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  • Trump orders troops to Portland to deal with ‘domestic terrorists’

    President Donald Trump said on Saturday he is expanding his military interventions in US cities, this time by ordering troops to be deployed to Portland, Oregon.

    He instructed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to provide as many soldiers as “necessary” to protect the city and any Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facilities threatened by “domestic terrorists,” he wrote on the platform Truth Social.

    As an example, he cited the far-left anti-fascism movement Antifa, which he recently designated a “domestic terrorist organization.”

    Trump described Portland, which is widely known for its progressive political values, as “war ravaged.”

    The Republican wrote that he is granting the military broad authority to use “full force,” though it remains unclear what that entails. He also did not specify what types of troops will be deployed.

    Oregon governor: ‘No need for military troops’

    The Democratic governor of Oregon, Tina Kotek, told a press conference that she had spoken with Trump, telling him that Portland could manage its own public safety needs. She called any deployment an “abuse of power and a misuse of federal troops.”

    “There is no insurrection. There is no threat to national security. And there is no need for military troops in our major city,” she said, adding that Portland was “safe and calm.”

    Kotek told reporters that the administration had refused to explain what it meant by plans to deploy “full force” against the city.

    “The president does not have the authority to deploy federal troops on state soil. I’m coordinating with Attorney General Dan Rayfield to see if any response is necessary,” she added.

    Oregon’s Democratic Senator Ron Wyden issued even harsher criticism in a post on X.

    “Trump is launching an authoritarian takeover of Portland hoping to provoke conflict in my hometown,” he wrote. “I urge Oregonians to reject Trump’s attempt to incite violence in what we know is a vibrant and peaceful city.”

    Portland continues to limit cooperation with ICE

    Portland describes itself as a “sanctuary city,” meaning it limits its cooperation with ICE.

    Last week, the city announced that it would investigate whether an ICE facility in Portland was violating regulations by holding people for longer than allowed.

    In a statement on Friday about alleged violence by Antifa supporters, the Department of Homeland Security mentioned rioters in Portland who had repeatedly attacked an ICE facility, listing several incidents that allegedly took place in June.

    According to US media reports, there have been several protests in the city around an ICE facility, directed at Trump’s controversial immigration policy.

    The president sent troops to Los Angeles in June, citing alleged unrest and resistance to ICE agents, whose operations against undocumented immigrants have frequently sparked protests.

    Trump has also deployed National Guard troops to Washington and announced plans for a deployment in Memphis, Tennessee. He has repeatedly threatened to send the National Guard to Chicago as well.

    National Guard members are not full-time active duty military personnel, but a part of the Army that can be deployed by the federal government or by a governor, often to help with disasters in states.

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  • You Should Go to a Trump Rally

    You Should Go to a Trump Rally

    If Donald Trump has benefited from one underappreciated advantage this campaign season, it might be that no one seems to be listening to him very closely anymore.

    This is a strange development for a man whose signature political talent is attracting and holding attention. Consider Trump’s rise to power in 2016—how all-consuming his campaign was that year, how one @realDonaldTrump tweet could dominate news coverage for days, how watching his televised stump speeches in a suspended state of fascination or horror or delight became a kind of perverse national pastime.

    Now consider the fact that it’s been 14 months since Trump announced his entry into the 2024 presidential race. Can you quote a single thing he’s said on the campaign trail? How much of his policy agenda could you describe? Be honest: When was the last time you watched him speaking live, not just in a short, edited clip?

    It’s not that Trump has been forgotten. He remains an omnipresent fact of American life, like capitalism or COVID-19. Everyone is aware of him; everyone has an opinion. Most people would just rather not devote too much mental energy to the subject. This dynamic has shaped Trump’s third bid for the presidency. As Katherine Miller recently observed in The New York Times, “The path toward his likely renomination feels relatively muted, as if the country were wandering through a mist, only to find ourselves back where we started, except older and wearier, and the candidates the same.”

    Perhaps we overlearned the lessons of that first Trump campaign. After he won, a consensus formed among his detractors that the news media had given him too much airtime, allowing him to set the terms of the debate and helping to “normalize” his rhetoric and behavior.

