Trump's Trials - NPR Politics Podcast: Trump's civil fraud judgement dropped to $175 million
Episode Date: March 27, 2024For this episode of Trump's Trials, we hand the mic over to the NPR Politics Podcast Former President Donald Trump got a brief reprieve in his New York civil case, as the amount he owes to secure a $4...54 million bond has been temporarily reduced on appeal. In another New York courtroom the judge overseeing the criminal hush money case set a new trial date — April 15th. The case was originally set to go to trial on March 25th but was delayed due to prosecution and defense receiving new documents from the U.S. attorney's office. NPR Politics Podcast host and White House correspondent Deepa Shivaram is joined by justice correspondent Carrie Johnson and national political correspondent Mara Liasson.Topics include:- Civil fraud judgment lowered- Impact on Trump campaign - Next stepsFollow the show on Apple Podcasts or Spotify for new episodes each Saturday.Sign up for sponsor-free episodes and support NPR's political journalism at plus.npr.org/trumpstrials.Email the show at trumpstrials@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Trump's Trials from NPR. I'm Miles Parks.
Today we're bringing you a recent episode from the NPR Politics Podcast,
where they focused on the New York civil fraud case.
They look at why a New York appeals court lowered the amount Trump would have to put up on bond,
from 454 million to 175 million.
Here's the show.
Hi, this is Josh in Madison, Wisconsin.
I just defended my PhD on Monday
and I am spending the rest of the week relaxing.
Oh, congratulations.
This podcast was recorded at
104 PM on Tuesday, March 26th, 2024.
Things may have changed by the time you hear it.
Okay, here's the show.
["The Star-Spangled Banner"]
Oh, fun memories of Madison.
I hope he's going to the dairy and getting some ice cream to sell the bread.
I was going to say, yes, Madison, swing state, Wisconsin, PhD, relaxation, a lot going on
for Josh.
We salute you.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Deepa Shivram.
I cover the White House.
I'm Carrie Johnson.
I cover the Justice Department.
And I'm Mara Liason, national political correspondent.
And today on the show, Donald Trump's legal woes continue. But he got an unlikely reprieve.
Trump has a judgment against him in his New York civil fraud case of more than $450 million.
But before we dive into this, remind us, Carrie, which case is this? There's a lot of Trump legal
troubles going on in the universe, but what are we talking
about with this one?
So many cases.
This is the case that the attorney general of New York, Letitia James, brought against
Trump for allegedly defrauding lenders and insurers by overvaluing a lot of his properties.
For example, you know, he said his apartment in Trump Tower was worth tens of millions
of dollars because it was like 30,000 square feet when in actuality it was only like 10 or 11,000 square feet.
So Judge Arthur N. Gorin ruled against Trump and imposed a very significant financial penalty
against him, almost $500 million, as you said.
And Trump's been fighting that.
Okay.
So that's where we stand.
But this judgment specifically, New York law says that if Trump wanted to appeal in
this case, he has to put up the total cost of the judgment as a bond.
But that sort of twisted around this week, right?
It absolutely did.
Trump went to the higher appeals court and the appeals court reduced the amount he would
have to put up on bond to $175 million. That's still a ton
of dough. But Trump told us this week he has that much cash and he will be able to put
up that money within nine or 10 days. So that's a pretty significant thing. The other thing
the appeals court did was reduce some of the conditions the judge and Gorin had put on
Trump and his sons, restricting them from conducting certain kinds of business
in the state of New York.
So that's another at least short lived victory
for Trump and his kids.
I mean, I was gonna say 175 million,
a big reduction from 450 million, of course,
but that's still, I mean, that's a big difference in money.
You've covered the justice system for so long,
this kind of treatment and specifically this level
of reduction in the amount of money
do, I mean, is that typical?
Does that happen to regular people?
You know, in civil cases, there are reductions in damage awards all the time against makers
of defective products and things like that.
And these numbers, Deepa, were so high.
I mean, we're talking about almost half a billion dollars.
It would have been, you know, catastrophic for Donald Trump, as his own lawyers said in court papers
seeking to get this amount reduced.
So I don't think we can say on its face that the appeals court treated Trump differently
because he's Donald Trump.
But there are many, many other ways that Trump has potentially gotten away with things that
other defendants would not.
