Trump's Trials - Why lawyers say 'never write anything down'
Episode Date: November 11, 2023On this inaugural episode of Trump's Trials, host Scott Detrow and NPR political editor/correspondent Domenico Montanaro break down this week's testimony from former President Donald Trump and his dau...ghter Ivanka in the New York civil fraud case brought against the Trump Organization. This week's guest is NYU's Melissa Murray. Topics include: -Arguments in the New York case so far-Whether Donald Trump actually cares if he loses -Why Trump sounded a lot different on the witness stand this week than he has in the past — while Ivanka, notably, did not-Why you should never email your family from a work account (especially if you also work with them) Follow 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
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From NPR, this is Trump's Trials.
I'm Scott Detrow.
This is a persecution.
Felony violations.
For national security laws.
We need one more indictment.
Criminal conspiracy.
To close out this election.
He actually just stormed out of the courtroom.
Innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Once a week we talk through the latest developments in the multiple legal cases former President Donald Trump is facing. There are four criminal cases, of Law. Once a week, we talk through the latest developments in the multiple legal cases
former President Donald Trump is facing. There are four criminal cases, of course, two of them
tied to his alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Another one focuses on
those classified documents that ended up stacked in a bathroom in Mar-a-Lago, among other places.
And the fourth, that's the case over hush money payments to Stormy Daniels.
But this week, we are focused on Trump's New York civil fraud case. The judge in the case
has already ruled the Trump organization committed fraud for years, inflating the
value of its properties. And Donald Trump took the stand this week. What's at stake in the case?
The Trump organization's ability to carry on doing business in New York is on the line.
the Trump organization's ability to carry on doing business in New York is on the line.
And there's also a chance of Trump being slapped with a $250 million fine. And this week,
the former president himself, as well as his daughter, Ivanka Trump, testified in the trial.
So that's the news this week. But first, I'm just going to take a moment to tell you what we're trying to do in this podcast. Each week, we're going to be joined by a legal expert to
help us break down what happened and what matters. And we'll do that in just a moment. But first,
also with me every week, will be NPR senior editor and correspondent, Domenico Montanaro.
Hey, Domenico.
Hey, Scott.
Imagine you and me doing a podcast together.
I know. Feels like long primary night hours.
So now we're going to be talking about courtroom stuff each week. And let's start how we're going to start each episode.
What happened this week in about one minute or so?
What do people need to know?
Well, it's pretty obvious.
Donald Trump had to take the stand where he was forced to defend himself and the company that he made and that made him.
And the Trump that we got on the stand was the Trump we're used to seeing.
Which was an open question because at times in the past when he's been deposed in other legal settings, he has acted different.
But he didn't here. He was campaign Trump.
Right. He was combative. He was defensive and not necessarily truthful.
I mean, even on the stand, when asked about the square footage of his Trump Tower apartment, he couldn't give a straight answer.
I mean, bottom line is Trump used his time on the witness stand to lean into this narrative that this case and others are part of a larger witch hunt.
That's something we've been hearing from him since these investigations started.
And Ivanka Trump, his daughter, she sounded a whole lot like her brothers,
claiming that she wasn't involved in the financial statements in question,
despite the fact that she herself was a former high-ranking executive at the company
before leaving to work at the White House in 2017.
A lot to get into, and we will do just that in a moment.
A lot to get into, and we will do just that in a moment.
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It's Trump's Trials from NPR. I'm Scott Detrow, and I am joined by my colleague,
Domenico Montanaro, as well as Melissa Murray, a lawyer and professor at NYU's School of Law.
She's the co-author of the upcoming book, The Trump Indictments. Thanks for being here, Melissa.
Thanks for having me.
So, Domenico, a lot on the line for the Trumps in this trial, right? A quarter of a billion
dollar fine, the ability to do business in New York State, the symbolic value of properties
like Trump Tower. And again, this is worth repeating at the beginning of this conversation,
the determination here is coming from the judge, not a jury. So this testimony matters
for Donald Trump. He takes the stand. What do we learn?
Well, what was surprising to me is just how much he contradicted his sons. His sons really sort of
took this hands-off approach and said, I wasn't really involved in these valuations. I don't
remember these emails. You know, yeah, I was on them, but I had other things to do. I don't really
know what you're talking about with all of this stuff. Donald Trump Sr. was very much the opposite.
He was like, I think
this property was undervalued and that property was undervalued, showing he really had his hands
very closely tied to these valuations, which is at the core of the fraud case here.
