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2024.02.24 07:48 GMT+8

Trump formally ordered to pay $454 million in New York fraud case

Updated 2024.02.24 10:27 GMT+8
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump during a "Get Out The Vote" rally at Winthrop Coliseum in Rock Hill, South Carolina, U.S., February 23, 2024. /CFP

Former U.S. President Donald Trump was formally ordered by a New York judge to pay $454.2 million after being found liable for manipulating his net worth in a civil fraud case brought by New York state's attorney general.

The payment includes the $354.9 million penalty that Justice Arthur Engoron of the state court in Manhattan ordered on February 16, plus interest, following a non-jury trial that stretched over three months.

Engoron also ordered Trump's adult sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, to each pay nearly $4.7 million, and the Trump Organization's former chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, to pay $1.1 million, all including interest.

The payouts total $464.6 million and were determined on Thursday. More than $114,000 of interest will continue accruing daily, mostly for Donald Trump alone. The judgment was made public on Friday, February 21.

Attorney General Letitia James accused the defendants of illegally overstating the value of Trump's properties to inflate his net worth and obtain better loan and insurance terms.

Engoron also banned Trump for three years from serving in a top role at any New York company, or seeking loans from banks registered in the state. His adult sons received two-year bans from leadership roles.

The judge said the defendants' "complete lack of contrition and remorse borders on pathological."

The Republican former president also faces four unrelated criminal prosecutions, in which he has pleaded not guilty, as he seeks to regain the White House from Democrat Joe Biden.

Trump has accused James and Engoron, both Democrats, of being corrupt, and called the case part of a witch hunt by political opponents.

He plans to appeal his penalty to the Appellate Division, a mid-level appeals court, but would have to come up with the money owed or obtain a bond.

Engoron rejected a request by Clifford Robert, a lawyer for the defendants, to delay enforcing the judgments for 30 days in order to allow "an orderly post-judgment process, particularly given the magnitude of judgment."

In a Thursday morning email to Robert, Engoron wrote: "You have failed to explain, much less justify, any basis for a stay. I am confident that the Appellate Division will protect your appellate rights."

(With input from agencies)

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