    But if the glut of attention in 2016 desensitized the nation to Trump, the relative dearth in the past year has turned him into an abstraction. The major cable-news networks don’t take his speeches live like they used to, afraid that they’ll be accused of amplifying his lies. He’s skipped every one of the GOP primary debates. And since Twitter banned him in January 2021, his daily fulminations have remained siloed in his own obscure social-media network, Truth Social. These days, Trump exists in many Americans’ minds as a hazy silhouette—formed by preconceived notions and outdated impressions—rather than as an actual person who’s telling the country every day who he is and what he plans to do with a second term.

    To rectify this problem, I propose a 2024 resolution for politically engaged Americans: Go to a Trump rally. Not as a supporter or as a protester, necessarily, but as an observer. Take in the scene. Talk to his fans. Listen to every word of the Republican front-runner’s speech. This might sound unpleasant to some; consider it an act of civic hygiene.

    Yes, there are other ways to familiarize yourself with the candidate and the stakes of this election. (And, of course, some people might not feel safe at a Trump event.) But nothing quite captures the Trump ethos like his campaign rallies. This has been true ever since he held his first one at Trump Tower, in June 2015. Back then, he had to stack the crowd with paid actors, prompting many in the press (myself included) to dismiss the whole thing as an astroturf marketing stunt. But the rallies, like the campaign itself, soon took on a life of their own, with thousands of people flocking to Phoenix or Toledo or Daytona Beach to witness the once-in-a-generation spectacle firsthand. What would he do? What would he say? I still remember the night of the 2016 Nevada caucuses, standing in line for Trump’s victory rally at the Treasure Island Hotel and Casino and overhearing one gawker enthuse to another, “This is a cultural phenomenon. We have to see it.”

    Regardless of your personal orientation toward Trump, attending one of his rallies will be a clarifying experience. You’ll get a tactile sense of the man who’s dominated American politics for nearly a decade, and of the movement he commands. People who comment on politics for a living—journalists, academics—might find certain premises challenged, or at least complicated. Opponents and activists might come away with new urgency (and maybe a dash of empathy for the people Trump has under his sway). The experience could be especially educational to Republican voters who are not Trump devotees but who see the other GOP candidates as lost causes and plan to vote for Trump over Joe Biden. Surely, they should see, before they cast their vote, what exactly they’re voting for.

    I recently undertook this challenge myself. As a reporter, I’ve covered about 100 Trump rallies in my life. For a stretch in the fall of 2016, I spent more time in MAGAfied arenas and airplane hangars than I did sleeping in my own bed. What I remember most from that year is the unsettling, anything-might-happen quality of the events. The chaos. The violence. The glee of the candidate presiding over it all.

    But with the commencement of a new election year, it occurred to me that I hadn’t been to a rally since 2019. The pandemic, followed by a book project and a series of story assignments unrelated to Trump, had kept me largely off the campaign trail. I was curious what it would be like to go back. Had anything changed? Was my impression of Trump still up-to-date? So, one night earlier this month, I parked my rental car on a scrap of frozen grass near the North Iowa Events Center in Mason City and made my way inside.

    A line had formed hours before Trump was scheduled to speak, but the people trickling in from the cold through metal detectors were in good spirits. They chatted amiably about their holiday travel and arranged themselves in groups for selfies. An upbeat soundtrack played over the speakers—Michael Jackson, Adele, Panic! at the Disco—and people excitedly pointed out recognizable faces in the media section. “You’re that guy from CBS!” one attendee exclaimed to a TV-news correspondent.

    I found the wholesome, church-barbecue vibe a little jarring. For months, my impression of the 2024 Trump campaign had been shaped by the apocalyptic rhetoric of the candidate himself—the stuff about Marxist “vermin” destroying America, and immigrants “poisoning the blood of our country.” The people here didn’t look like they were bracing for an existential catastrophe. Had I overestimated the radicalizing effect of Trump’s rhetoric?

    Only once I started talking to attendees did I detect the darker undercurrent I remembered from past rallies.

