This was for the civil fraud lawsuit the State of New York filed against the various Trump companies. This trial has not yet begun. What with 91 criminal charges against Trump, it's easy to forget about this civil fraud case.
That is correct. I find the New York cases confusing due to the sheer volume of them.
The following is not really in response to your post, it's just my attempt to outline the various NY legal issues in case it's helpful to people reading this thread.
A note on terminology. "Guilty" applies to criminal cases, whereas "liable" applies to civil cases. The title of this thread really should be Trump Liable for Fraud. I'm not trying to be a geek about the terms, it's just that I find it confusing when people use them interchangeably.
For me, it helps to separate the cases (civil vs criminal) and the parties (Trump the individual vs a Trump business). Essentially, the NY cases fall into one 4 categories (Trump/civil, Trump/criminal, business/civil, business/criminal). In theory, one set of facts could lead to 4 separate cases.
The facts of the recent civil case (the one in which Trump was just found liable) involved Trump inflating the value of his properties on financial statements (false valuations). Bragg had been investigating the false valuations for potential criminal charges, but he decided not to indict Trump criminally for the false valuations. The false valuations were, however, the basis of the civil action we've been discussing in this thread:
>>>Attorney General Letitia James of New York filed a sweeping lawsuit on Wednesday that accused Donald J. Trump, his family business and three of his children of lying to lenders and insurers by fraudulently overvaluing his assets by billions of dollars. . . . The Manhattan criminal investigation [into the false valuations] has not resulted in charges.. Early this year, the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, instructed prosecutors to halt their effort to seek to indict Mr. Trump after he and some of his aides developed concerns about proving a criminal case. Such cases require a higher burden of proof than a civil case like the one Ms. James has filed.<<<
The New York attorney general, Letitia James, is seeking to bar the Trump family from ever operating in the state again.
www.nytimes.com
From the nyt article above, it appears to me that state criminal charges based on the false valuations are still possible:
>>>The [civil] lawsuit also argued that the financial statements violated “a host of state laws.” A
sked about the possibility of state charges, Mr. Bragg said in a statement that the investigation into Mr. Trump and his company is “active and ongoing.”<<<(disclaimer: I'm not sure if Bragg has made more recent statements about possible criminal charges for the false valuations)
Bragg
did file criminal charges for tax fraud, which resulted in Wesselberg pleading guilty (and getting five months at the greybar hotel) and the Trump businesses being found guilty.
>>>Allen Weisselberg, the decades-long chief financial officer at former President Donald Trump's family business, was sentenced Tuesday to
five months behind bars for financial crimes he committed while working as a top executive there. . . . Weisselberg, 75, pleaded guilty to 15 counts in August, including grand larceny tax fraud and falsifying business records. That paved the way for his testimony at the tax fraud trial of two of the Trump Organization's business entities: the Trump Corporation (which encompasses most of Trump's business empire) and the Trump Payroll Corporation (which processes payments to staff). . . . Under an agreement with prosecutors, Weisselberg agreed to testify in exchange for a lighter sentence.
The Trump businesses were found guilty in December and will be sentenced at the end of this week. <<<
Editorial comment: Weisselberg's testimony (in exchange for the reduced sentence) that he didn't conspire with Trump to commit tax fraud strikes me as suspicious. I can't help but wonder if Trump communicated to Weisselberg through his lawyers that it would be in his financial best interest not to testify directly against Trump.
The criminal conviction of Trump's business for tax fraud resulted in a $1.6 million criminal penalty:
>>>Former President Donald J. Trump’s family real estate business was ordered on Friday to pay a $1.6 million criminal penalty for its
conviction on felony tax fraud and other charges, a stinging rebuke and the maximum possible punishment.<<
The Trump Organization must pay $1.6 million for giving executive off-the-books benefits and pay.
www.nytimes.com
From the npr article above, it appears to me that tax fraud criminal charges against Trump individually (not the Trump organization) are still possible:
>>>Trump was never charged in the scheme, but Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has said the former president remains under investigation.<<<
And, of course, there is the pending criminal case against Trump for the porn star hush money:
>>>NEW YORK (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday rejected
Donald Trump ’s bid to move his hush-money criminal case from New York state court to federal court, ruling that the former president had failed to meet a high legal bar for changing jurisdiction.<<<
https://apnews.com/article/trump-new-york-indictment-stormy-daniels-cohen-e673f673d205a70275d05510793672f2
But, I tell ya, that Trump guy, he's a straight shooter! (sarcasm alert)