Current:Home > StocksTrump's decades of testimony provide clues about how he'll fight for his real estate empire -Stellar Wealth Sphere
Trump's decades of testimony provide clues about how he'll fight for his real estate empire
View
Date:2025-04-12 05:09:09
NEW YORK — Donald Trump has testified in court as a football team owner, casino builder and airline buyer. He bragged in a deposition that he saved "millions of lives" by deterring nuclear war as president. Another time, he fretted about the dangers of flung fruit.
Conditioned by decades of trials and legal disputes, Trump is now poised to reprise his role as witness under extraordinary circumstances: as a former Republican president fighting to save the real estate empire that vaulted him to stardom and the White House.
Trump is set to testify Monday at his New York civil fraud trial, taking the stand in a deeply personal matter that is central his image as a successful businessman and threatens to cost him control of marquee properties such as Trump Tower. His highly anticipated testimony in the trial of New York Attorney General Letitia James' lawsuit follows that of his eldest sons, Trump Organization executives Eric and Donald Trump Jr., who testified last week. His eldest daughter, Ivanka, is set to testify on Wednesday.
Trump has testified in court in at least eight trials since 1986, according to an Associated Press review of court records and news coverage. He also has been questioned under oath in more than a dozen depositions and regulatory hearings.
In 1985, he was called to testify before Congress as owner of the USFL's New Jersey Generals and he testified on behalf of lawyer and friend Roy Cohn at a state disciplinary hearing that led to Cohn's disbarment. In an early flash of his firebrand persona, in 1986, Trump told New Jersey's casino commission that plans for highway overpasses near one of his casinos "would be a disaster. It would be a catastrophe."
Those testimonies, captured in thousands of pages of transcripts and some on videotape, offer clues to the approach Trump is likely to take when he testifies Monday. They show clear parallels between Trump as a witness and Trump as a president and current candidate for the office. His rhetorical style in legal proceedings over the years bears echoes of his political verve: a mix of ego, charm, defensiveness, aggressiveness, sharp language and deflection. He has been combative and boastful, but sometimes vague and prone to hedging or being dismissive.
Testifying in the USFL's antitrust lawsuit against the NFL in 1986, Trump denounced allegations that he had spied on NFL officials at one of his hotels, calling the claim "such a false interpretation it's disgusting."
In 1988, as he sought to buy Eastern Air Lines' Northeast shuttle service, Trump turned on the charisma, flashing a wide smile at the judge's female law clerks and shaking hands with the bailiff during a break in his testimony at a federal court hearing in Washington. Trump testified that his $365 million purchase, later approved, would be a "major boost in morale" for employees.
On the stand in a boxing-related case in 1990, Trump described a Mike Tyson fight he planned for one of his casinos in Atlantic City, New Jersey, as "one of the greatest rematches you could have." Accused by two men of cutting them out of a riverboat gambling project, Trump professed ignorance, testifying in 1999: "I was shocked by this whole case. I had no idea who these people were."
Trump was briefly called to the witness stand in the New York case last month to explain comments outside of court that the judge said violated a limited gag order.
Before that, he last testified in a courtroom in 2013, two years before launching his winning presidential campaign. An 87-year-old suburban Chicago widower had sued him over changes to contract terms for a hotel and condominium tower she had bought units in as an investment. Trump grew increasingly agitated as his testimony wore on, at one point raising his arms and bellowing: "And then she sued me. It's unbelievable!"
In 1990, Trump testified in a losing effort in a lawsuit over his company's failure to make pension contributions on behalf of about 200 undocumented Polish workers hired to tear down a building to make way for Trump Tower. A year later, he was in court again in Manhattan, testifying against a man who claimed he had a contract to develop Trump's board game and was owed 25% of profits from "Trump: The Game."
Trump won that one and another lawsuit in 2005, where he testified that a construction company had "fleeced" him by overcharging him by $1.5 million for work at a golf course in New York's Westchester County.
When questioned in the past about his business and financial dealings, Trump has sometimes deflected responsibility and blame. In a 2013 deposition over a failed Florida condo project, Trump blamed an employee for paperwork that said he was developing a project when, in reality, he wasn't.Another refrain in Trump's depositions is his incredulity that he would be taken so seriously for hyping up his real estate projects.
"You always want to put the best possible spin on a property that you can," Trump said in a December 2007 deposition in his lawsuit against a journalist he had accused of downplaying his wealth. "No different than any other real estate developer, no different than any other businessman, no different than any politician."__Associated Press writer Jill Colvin contributed to this report.
veryGood! (39121)
Related
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Burton Wilde: In-depth Explanation of Lane Club on Public Chain, Private Chain, and Consortium Chain.
- New Mexico police discover explosive device, investigate second suspicious package
- Michael Phelps and Wife Nicole Johnson Welcome Baby No. 4
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Risk of wildfire smoke in long-term care facilities is worse than you'd think
- Sarah Ferguson treated for skin cancer: What to know about melanoma, sunscreen
- Chris Stapleton's Traveller is smooth as Tennessee whiskey, but it's made in Kentucky
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Sofia Vergara and Netflix sued by family of Griselda Blanco ahead of miniseries about drug lord
Ranking
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Appeals court reverses judge’s ruling, orders appointment of independent examiner in FTX bankruptcy
- Florida man charged with battery after puppy sale argument leads to stabbing, police say
- The EU sanctions 6 companies accused of trying to undermine stability in conflict-torn Sudan
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Trump seeks control of the GOP primary in New Hampshire against Nikki Haley, his last major rival
- Botched Star Dr. Terry Dubrow Reveals Why He Stopped Taking Ozempic
- Live updates | 21 Israeli soldiers are killed in Gaza as criticism of war’s handling rises at home
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Emergency declared after extreme rainfall, flash flooding wreck havoc in San Diego
Strong magnitude 7.1 earthquake strikes remote western China, state media says
20 people rescued from ice floe in Lake Erie, Coast Guard says
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
Could falling inflation trigger layoffs and a recession? Hint: Watch corporate profits
Zendaya and Hunter Schafer's Reunion at Paris Fashion Week Is Simply Euphoric
Mary Weiss, lead singer of '60s girl group the Shangri-Las, dies at 75