    I met Kris, a 71-year-old retired nurse in orthopedic sneakers, standing near the press risers. (She declined to share her last name.) She was smiley and spoke in a sweet, grandmotherly voice as she told me how she’d watched dozens of Trump rallies, streaming them on Rumble or FrankSpeech, a platform launched by the right-wing MyPillow founder Mike Lindell. (She waited until Lindell, who happened to be loitering near us, was out of earshot to confide that she preferred Rumble.) The conversation was friendly and unremarkable—until it turned to the 2020 election, which Kris told me she believes was “most definitely” stolen.

    “You think Trump should still be president?” I asked.

    “By all means,” she said. “And I think behind the scenes he maybe is doing a little more than what we know about.”

    “What do you mean?”

    “Military-wise,” she said. “The military is supposed to be for the people, against tyrannical governments,” she went on to explain. “I hope he’s guiding the military to be able to step in and do what they need to do. Because right now, I’d say government’s very tyrannical.” If the Democrats try to steal the election again in 2024, she told me, the Trump-sympathetic elements of the military might need to seize control.

    Around 8 p.m., Trump took the stage and launched into his remarks, toggling back and forth between what he called “teleprompter stuff” (his prepared stump speech) and the unscripted riffs that he’s famous for. Seeing him speak in this setting after so many years was strange—both instantly familiar and still somehow shocking, like rewatching an old movie you saw a hundred times as a kid but whose most offensive jokes you’d forgotten.

    When he talked about members of the Biden administration, he referred to them as “idiots” and “lunatics” and “bad people.” When he talked about the “invasion” of undocumented immigrants at the southern border, he punctuated the riff with ominous warnings for his mostly white audience: “They’re occupying schools …They’re sitting with your children.” When he mentioned Barack Obama, he made a point of using the former president’s middle name—“Barack Hussein Obama”—and then veered off into an appreciation of Rush Limbaugh, the late conservative talk-radio host who taught him this trick. “We miss Rush,” Trump said to enthusiastic cheers. “We need you, Rush!”

    I’d forgotten how casually he swears from the podium—deriding, at one point, his Republican rival Nikki Haley’s recent statement on the Civil War as “three paragraphs of bullshit”—and how casually people in the crowd swear back. Throughout the speech, two young men near the front repeatedly screamed “Fuck Biden!” prompted a wave of naughty giggles from others in the crowd.

    If one thing has noticeably changed since 2016, it’s how the audience reacts to Trump. During his first campaign, the improvised material was what everyone looked forward to, while the written sections felt largely like box-checking. But in Mason City, the off-script riffs—many of which revolved around the 2020 election being stolen from him, and his personal sense of martyrdom—often turned rambly, and the crowd seemed to lose interest. At one point, a woman in front of me rolled her eyes and muttered, “He’s just babbling now.” She left a few minutes later, joining a steady stream of early exiters, and I wondered then whether even the most loyal Trump supporters might be surprised if they were to see their leader speak in person.

    My own takeaway from the event was that there’s a reason Trump is no longer the cultural phenomenon he was in 2016. Yes, the novelty has worn off. But he also seems to have lost the instinct for entertainment that once made him so interesting to audiences. He relies on a shorthand legible only to his most dedicated followers, and his tendency to get lost in rhetorical cul-de-sacs of self-pity and anger wears thin. This doesn’t necessarily make him less dangerous. There is a rote quality now to his darkest rhetoric that I found more unnerving than when it used to command wall-to-wall news coverage.

    These were my own impressions of the rally I attended; yours may very well be different. The only way to know is to see for yourself. Every four years, pundits try to identify the medium that will shape the presidential race—the “Twitter election,” the “cable-news election.” In 2024, with both parties warning of existential stakes for America, perhaps the best approach is to simply show up in real life.

    Shortly before Trump began speaking, I met a friendly young dad in glasses who’d brought his 6-year-old son to the event. He’d never attended a Trump rally before and was excited to be there. When I asked if I could chat with him after Trump’s speech to see what he thought of the event, he happily agreed.

    As Trump spoke, I glanced over at the man a few times from the press section. His expression was muted; he barely reacted to the lines that drove the crowd wild. The longer Trump spoke, I noticed, the further the man drifted backward toward the exits. Of course, I don’t know what was going through his head. Maybe he was just a stoic type. Or maybe his enthusiasm was tempered by the distraction of tending to a 6-year-old. All I know is that, halfway through the speech, he was gone.

