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    Judge denies Trump's push to get him kicked off civil fraud case

    By Peter CharalambousAaron Katersky,

    12 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2hAraR_0udMgVgT00

    The New York judge who oversaw former President Donald Trump's civil fraud trial on Thursday denied an attempt to kick him off the case.

    Trump had tried to get Judge Arthur Engoron removed from the case based on alleged violations of the rules governing how judges are supposed to behave.

    Trump's attorneys said Engoron "may have engaged in actions fundamentally incompatible with the responsibilities attendant to donning the black robe and sitting in judgment."

    MORE: Trump seeks recusal of judge who fined him $464M in civil fraud trial

    Trump's defense alleged that Engoron, three weeks before he handed down his ruling in the case, spoke to a New York real estate attorney about the substance of the case, in violation of New York's Code of Judicial Conduct -- but Engoron said the attorney, Adam Bailey, "accosted and started haranguing me about Executive Law 63(12). He did not relay any alleged facts."

    Engoron said Thursday he has overseen the case for 3 1/2 years and he said he did not need, much less welcome, a "tirade" from Bailey, who he derided as a "landlord-tenant lawyer ranting."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1GgwC4_0udMgVgT00
    Brandon Bell/Getty Images - PHOTO: Republican Presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks to attendees during his campaign rally at the Bojangles Coliseum, on July 24, 2024, in Charlotte, North Carolina.

    "I am supremely confident in my ability to continue to serve, as I always have, impartially," Engoron wrote Thursday.

    Earlier this week, Trump and his co-defendants asked New York's Appellate Division to overturn February's ruling from Engoron that found the former president fraudulently inflated his net worth to secure better business deals.

    "It violates centuries of New York case law holding that NYAG cannot sue to vindicate alleged violations that are purely private in nature -- and, in this case, do not exist at all," defense lawyers wrote in a 95-page filing.

    Engoron in February ordered Trump to pay $464 million in disgorgement and pre-judgment interest after he found the former president and his adult sons liable for using "numerous acts of fraud and misrepresentation" to inflate his net worth in order to get more favorable loan terms. Trump has denied all wrongdoing and has appealed the decision in the case.

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