He spoke back repeatedly to Judge Ngoin in the course of this case. Judge and Gorin slapped a gag order on him at one
point and Trump still was saying terrible things about the judge and the system and
regular defendants would not be able to get away with that kind of thing.
What would happen to a regular defendant who did that?
Well, potentially they'd be incarcerated. It's not unusual for people who speak with that level of vitriol against judges in the
court system and potentially against prosecutors to face some consequences.
And Trump, he's had to pay a few fines here and there, but really he's gotten away with
a lot.
And you know, it's funny, he hasn't just gotten away with bad behavior in the courtroom.
This is his strategy. I mean, his tactic might be to delay as much
as possible, but his strategy is to undermine faith in the justice system and to get voters
to think that this is a sham, it's a witch hunt, he's being persecuted, and it's at
a huge cost to democracy. But that is the strategy because he has to figure out
if he does get convicted, how is he going to not have that be a political liability?
All of the talking back to the judge and the kind of ranting and complaining about the
case is all about trying to convince people that they shouldn't have faith in the justice
system.
And when you talk about delay, wealthy defendants, people with resources,
have always been able to hire better lawyers and engage in more delay and get more benefits
from the system.
Most other people who face these kinds of charges do not have the money to fight for
that long.
They don't have the kind of lawyers who know how to play that game and get away with it
in court.
And so Trump is maybe the highest profile example we have, but he's certainly not the only one.
Danielle Pletka It's interesting, Mara, you pointed this out that, you know, Trump is often saying
that the justice system is out to get him. This is unfair. But in reality, you know, as we've been
saying, it's working in his favor. Mara McLean
And not only that, but he has said as an explicit part of his platform that he plans to use the
Justice Department,
if he becomes president again, to go after his enemies because remember he said, I am
your retribution. And revenge and retribution are what he says he's gonna use the Justice
Department for.
Danielle Pletka And we just had a development on that too. James
Comer, who's the head of a key house committee that's been investigating the current president,
Joe Biden, talking about wanting to impeach Biden, seems to have abandoned the impeachment effort and now says
he wants to send a criminal referral to the Justice Department, a criminal referral that
could be sitting at the Justice Department if Donald Trump wins and retakes the White
House.
Right.
Okay, we're going to leave it there for right now.
We're taking a quick break and when we come back, some news about the trial date for the former president.
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No pay walls, no profits, no nonsense. Download it in your app store today. And we're back. Mara, I want to zoom out here for a second because part of why Trump wanted
a reduction in that bond, right, was his argument that he didn't have $450 million in liquid
cash to pay up. But part of Trump's whole pitch and part of what this case was about
in the first place was that he's really rich and he's good at business and he tries to show that. So there's some
competing narratives here.
Well, not only that, but he said that it would be easy for him to get $450 million in cash,
that he had that amount. He actually testified to that number approximately.
I mean, we talk all the time about how the rules do not apply to Trump, that he tries
to play it both ways.
In your sense of this case specifically, how are we seeing that play out?
Well, I think that the political repercussions of this would only be if all of a sudden the
emperor had no clothes and it turned out that Trump didn't have much money at all, which
doesn't seem to be true.
So one of the things that he's been very successful at is keeping up the
persona that people first encountered on The Apprentice, that he is this super rich guy.
And so far, that hasn't been destroyed.
But depending on the outcomes of these cases, that could change.
Yeah.
And it feels really personal, right? Trump just posted on his social media site
that his real estate platforms were like his babies. He actually called them his babies.
And so in addition to fending off suits against himself and his sons, his babies are at stake,
his assets.
Babies. Oh my goodness. But let's get into this a little bit further because he has this
money he needs to pay off. He says he didn't have the $450 million, but his social media company,
which is called Truth Social, just became publicly traded. And as a result, Trump's
net worth on paper has increased significantly. But it's not like this is going to tie a big
bow at the end of it and it's all cleared up. Is that right?
Yeah, worth billions more on paper, according to the business reporters
I've talked to. But under the terms of this deal,
typically it would be six months before you could take any money out of that, any actual cash money, green money in your pocket, as
opposed to pie-in-the-sky
theoretical money. Unless Trump somehow gets special permission or
money unless Trump somehow gets special permission or renegotiates, that money wouldn't be available to him right away to pay for some of these bonds or other bills or even for his campaign.