    McKay Coppins

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  • Trump arrives at New York court for $250 million fraud trial

    Trump arrives at New York court for $250 million fraud trial

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump attends the trial of himself, his adult sons, the Trump Organization and others in a civil fraud case brought by state Attorney General Letitia James, at a Manhattan courthouse, in New York City, U.S., October 2, 2023. 

    Seth Wenig | Reuters

    The $250 million civil fraud trial that could see former President Donald Trump permanently banned from doing business in New York began Monday.

    The trial comes a year after New York Attorney General Letitia James sued him, his company, three of his adult children, and top Trump Organization officials.

    James alleged the defendants misstated the values of real estate properties by billions of dollars in business records to obtain better loan and insurance terms, and tax benefits.

    Trump, who is seeking the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, arrived at Manhattan Supreme Court for the start of the trial.

    Before it began, Trump claimed the case was a “witch hunt” aimed at undermining his presidential campaign.

    “Everything was perfect. There was no crime. The crime is against me,” Trump told reporters in the hallway outside the courtroom.

    CNBC Politics

    Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

    James notched a massive win against Trump and other defendants last week when Judge Arthur Engoron ruled they were liable for the fraud claims. Engoron in that ruling canceled the defendants’ New York business certificates and ordered an independent receiver to oversee their dissolution.

    Engoron, not a jury, will decide whether the defendants are liable for the other six claims at the trial, which is expected to conclude in late December.

    “The people have already proven” that Trump’s financial statements from 2011 to 2021 were “false and misleading,” said Kevin Wallace, a prosecutor from the attorney general’s office, in his opening statement to the judge.

    Wallace played video clips of depositions from key witnesses, including Trump, former Trump Org Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg and former personal attorney Michael Cohen.

    In one clip, Cohen said that he and Weisselberg would inflate the value of real estate assets in order to reach the figure that Trump wanted in order to help him climb higher on Forbes’ wealth rankings.

    Wallace argued while a person may exaggerate their wealth for Forbes Magazine or television audiences, they “cannot do it while conducting business in the State of New York.”

    But defense attorney Christopher Kise said the evidence will show that “there was no intent to defraud.”

    The loans that Trump’s business secured were “successful” and “profitable,” Kise said.

    “The banks made well over a hundred million dollars,” Kise added.

    A box is carried as the civil fraud trial of former President Donald Trump is set to begin at New York State Supreme Court on October 02, 2023 in New York City.

    Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

    James, who is also in court, in a statement said, “For years, Donald Trump falsely inflated his net worth to enrich himself and cheat the system.”

    “We won the foundation of our case last week and proved that his purported net worth has long been rooted in incredible fraud,” James said. “No matter how rich or powerful you are, there are not two sets of laws for people in this country. The rule of law must apply equally to everyone, and it is my responsibility to make sure that it does.”

    Ivanka Trump was removed from the case in June, after an appeals court ruled that the claims against her were barred by the statute of limitations. But two of Trump’s other children, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, who took over the family business after their father became president in 2016, remain as defendants.

    This is developing news. Please check back for updates.

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  • Trump’s Habit of Lying About Everything All the Time May Cost Him Trump Tower

    Trump’s Habit of Lying About Everything All the Time May Cost Him Trump Tower

    Unless you were dropped on earth just 24 hours ago, you obviously know that Donald Trump is famous for lying about everything all the time, and that he has been telling lies for basically his entire life. He lies about dumb stuff, like that he invented the phrase “prime the pump” and that he was named “Michigan’s Man of the Year.” He lies about serious stuff, like that he saw “thousands” of supposed terrorist sympathizers “cheering” from New Jersey as the World Trade Center towers collapsed on 9/11. He told lies before he was president (sometimes by pretending to be his own spokesman, John Barron), he told lies when he was president (by The Washington Post’s count, a whopping 30,573 “false or misleading claims”), and he’s continued to tell lies since becoming an ex-president (see: the business about having won the 2020 election). At this point, his inability to open his mouth without 47 lies flying out should really be studied by a team of multidisciplinary scientists who can dedicate their life’s work to figuring out what is wrong with him.