Right. And Melissa, this is the center of the case. And again, the judge has already ruled
that these financial documents were fraudulent, that they inflated the value of the
organization way more than its actual value. And he comes in and says, no, they were worth more
than that. I mean, what did you make of that legally? Well, it does seem like Donald Trump
is playing to two different audiences. As Domenico said, the main audience here or the proper audience
here is the judge who will make the
decision about what the penalties will be in this phase and will determine what punishment Donald
Trump will have for the fraud that's already been determined. But Donald Trump is also playing for
an audience outside of this courtroom. And there were moments in his testimony where it seemed like
maybe he wasn't that concerned about winning this New York fraud case because he had
bigger fish to fry elsewhere. And that could be the criminal cases and the criminal liability he
is facing in four other lawsuits, or it could just be his presidential campaign.
What's a specific moment that made you think maybe he doesn't actually care about the outcome
of this trial? Again, like the bombast, like, you know, the square footage of the apartment is a
verifiable fact. I mean, maybe there's a little bit of tinkering that one could do on the edges,
like, do you include this closet? Do you not include this closet? But escalating the square
footage of your apartment from 10,000 to 30,000 seems like a bit out of range. And he did not
bother to rein in any of that. He was like, yeah, it's a huge
apartment. There you are. It's kind of what you do with money laundering. But it's not,
there's obviously not a case about that, but it's literally what you would do is just
inflate how much, at least what I learned from Ozark. But to mitigate, he was doing it in real
time with the apartment. He was saying it was 10,000. No, actually it's more 11,000. No,
it's 12,000. No, it's 13. Like in real time, he's just like growing the number on the apartment. He was saying it was $10,000. No, actually, it's more $11,000. No, it's $12,000. No, it's $13,000. Like in real time, he's just like growing the number on the stand.
Yeah. Well, that's what he did with his net worth when he ran for president the first time. I mean,
$2 billion, why not $5? Why not $10, right? I mean, how do you value a brand like Trump's,
right? And this was all about that branding. But Meloisa's 100% right. You can't just make up
square footage unless you change
like the measuring stick, right? And obviously he wishes he could do that, but he can't. And
I think that his team- And it's still a big apartment.
It's a huge apartment. It's huge, as he would say. It's a New York apartment. It's worth a lot of
money. The fact though is his team has always had these tactics in law cases to delay, number one.
He tried to delay this case, tried to get it thrown out, didn't work.
So this time, maybe Melissa's right.
He doesn't care if he wins or loses this thing
because he knows the real audience is politics
and he's got to keep his base in line.
And that's why he was so combative
and why he was making the speeches
he was making from the stand,
which is atypical really of what we've seen from Trump
in previous depositions where he's much more sober.
Right.
To be clear, Domenico, there was a moment where he did seem to dial it back in because
his lawyers did ask the judge for a directed verdict, which is to say to basically override
his earlier verdict, finding fraud and grant a win to Donald Trump.
So, I mean, at least the lawyers seem interested in winning this case or
a more favorable outcome than what is likely to happen. But you're right. They had a very
recalcitrant client on the stand. There was one specific defense that Trump kept coming back to,
you know, at one point, pulling out this piece of paper, waving it around. He said this gave
the financial statements legal cover for possible inflated value.
This was the idea of the disclaimer in the document.
Can you explain to us why this matters and what the judge's response was?
Sure.
So, again, I think we are seeing glimpses of what the defense is going to do when it begins to present its case next week.
But this disclaimer is sort of, you know, at the end of these statements, like, yeah, you know, maybe this is not entirely accurate, like here are the numbers, but there's
room for disagreement. These are subjective. And that's going to be, I think, the crux of
the defense. Valuation, especially in real estate, is necessarily subjective. It is particularly
subjective, I think they will argue, in the context of this family, where so much of their alleged worth is tied up in the family brand and is not necessarily
subject to the kinds of traditional valuations that you might see for real estate enterprises
that don't necessarily have an outlet on television or reality TV, for example.
So I think that's a big part of what's
going on here. And I think separately, another thing that we're going to see, and the disclaimer
is related to that, is nobody was hurt here. The banks made money. Donald Trump made money.
No one was deprived of anything in the manner of a traditional fraud situation.
What's the state's argument? Who was hurt here?
Well, the state seems
to be making a very populist argument, which is we're all hurt when Donald Trump cheats like this.
Like we're ordinary stiffs who go to get a mortgage and we don't inflate the value of our
net worth. We don't inflate the valuations of our existing assets. We have to play by the rules.
