted to help him, though reporters in the courtroom did not hear her raise her voice. She was later heard screaming in the courthouse lobby as officers removed her from the building.
Trump later indicated to reporters he wasn’t aware of what had happened, saying: “Who got arrested? We didn’t know anything regarding it.”
The woman, whom Chalfen did not name, works in a different state courthouse. She has been placed on administrative leave and barred from entering state court facilities pending an investigation, Chalfen said.
The trial went on, albeit with one other unusual moment — this one following Trump threw up his hands in frustration and grumbled to his lawyers while a witness was testifying once morest him.
Judge Arthur Engoron warned Trump and others involved in the case to keep their voices down following the 2024 Republican frontrunner conferred animatedly with his lawyers at the defense table during real estate appraiser Doug Larson’s second day of testimony.
State lawyer Kevin Wallace asked Engoron to ask the defense to “stop commenting during the witness’ testimony,” adding that the “exhortations” were audible on the witness’ side of the room. The judge then asked everyone to keep their voices down, “particularly if it’s meant to influence the testimony.”
Trump was in court for a second straight day Wednesday, diverting from Iowa, New Hampshire and other campaign haunts to give close attention to the case threatening to upend his real estate empire and his wealthy businessman image. Trump attended the first three days, but skipped last week. On Tuesday, he left early to give a deposition in an unrelated lawsuit.
In a pretrial decision last month, Engoron ruled that Trump and his company, the Trump Organization, committed years of fraud by exaggerating his asset values and net worth on annual financial statements used to make deals and get better terms on loans and insurance.
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, but an appeals court has blocked that for now.
Trump didn’t talk regarding the case on his way into court past TV cameras Wednesday, saving his usual vitriol regarding New York Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit for a morning break.
Inside the courtroom, which is closed to cameras, Trump grew irritated as Larson testified. Trump’s lawyers were seeking to undercut the state’s claims that his top corporate deputies played games to inflate the values of his properties and pad his bottom line.
In a series of questions, Trump lawyer Lazaro Fields sought to establish that Larson had, at one point, undershot the projected 2015 value of a Trump-owned Wall Street office building by $114 million. Larson said the “values were not wrong — it’s what we knew at the time.”
Trump threw up his hands during the exchange.
On Tuesday, Larson testified that he never consulted with or gave permission for the Trump Organization’s former controller, Jeffrey McConney, to cite him as an outside expert in the valuation spreadsheets he used to create Trump’s financial statements.
Fields on Wednesday accused Larson of lying, pointing to a decade-old email exchange between McConney and the appraiser.
That touched off an angry back-and-forth between the defense and state sides, with Trump lawyer Christopher Kise suggesting that Larson might risk perjuring himself and needed to be advised regarding his rights once morest self-incrimination. State lawyer Colleen Faherty called Kise’s comments “witness intimidation.”
After Larson was escorted out of the courtroom, Kise insisted that he was trying to protect the witness’ rights, while state lawyer Kevin Wallace complained that the defense was mounting “a performance” for the media. Ultimately, Engoron allowed Larson to return and answer the question with no legal warning. Larson said he didn’t recall the email.
Asked once more whether he understood that McConney had asked for his input in order to carry out valuations, a weary Larson said: “That’s what it appears.”
Trump railed regarding that exchange during a court break.
“See what’s happened? The government lied. They just lie. They didn’t reveal all of the information that they had,” Trump said. “They didn’t reveal all the evidence that made me totally innocent of anything that they say.”
After Larson, state lawyers called Jack Weisselberg, the son of former longtime Trump Organization finance chief Allen Weisselberg. The son, who arranged financing for Trump while an executive at Ladder Capital, testified that those deals generally started with discussions amongst father-and-son.
Trump’s civil trial involves six claims in James’ lawsuit that weren’t resolved in Engoron’s pretrial ruling, including allegations of conspiracy, insurance fraud and falsifying business records. Engoron will decide the case, not a jury, because state law doesn’t allow one in this type of lawsuit.
Wednesday’s dust-up was just the latest clash between Engoron and Trump.
After Trump maligned a key court staffer on social media on the trial’s second day, the judge, a Democrat, issued a limited gag order barring parties in the case from smearing members of his staff. Last year, Engoron held Trump in contempt and fined him $110,000 for being slow to respond to a subpoena from James’ office.
Trump on Tuesday said outside court that he had grown to like and respect Engoron, but that he believed Democrats were “pushing him around like a pinball.” “It’s a very unfair situation that they put me in,” Trump said.
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Associated Press writer Jill Colvin contributed to this report.
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#Trump #told #volume #animated #court
Former Girlfriend Implicates Sam Bankman-Fried in Cryptocurrency Scandal: Alameda Research and FTX Exposed
2023-10-10 18:42:00
Caroline Ellison, the former girlfriend of Sam Bankman-Fried, implicated the ex-cryptocurrency superstar in the first minutes of her hearing on Tuesday, claiming that she broke the law on his orders.
“He was the boss of Alameda and the owner of Alameda and he gave me instructions to commit these crimes,” Caroline Ellison said.
This graduate in mathematics from Stanford University was named, by the accused, head of the hedge fund Alameda Research whose activities were largely financed by money from clients of the cryptocurrency exchange platform FTX, without their knowledge.
Co-founded in 2019 by Sam Bankman-Fried, FTX filed for bankruptcy in November 2022 following many customers, learning that their funds had been used in this way, sought to recoup their stake. After the bankruptcy, some eight billion dollars were missing.
Sam Bankman-Fried is accused of having set up this system of communicating vessels between FTX and Alameda, while concealing it from the platform’s clients, investors and creditors.
Alameda pumped some $14 billion in total from FTX accounts, estimated at the hearing Caroline Ellison, who indicated that she had been in a relationship with “SBF” for “regarding two years”.
“Alameda took billions of dollars to make investments and repay debts,” she explained, indicating that in addition to FTX customers, investors in the platform and creditors of Alameda had been deceived regarding the the state of the finances of the two companies.
The 28-year-old pleaded guilty to seven counts in December and agreed to cooperate with Manhattan federal prosecutor Damian Williams. She agreed to testify at the trial of Sam Bankman-Fried and should receive, in exchange, a reduced sentence, which has not yet been pronounced.
Questioned by Danielle Sassoon, assistant federal prosecutor in Manhattan, regarding the nature of the facts with which she was accused, she mentioned “fraud, criminal conspiracy to commit fraud, and money laundering”.
Since the bankruptcy, “SBF” has regularly accused Caroline Ellison of faults and negligence in the management of Alameda.
He assured that he no longer followed the daily activities or the financial situation of Alameda during the last months preceding the failure of FTX, relying on his boss, even if he was still the majority shareholder.
But during his hearing Friday, FTX co-founder Zixiao “Gary” Wang maintained that Sam Bankman-Fried continued to closely monitor the operations of Alameda until the bankruptcy filing.
“It was he who set up the system” which made it possible to siphon funds from FTX clients, assured Caroline Ellison.
Tuesday morning began with the cross-examination, by the defense, of Gary Wang, who was not put in difficulty. The lawyers of “SBF” especially insisted on the collaboration of this former technical manager of FTX with the authorities.
Also charged with seven counts, Sam Bankman-Fried faces more than a hundred years in prison if convicted.
published on October 10 at 8:42 p.m., AFP
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