    Incredibly, the vast majority of Trump’s lies have never actually hurt him in the slightest. After all, he was elected president of the United States in 2016 and is currently the front-runner—by a landslide—for the GOP nomination. But on Tuesday, a specific set of falsehoods very much came back to bite him in the ass: the ones he told about his real estate holdings as owner of the Trump Organization. 

    We speak, of course, of the explosive ruling issued by Judge Arthur Engoron, who declared—as part of a suit brought by the New York attorney general—that Trump, his two adults sons, and the Trump Organization committed years of fraud by hugely inflating the businesses’ assets (and Trump’s net worth), which led to better loan terms and lower insurance costs. Among the most absurd examples: Engoron found that Trump repeatedly overvalued Mar-a-Lago, and in one instance did so on a financial statement by as much as, wait for it, 2,300%. While an outside appraisal put the value of the Palm Beach club at approximately $28 million, due to restrictions on how the property can be used, the Trump Organization claimed it was worth as much as $612 million.

    In another instance, Trump claimed his triplex at Trump Tower was 30,000 square feet—and valued it at $327 million based on that size—when it is actually only about 10,000. Which, y’know, is a pretty big difference. “A discrepancy of this order of magnitude, by a real estate developer sizing up his own living space of decades, can only be considered fraud,” Engoron wrote, according to The New York Times. Elsewhere, the judge responded to Team Trump’s various defenses of its business practices by writing: “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…. That is a fantasy world, not the real world.”

    As New York magazine notes, Engoron “ordered that the business certificates that allowed the family’s limited liability companies to operate in New York be rescinded and that independent receivers be put in place to manage them. This could mean that Trump will lose control over the iconic properties that bear his name such as Trump Tower, as well as make it more difficult for the former president to do business in his home state.” On top of all that, five defense lawyers were fined $7,500 a piece for making “frivolous” arguments that the judge had already rejected. As Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter David Cay Johnston notes, “A judge calling a lawyer’s argument ‘frivolous’ is the equivalent of saying it is no better than nonsense from a drunk in a bar.”

    A lawyer for Trump called the decision “outrageous” and “completely disconnected from the facts and governing law,” indicating that Trump will appeal. In the meantime, the ex-president is scheduled to face off at trial with New York attorney general Letitia James, who has accused him of inflating his assets by as much as $2.2 billion and is seeking damages of about $250 million.

    For their part, the Trump boys have responded to the ruling by doing…exactly how what you’d expect. On Truth Social, the ex-president raged that his “civil rights” had been violated, and called Engoron a “Deranged, Trump hating judge.” In one post on X, Eric Trump claimed that the ruling is “an attempt to destroy my father” and that Mar-a-Lago is actually “arguably the most valuable residential property in the country.” Later, he accused Engoron of dragging his name “through the mud,” calling the ruling “cruel.” Trump’s namesake declared the decision “nonsensical and asinine,” adding: “This is weaponized Blue State Marxist America, & another example of the sheer impossibility of a fairness & impartiality in these areas.”

    Last year, in an unrelated case, the Trump Organization and its longtime chief financial officer were found guilty of tax fraud, among other crimes. Trump, of course, has been indicted four separate times since late March, for a total of 91 felony counts related to hush money deals, his handling of classified government documents, and trying to overturn the results of the 2020 election. He has pleaded not guilty in all cases. 

    Republicans aren’t even trying to hide their bigotry anymore 

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    Bess Levin

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  • Entirely Unrepentant

    Entirely Unrepentant

    “Our country is being destroyed by stupid people,” former President Donald Trump declared during a CNN town hall tonight, shortly after he endorsed defaulting on the national debt.

    Trump remains without shame. Neither impeachment nor indictment nor arraignment nor a barely day-old verdict against him in a civil suit can change the fact that he’s still leading the field of Republican presidential candidates—comfortably.

    During tonight’s hour-plus live broadcast from New Hampshire, Trump steamrolled over the moderator, Kaitlan Collins, at one point calling her a “nasty” person—an echo of his 2016 campaign against Hillary Clinton. Collins did her best to fact-check the former president, but her efforts consistently fell short. Trump’s ability to disgorge words is unparalleled. She tried to cut him off, but he battled through it.

