NEW YORK – Donald Trump faced having assets seized in a humiliating blow to his carefully cultivated image as a self-made tycoon as his lawyers acknowledged Monday he doesn’t have the cash to appeal a US$464 million fine for fraudulently inflating his wealth. Trump, the Republican candidate for November’s US presidential election, intends to challenge the judgment imposed by a New York civil court in February, which would force an automatic stay of enforcement.
But first he must put the money into an account managed by the appeals court or post a bond in the full amount, and 30 insurance underwriters have rejected his pleas for assistance, his lawyers said in a new filing.
“We will fight and defeat this Hoax,” Trump said in a vituperative statement Monday night, blasting the case as a “witch hunt” against him.
His cash crunch raises the possibility that the state of New York could begin seizing the former president’s property as soon as next Monday unless the court — known as the First Department of the Appellate Division — agrees to a delay.
“Defendants have faced what have proven to be insurmountable difficulties in obtaining an appeal bond for the full US$464 million,” Trump Organisation general counsel Alan Garten said in a filing to the court.
Judge Arthur Engoron ruled that Trump and his company had unlawfully inflated his wealth and manipulated the value of properties to obtain favorable bank loans or insurance terms.
Last month the judge ordered Trump to pay US$355 million plus interest while his sons Eric and Don Jr. were told to hand over more than US$4 million each. Trump managed to put together a separate bond earlier this month for US$91.6 million as he appeals a sexual assault and defamation judgment in a lawsuit brought by New York writer E. Jean Carroll.
But his lawyers said the leading bond providers all had internal policies preventing them from accepting real estate as collateral in the fraud case, and many would not exceed limits of US$100 million. That leaves Trump with the only option of posting 120% of the bond in cash and cash equivalents totalling US$557.5 million, including fees and interest. – Nampa/AFP