Letitia James doubts Trump is ‘truly unable’ to come up with $454M bond as deadline to pay up inches closer

Donald Trump, Letitia James
Donald Trump, Letitia James

The New York Attorney General’s Office doubts that Donald Trump is “truly unable” to come up with $454 million bond in his civil fraud case — arguing Wednesday that the ex-president could have pledged his real estate properties to the courts.

The filing from AG Letitia James’ office comes after Trump’s lawyers on Monday claimed he was facing “insurmountable difficulties” finding a lender to back the full amount he owes by the March 25 deadline as he seeks to appeal the hefty judgment against him.

If Trump and the other defendants “were truly unable” to secure the bond, “they at minimum should have consented to have their real-estate interests held by the courts to satisfy the judgment,” Dennis Fan, a lawyer with the AG’s Office, responded.

New York AG Letitia James’ office doubts that former President Donald Trump is truly unable to come up with the $454 million bond he needs for his civil fraud case. Steven Hirsch
New York AG Letitia James’ office doubts that former President Donald Trump is truly unable to come up with the $454 million bond he needs for his civil fraud case. Steven Hirsch
James’ office said Trump and other defendants could have “consented to have their real-estate interests held by the courts” if they are unable to secure the bond. AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File
James’ office said Trump and other defendants could have “consented to have their real-estate interests held by the courts” if they are unable to secure the bond. AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File

Or Trump “should have otherwise pledged security in real-estate holdings with sufficient value to secure payment of the entire judgment,” Fan wrote.

Trump is seeking to appeal Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron’s ruling hitting him with the huge judgment over a decade-long fraud scheme in which the real estate tycoon inflated his net worth by billions a year to get an edge on loan and insurance terms.

But the 45th president must either fork over the full amount or secure a bond for it in order to go forward with the appeal.

Lawyers for Trump said Monday they’d approached 30 firms as he sought to secure the massive bond without any luck as the companies wouldn’t accept his properties as collateral and he didn’t want to sell his prized real estate buildings at “fire sale” prices.

But Trump could have sought to break up the amount over multiple bonds by multiple backers, “limiting any individual surety’s risk to a smaller sum,” Fan wrote.

And Fan highlighted that Trump was able to use real estate as collateral to back a bond for the $83 million judgment he owes writer E. Jean Carroll in her defamation case.

“The use of real estate as collateral for an appeal bond is hardly impossible as a general matter,” Fan wrote.

Fan criticized the former commander-in-chief for failing to provide any proof of all the failed efforts he made in looking for a backer.

“As far as the Court can infer,” surety companies may not have wanted to accept his properties as collateral “because using Mr. Trump’s real estate will generally need ‘a property appraisal’ and his holdings are not nearly as valuable as defendants claim,” Fan said.

At trial, the value of some of the former president’s key properties, such as his Florida residence Mar-a-Lago and his Trump Tower triplex, were constantly debated — with Trump, for instance, claiming the Florida estate was worth $517 million while a local appraiser pegged it at a much lower $27 million.

Trump lawyer Chris Kise said in a statement Wednesday: “The Attorney General’s latest filing demonstrates her continued willingness to misrepresent the facts and misconstrue applicable law in her political crusade against President Trump.”