    Tonight, Trump rattled off myriad conspiracy theories about voter fraud and claimed, as he had at CPAC, that he could end the war in Ukraine in a quick 24 hours. He painted the January 6 insurrectionist Ashli Babbitt as a martyr and called the Capitol Police officer who shot her a “thug.” He referred to former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi as a “crazy woman.” He repeatedly denigrated the writer E. Jean Carroll, who was just awarded $5 million in damages after a jury found that he defamed and sexually assaulted her. Trump repeated his earlier claims not to know her, calling her a “whack job.”

    But will it matter? Has it ever mattered before?

    Trump is currently leading both the incumbent, President Joe Biden, and the top Republican alternative, Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida, in the polls. Though the 2024 election is still a long way off, the campaign is officially under way—such was the network’s justification for tonight’s town hall. Many observers on social media objected to the fact that it happened at all.

    On set in New Hampshire, Trump was speaking not just to the country, but to a roomful of undecided voters. Most of them seemed eager to applaud and giggle along with the former president, whom nearly everyone addressed as “Mr. President.” He’s still the star, the draw, the showman. When he theatrically pulled papers out of his breast pocket, the crowd hooted. He teased a few 2024 talking points: The economy? Stinks. Inflation? A disaster. Afghanistan? “The single most embarrassing moment in the history of this country.”

    And then there’s the topic of January 6. The laughably big question going into the next election is whether a president who incited a violent mob and tried to stage a coup in lieu of orchestrating a peaceful transfer of power can once again be president. Has Trump taken the past two years to reflect on his actions? Has he been humbled? Chastened? Of course not.

    Tonight, Trump doubled down on his claim that former Vice President Mike Pence should have overturned the results of the 2020 election. He said he was inclined to pardon “many” of the January 6 rioters, bemoaning that “they’re living in hell right now.” He referred to these insurrectionists as “great people,” a subtle callback to his comments in the aftermath of the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in which he claimed there were “very fine people” on both sides.

    Next month marks eight years since Trump descended the golden escalator in Trump Tower and announced his candidacy for president. Hardly anyone in the media seemed to know how to properly cover him then. CNN was among the networks that used to carry his campaign rallies live. Tonight’s town hall, despite Collins’s admirable attempts at pushback, felt like a regression to that earlier era. Even some of Trump’s lines felt ominously familiar. “If I don’t win, this country is going to be in big trouble,” he said. Are we really about to do this all over again?

    John Hendrickson

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  • Trump Hastily Settles Assault Suit That Led to Revelation He’s Afraid He Might Be Killed by a Piece of Fruit

    Trump Hastily Settles Assault Suit That Led to Revelation He’s Afraid He Might Be Killed by a Piece of Fruit

    In 2022, it’s a full-time job keeping track of all the criminal investigations and civil suits facing Donald Trump. Luckily, today, we can cross one of them off the list: the 2015 lawsuit filed by a group of protesters who alleged they were assaulted by Trump’s security guards outside of Trump Tower. Y’know, the one that led to the revelation that the ex-president thinks it’s highly possible he could be killed by a piece of fruit. But more on the fruit later.

    On Wednesday, Trump reached a settlement agreement with the plaintiffs, just days after the case had gone to trial. The suit revolved around a September 2015 incident, in which a group protesting comments Trump had made about Mexican immigrants while campaigning for president say they were assaulted outside of Trump Tower by his security guards. The plaintiffs said that the head of security allegedly punched one of the protesters in the head while trying to rip away a sign that read “Make America racist again” sign.

    While Trump claimed in a February 2016 affidavit that he had no knowledge of the situation at the time, and only learned about it the next day, in May, his former fixer, Michael Cohen, has said that was not the case. In a sworn deposition, Cohen claimed that he’d told Trump about the protesters that day, at which point the then presidential candidate allegedly told his head of security, Keith Schiller, “Get rid of them.” When he returned, Schiller, according to Cohen, told Trump: “I took the sign. He grabbed me, so I hit him across the side of the head,” to which Trump allegedly responded, “Good.” In his own deposition last year, Trump maintained that he “didn’t know about” what happened but also that Schiller “did nothing wrong.” Which brings us to a revelation about the former president and his apparent fear of flying fruit.