And here's this guy who never plays by
the rules. Well, politically, Trump would say that makes me smart, right? I mean, that's how he
talked about his taxes in one of the debates in 2016. And I think that in this case, he would
say the same thing. But when it's revealed in court, it stands a little bit differently,
especially when the state is really threatening your entire business. Well, I think that's right.
I also think it stands in stark contrast to his very populist message to his base, like
you're all being overrun, you're losing ground.
And he sort of put himself in with those individuals who believe that they've lost ground.
But Letitia James is putting out there that it's not merely aspirational.
He's the guy that's cutting into your bottom line.
One other thing to ask about in that New York courtroom this week, Melissa, that's the fact that Ivanka Trump testified.
She was the last witness called by the attorney general's office.
She has, of course, been the Trump child most closely tied to him over the years.
She's the one who had an office in the White House.
She has been a high profile figure in Trump's orbit. What do we need to know about her testimony? Well, I think if you were expecting the kind of bombast and outbursts that you saw
with Donald Trump and the recalcitrants that you saw in the two Trump brothers, you didn't get that
with Ivanka Trump. She was much more controlled.
I believe the attorney general referred to her as cordial, and I think that's exactly right.
She seemed to be a very willing witness, although not one that could recall the particularities of
some of the business deals with which she apparently was very closely associated with.
I want to end the conversation like we do each week with one big takeaway,
the most important thing that you think happened in the courtroom,
outside of the courtroom this week.
Domenico, I'll start with you.
Well, I mean, the fact that Ivanka Trump here is continuing to sort of distance herself,
you know, she's not on trial in the same way that her father and her brothers are.
You know, her apartment was shown to be valued
at a higher rate by her father,
by the company's financial statements
than she says she even knew about.
And I think we're continuing to see this sort of distancing
that Ivanka Trump has done from her dad,
where in 2015, 2016,
she looked like the real heir apparent to all things Trump.
And now she looks like she's just sort of running
her own
side game with her husband, Jared Kushner, who was also on a lot of these emails, by the way,
having some intimate involvement with how the Trump company was being run,
even though he wasn't employed by it. Melissa, what's your big takeaway from the week?
Well, this also relates to Ivanka, but at one point in time, the lawyers tried to limit some
of the testimony on the ground that she was being asked
questions about her conversations with her husband, Jared Kushner. And the lawyers tried to say that
this was barred by spousal privilege. And the judge, after taking a moment to think about this,
came back to the bench and said, no, they were both emailing each other from work email accounts, which make this work matters, not necessarily
spousal pillow talk. And so just my legal tip to husbands, wives, partners, do not email each other
from work accounts if you want to keep this away from the court and out of evidence. Don't lawyers
always say never write anything down, right? Never write anything down, but definitely don't email
your spouse from your work account. Yeah, now the Trump team kind of gets write anything down, right? Never write anything down, but definitely don't email your spouse from your work account.
Yeah, now the Trump team kind of gets its turn now, right?
They kind of get the chance to go back.
And I guess we're going to see how quickly this judge winds up ruling on this case.
I guess I've got more of a big picture takeaway from this week.
And it just gets back to the fact that this is such a strange parallel universe right now where the stakes for Donald Trump at the moment are enormous, right?
We're talking about criminal charges that could land him in jail.
We're talking about this civil case that could take away his business empire.
And yet it seems like it almost doesn't matter
in the way that he thinks about it and acts about it
and the way that he continues to be in front in the polls.
And we saw in hypothetical matchups
of the presidential election a year from now, ahead of the polls in some places. It's just a
very strange moment. I'm not sure how it settles. Yeah, well, it's been more than a decade since
Teflon was found to be toxic, but it's still with Donald Trump and things seem to be sliding off of
him when it comes to his base. That is senior political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.
Thanks, Domenico.
You're welcome.
And Melissa Murray, a lawyer and professor at NYU School of Law.
Thanks, Melissa.
Thank you.
And we will be back next week with another episode of Trump's Trials.
Be sure to follow more of NPR's political coverage from Domenico
and the rest of the NPR politics team,
daily weekday episodes of the NPR Politics Podcast.
And thanks to our supporters who hear
the show sponsor-free. If that's not you, it could be. Sign up at plus.npr.org or subscribe
on our show page in Apple Podcasts. The show is produced by Tyler Bartlam and edited by Adam
Rainey as well as Steve Drummond. Our technical director is Kwesi Lee. I'm Scott Detrow. Thanks
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