It is also like I think just as someone who does not cover the ins and outs of Trump's
legal cases on a regular basis, there's a lot of whiplash here. Trump has the money,
he doesn't have the money. He is really good at business. He actually, nope, turns out he's really bad at handling his finances. For voters and for
people who are not maybe clued into all of this going on, how do you think it translates
on the political front in the stage that we are right now in this election?
Danielle Pletka So far, I don't think that it has hurt him.
One of the big questions hanging over all these Trump trials would be, we know that
they actually helped him in a Republican primary because they made his base more devoted to him.
A big majority of Republicans felt he was being persecuted. In other words, they bought his version
of events here. What we were waiting to see is if the cumulative effect of all of these cases would
take a toll on his political standing. It hasn't yet, and
it may not before the election because so many of them have been delayed. That was the
interesting thing about yesterday. He did get a discount, but he didn't get a delay.
Yeah.
Danielle Pletka But not a delay.
Danielle Pletka Yeah.
Danielle Pletka
Meanwhile, in another courtroom, Trump got a trial date.
Danielle Pletka
That's right. Judge Juan Marchand in New York said on April 15th, Trump's trial will begin. That's the case
involving hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels that Manhattan District
Attorney Alvin Bragg has brought against Trump. Trump has pleaded not guilty, but these are
34 charges related to hush money payments that flowed through his former fixer and now star witness
against him, potentially Michael Cohen.
We're going to turn here now, just looking ahead, Carrie, timeline, what are we looking
out for next?
Give us an idea of what's coming up.
Sure.
Jury selection will start in mid-April in the Alvin Bragg case, and that case is supposed
to last as long as 12 weeks. So Trump
is probably going to be in the courtroom in New York and making comments in the hallway
that we'll all hear as part of his campaign. If Trump is convicted in that case, I went
back and looked this morning. These are felony charges, but it's a nonviolent crime and
Trump has no criminal history. So typically, the sentence would
be one of probation.
Yeah. And Mara, I mean, it's increasingly likely that the other cases against Trump,
right? There are a lot of them. The Mar-a-Lago documents case, the January 6th insurrection
case, the Georgia election interference case. These are all, like we said, not going to
be resolved before this year's presidential election. How important then does this case become?
Well, this case becomes the only show in town.
It was considered to be the least important case involving Donald Trump's political fate,
but now it's the only thing.
I think it was the easiest case for him to dismiss, the easiest case for him to say Alvin
Bragg is a partisan going after me.
And I think that the cases that were really significant, clearly
January 6th was the first. And I'm wondering, Carrie, do you think that... I know that he
can appeal in all these cases and that will certainly go beyond the election, but do you
think that there will be a judgment rendered in any of these before the election? We know
they won't be resolved because he can appeal.
Carrie Sussman The New York case is the one that has the
best shot. Danielle Pletka But not January 6th.
Danielle Pletka Depending on what the Supreme Court does...
Danielle Pletka About immunity.
Danielle Pletka About immunity and how quickly they do it, it is possible that in that case,
a trial could begin before the election. But my money right now, if you made me take a
position, my money would be that the majority of the conservative Supreme
Court would send the immunity question back to the trial judge in DC to answer some questions
about certain behaviors by Donald Trump before and after January 6th, whether those were
official acts by a president or acts of a candidate. If Donald Trump disagrees with
the judge's determinations on that, he could appeal that
all over again before any trial in DC begins.
Danielle Pletka So it sounds like the Supreme Court will help
Donald Trump in his prime tactic, which is delay.
Danielle Pletka Yeah.
And given what's been happening in Georgia with the prosecutors having to defend their
own actions and personal conduct, that case is very, very far away from trial.
All right.
We're going to leave it there for today.
I'm so glad we have both of you to talk through all of this with us.
And before we go, a huge thanks to everyone who supports the show by donating to your
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I'm Deepa Shivaram. I cover the White House.
I'm Kerry Johnson. I cover the Justice Department. And I'm Mara Liason. I cover the White House. I'm Carrie Johnson.
I cover the Justice Department.
And I'm Mara Eliason, national political correspondent.
Thanks for listening to Trump's Trials.
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