    During that testimony, the plaintiff’s attorneys asked why Trump, at a 2016 rally, told attendees, “If you see someone getting ready to throw a tomato, just knock the crap out of them, would you?” Trump testified that he and his security detail were on high alert that someone was “going to throw fruit.” “You get hit with fruit, it’s—no, it’s very violent stuff. We were on alert for that,” Trump said. “It’s worse than tomato, it’s other things also. But tomato, when they start doing that stuff, it’s very dangerous. There was an alert out that day.”

    Then Trump testified that yes, it would be his expectation that if one of his security guards saw someone about to throw a tomato, they should knock the crap out of them, adding that other fruits would necessitate a beating too. “A tomato, a pineapple, a lot of other things they throw,” he said. “Yeah, if the security saw that, I would say you have to…I think that they have to be aggressive in stopping that from happening. Because if that happens, you can be killed if that happens…. It’s dangerous stuff.” Relatedly, during his May deposition, Cohen revealed that his old boss frequently obsessed over a 1998 incident in which Bill Gates was hit with a pie while walking into a building, and obsessed over the idea that the same fate would befall him. “For some reason that upset Mr. Trump terribly. We were all instructed that if somebody was to ever throw anything at him, that if that person didn’t end up in the hospital, we’d all be fired,” Cohen said.

    On Wednesday Benjamin Dictor, an attorney for the protesters, said that the lawsuit “was resolved on terms that they are very, very happy with.” A separate statement, signed by the plaintiffs and Trump attorney Alina Habba, noted that “all people…have a right to engage in peaceful protest on public sidewalks.”

    It’s not clear why Trump chose to settle, but it’s possible he was worried about how much money he was going to have to pay out, particularly in light of where the trial was taking place. As Randolph McLaughlin, a Pace University law school professor, told The Guardian just before jury selection kicked off: “Bronx juries, they engage in Robinhood-ism. They take from the rich and give to the rest of us—their verdicts are always generally right at the ceiling. There’s no limit in the Bronx. They love to give money to the people. Donald Trump, as much as he is loved in certain corners of the country, he is not loved in the Bronx.”

    Bess Levin

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  • Trump Organization Settles Lawsuit With Protesters Alleging Assault—Here’s Where Other Cases Involving Ex-President’s Business Stand

    Trump Organization Settles Lawsuit With Protesters Alleging Assault—Here’s Where Other Cases Involving Ex-President’s Business Stand

    Topline

    Former President Donald Trump and the Trump Organization settled a lawsuit Wednesday with protesters who alleged security guards at Trump Tower assaulted them in 2015, attorneys in the case said, though a number of lawsuits involving Trump and his company are still ongoing.

    Key Facts

    Attorneys in the Trump Tower case did not disclose the terms of the settlement, which was signed on the third day of jury selection as the civil case went to trial in New York state court, but plaintiffs’ attorney Ben Dictor said in a statement the “matter has been resolved to the satisfaction of all parties,” multiple outlets report.

    Protesters who demonstrated in 2015 against Trump’s attacks on Mexican immigrants sued Trump, his business and campaign, alleging Trump’s head of security Keith Schiller struck protester Efrain Galicia in the head as the two struggled over Schiller trying to take away a sign that read “Trump: Make America Racist Again.”

    The case went to trial the same week as the Manhattan district attorney’s criminal case against the Trump Organization for alleged tax fraud, as prosecutors allege the company paid executives through gifts and other “off the books” compensation to get out of paying taxes on that income (the case does not directly implicate Trump).

    A separate civil lawsuit is pending in New York Supreme Court from New York Attorney General Letitia James, which accuses Trump and his business, family members and associates of fraudulently inflating the stated value of their assets for financial gain.

    As that lawsuit moves forward, James has asked the court to order an independent monitor to oversee the company’s activities and prohibit the Trump Organization from transferring assets or submitting financial statements that don’t “adequately disclose” how they were valued.

    Trump, his children and his company are also facing a class action lawsuit filed in 2018 alleging they promoted the scam multi-level marketing company ACN—which the New York Times reported paid Trump $8.8 million over the course of 10 years—a case that seeks monetary damages and accuses the Trumps of racketeering, unfair competition, deceptive trade practices, negligent misrepresentation and dissemination of untrue and misleading business statements.

