Trump, adult children agree to testify in NY civil probe
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[June 09, 2022]
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Donald Trump and two of
his adult children, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump, have agreed to
testify starting July 15 in a New York state civil investigation into
the former U.S. president's business practices.
The Trumps' testimony could last through the following week, according
to an agreement with state Attorney General Letitia James made public on
Wednesday. James is investigating whether the Trump Organization misled
lenders and tax authorities.
The deal for the Trumps to testify came more than six months after James
first issued subpoenas for their testimony, which the Trumps fought
bitterly in court. Last month, an intermediate state appeals court
denied the Trumps' bid to avoid testimony in James' probe.
Trump, 75, and his son and daughter, both in their 40s, had argued that
testifying in the civil probe would violate their constitutional rights
because their words could be used in a related criminal investigation
led by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
Separately, a New York state judge ruled in a virtual hearing on
Wednesday that Trump must send James affidavits from several Trump
Organization executives about their policies for retaining or destroying
records.
But the judge, Arthur Engoron, said he would not yet fully purge a
contempt order he issued against Trump in April for failing to comply
with a subpoena from the state attorney general. Trump had said he had
no documents that were relevant to the probe, a claim Engoron said he
found "surprising."
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a rally to boost
Ohio Republican candidates ahead of their May 3 primary election, at
the county fairgrounds in Delaware, Ohio, U.S. April 23, 2022.
REUTERS/Gaelen Morse
Engoron rejected a suggestion by Trump lawyer Alina
Habba that he might have ruled differently had someone other than
Trump been involved. "I try to take myself out of the equation," the
judge said.
The former president last month paid a $110,000 fine - one of the
conditions needed to lift the contempt order - a sum being held in
escrow pending Trump's appeal of Engoron's order.
James says her more-than-three-year investigation has found evidence
that the Trump Organization - which manages hotels, golf courses and
other real estate throughout the world - overstated asset values to
obtain benefits such as favorable loans and understated the values
to get tax breaks.
Trump, a Republican, has denied wrongdoing, and called the
investigation politically motivated. James is a Democrat.
The Trumps have until June 13 to ask New York state's highest court,
the Court of Appeals, to further delay any testimony in James'
probe. The testimony would be postponed if that court issued a stay.
(Reporting by Karen Freifeld and Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis and Howard Goller)
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