NEW YORK: In a relief to former US President Donald Trump, a New York appellate court on Monday ruled that it would accept a far smaller bond of $175 million to cover his $464 million civil fraud judgment, ABC News reported.
The Appellate Division, First Department, said Trump can post a bond “in the amount of $175 million” to cover the judgement. Trump’s attorneys had argued obtaining a bond for the full amount of $464 million was a “practical impossibility”. The panel of five judges also opted to delay enforcement of the $464 million judgement by 10 days.
The ruling comes as Trump and his sons faced a Monday deadline to pay or secure a bond, or risk New York Attorney General Letitia James beginning the process of seizing the former president’s prized assets, ABC News reported.
“It is ordered that the motion is granted to the extent of staying enforcement of those portions of the Judgment (1) ordering disgorgement to the Attorney General of $464,576,230.62, conditioned on defendants-appellants posting, within ten (10) days of the date of this order, an undertaking in the amount of $175 million dollars,” the two-page order said, ABC News reported.
JUST IN: Donald Trump says his collateral on the bond in the NY fraud case is cash after a New York appeals court lowered the bond to $175 million.
Reporter: "What's your collateral on the bond?"
Trump: "Cash."
Trump also shredded Judge Engoron, calling him a "disgrace to this… pic.twitter.com/lZa0NmniyF
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) March 25, 2024
Trump, addressing reporters during his appearance Monday at a hearing in his hush money criminal case, thanked the appellate court for the ruling.
“I greatly respect the decision of the Appellate Division, and I’ll post either $175 million in cash or bonds or security or whatever is necessary very quickly within the 10 days, and I thank the Appellate Division for acting quickly,” Trump said. “We got what we wanted”, one source close to Trump told ABC News.
Thirty bond companies had declined to offer Trump a bond to cover the full $464 million judgment and were waiting for the appeals court to rule.
In a statement, a spokesperson for the New York attorney general said, “The $464 million judgement–plus interest–against Donald Trump and the other defendants still stands”.
“Donald Trump is still facing accountability for his staggering fraud,” the statement said. “The court has already found that he engaged in years of fraud to falsely inflate his net worth and unjustly enrich himself, his family, and his organisation.”
Trump attorney Alina Habba, in a statement, said, “We are extremely pleased with the ruling issued by the Appellate Division. This monumental holding reigns in Judge Engoron’s verdict, which is an affront to all Americans. This is the first important step in fighting back against Letitia James and her targeted witch hunt against my client which started before she ever stepped foot in office”.
In February, Judge Arthur Engoron found that Trump and his sons had committed a decade of fraud by inflating their assets to obtain better business deals. Trump and his sons have denied all wrongdoing and have appealed the ruling.
The finding and $354 million penalty, plus interest, immediately presented a cash crunch for a man who successfully ran for President based on his wealth and success. “I mean I became President because of the brand, OK? I became President. I think it’s the hottest brand in the world”, Trump told the attorney general’s office during a deposition last year.
Since Judge Engoron’s order last month, Trump’s lawyers have made a concerted effort to delay the enforcement of the massive financial penalty in his civil fraud case as well as the $83.3 million judgement he was ordered to pay after a jury found him liable for defaming the writer E. Jean Carroll. Trump, who has denied all wrongdoing, has filed a notice of appeal in that case.
ABC News reported that following Trump’s fraud judgement, Trump’s lawyers first asked Judge Engoron to delay entering the judgement by 30 days “to allow for an orderly post-judgement process, particularly given the magnitude of the judgement.”
Engoron denied that request and signed the judgement on Feb. 22; the following day, the New York Supreme Court clerk entered the judgement, effectively starting the clock for the financial penalties in the case. “You have failed to explain, much less justify, any basis for a stay,” Engoron wrote in response to the defence’s request. “I am confident that the Appellate Division will protect your appellate rights”.
The following week, Trump’s lawyers asked New York’s Appellate Division, First Department for permission to post a $100 million bond — a fraction of the over $550 million needed to cover the full judgment. They advised the court that a bond for the complete judgement was “impossible” and that the Trump Organisation might have to sell off properties.
“In the absence of a stay on the terms herein outlined, properties would likely need to be sold to raise capital under exigent circumstances, and there would be no way to recover any property sold following a successful appeal and no means to recover the resulting financial losses from the Attorney General,” defence attorneys said.
Lawyers for the New York attorney general pushed back against their request, arguing Trump might attempt to evade punishment if his appeal fails.
An appellate judge on Feb. 28 denied Trump’s request for a stay of the financial penalty, but lifted a ruling Judge Engoron handed down prohibiting Trump from running any New York company and accessing lines of credit, opening the door for Trump to ask surety companies for a bond.
But Trump’s lawyers returned to the same court last Monday, asking again for a delay because finding a bond company to sign off on a $550 million bond was a “practical impossibility,” they told the court. Because of the size of the bond and the necessity for Trump to use property as collateral, more than 30 surety companies turned down the potential bond, according to a court filing, ABC News reported.
“Perhaps worst of all, the Attorney General argues that defendants should be forced to dispose of iconic, multi-billion-dollar real-estate holdings in a ‘fire sale,'” a defence lawyer told the court.
Trump himself has claimed that he has almost $500 million in cash, but his lawyers have argued that he can’t both pay the bond and run his companies. Despite not spending any of his own money on his presidential campaign in 2020, Trump also claimed he wanted to use the money on his current campaign.
“Billions of dollars of value, billions of dollars in properties, but they’d like to take the cash away, so I can’t use it on the campaign,” Trump said last week.
Trump’s lawyers also made a similar effort to delay the enforcement of the judgement in his $83.3 million defamation case, though the former president eventually secured a $91 million bond for the judgement plus interest by using a brokerage account as collateral, ABC News reported.
While James won’t be putting a padlock on buildings like Trump Tower or 40 Wall Street, she took initial steps last week to potentially seize a golf course and estate that Trump owns in New York’s Westchester County by registering the judgement there.
“I’m going to assume they’re going to go to the New York properties first because that’s the easiest thing to do,” Steven Cohen, a New York attorney whose work includes enforcing judgements, told ABC News, said of a potential process to seize Trump’s assets. (ANI)