    Attorneys told the court in early October that discovery in the case has been completed ahead of a trial, and Trump was slated to have been deposed in the case by October 31 (attorneys will file a report by Friday informing the court if that has taken place).

    Key Background

    The Trump Tower protesters, who described themselves as “human rights activists of Mexican origin,” first filed their lawsuit in September 2015, soon after the encounter with Trump’s security chief Keith Schiller took place. The lawsuit accuses Schiller of hitting Galicia “with a closed fist on the head with such force that it caused Galicia to stumble backwards” and sought monetary damages along with an injunction that would bar security from interfering with the advocates’ protesting. Trump was deposed in the case after leaving office, in which a transcript shows he called the protesters “troublemakers” and alleged he was unaware of the protests at the time, also arguing that Schiller “did nothing wrong.” Though Trump did not directly engage with the protesters, the plaintiffs alleged the then-candidate should have known the security guard would have behaved in a “negligent or reckless manner,” the Associated Press reports, and attorneys sought to depose Trump to see if he was at all responsible for Schiller’s conduct.

    Crucial Quote

    “The parties all agree that the plaintiffs in the action, and all people, have a right to engage in peaceful protest on public sidewalks,” attorneys from both sides of the protesters’ case said in a joint statement Wednesday.

    What To Watch For

    The Manhattan District Attorney’s criminal trial against the Trump Organization is now on hold until next week, after the Trump Organization’s controller Jeffrey McConney, a witness in the case, tested positive for Covid-19. Opening arguments in the trial first got underway on Monday, and the trial is expected to last five to six weeks in total, New York State Judge Juan Merchan said ahead of jury selection. The Trump Organization faces up to $1.6 million in fines if convicted in that case, and legal experts note it could also make creditors and business partners less likely to work with them. Former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg has already pleaded guilty in the case and will serve up to 15 months in prison. The Trump Organization and Trump family face the threat of harsher punishments in James’ civil lawsuit, which asks the court for such relief as having the company’s business certificates canceled in New York, Trump and his children being barred from leading New York businesses and a $250 million fine. James said she has also referred evidence of alleged criminal activity to the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service for further investigation.

    Chief Critic

    Trump and the Trump Organization have broadly denied wrongdoing in the cases against them, denouncing James’ lawsuit as a politically motivated attack and arguing in the company’s Manhattan criminal trial that Weisselberg acted alone and the company should not be held liable for his actions. Trump also described the protesters’ lawsuit against him as “just one more example of baseless harassment of your favorite President” after he was deposed in the case in October 2021. The Trumps and their business allege in the ACN case that the plaintiffs did not adequately make their claims and the court does not have jurisdiction to hear the case.

    Surprising Fact

    Trump was supposed to be deposed in the ACN case on September 30, but it was ultimately delayed because Hurricane Ian struck Florida, where Trump was located at the time and where the deposition was scheduled to take place. The attorneys representing the plaintiffs told the court they did not feel it was safe to travel to the state, but Trump’s attorneys traveled to Florida for the deposition ahead of the hurricane and were unwilling to move the location despite the impending storm.

    Tangent

    Trump faces numerous other lawsuits and investigations on top of those that target his business. The ex-president’s other legal issues include two investigations from the Justice Department into his handling of White House documents and efforts to overturn the election; an investigation in Fulton County, Georgia, into his attempts to overturn that state’s election; a defamation case brought by writer E. Jean Carroll, who accused him of rape; and multiple lawsuits from lawmakers and police offers seeking to hold him liable for the January 6 attack.

    Further Reading

    Tracking Trump: A Rundown Of All The Lawsuits And Investigations Involving The Former President (Forbes)

    Protestors who sued Donald Trump and accused him of siccing his security on them outside Trump Tower have settled their case against the former president (Insider)

    Trump Organization’s Criminal Trial For Tax Fraud Starts—Here Are The Consequences It Could Face (Forbes)

    New York Seeks Injunction Against Trump To Stop Alleged Ongoing Fraud (Forbes)

    Alison Durkee, Forbes Staff

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