By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) – New York’s attorney general on Tuesday asked a judge to sanction former U.S. President Donald Trump, his adult children, the Trump Organization and their lawyers over their responses to her $250 million civil fraud lawsuit against them.
The lawsuit by Attorney General Letitia James last September accused the defendants of involvement in a decade-long scheme to manipulate asset values and Trump’s net worth, in order to induce banks and insurers to provide better terms.
On Jan. 26, the defendants filed formal “answers” where, as often occurs in similar lawsuits, they denied or claimed to lack sufficient knowledge about dozens of substantive accusations.
In a letter to the Manhattan judge overseeing the case, Arthur Engoron, James said many responses were “demonstrably false,” frivolous or otherwise improper. She said the Trumps should lose some of their defenses, as well as face sanctions.
“The court has already admonished defendants and their counsel for their continued invocation of meritless legal claims but exercised its discretion in not imposing such sanctions,” the letter said. “It does not appear that this point was taken.”
Lawyers for the Trump defendants did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
James said the improper responses included Trump’s objection to being labeled the “inactive president” of the Trump Organization during his White House term, though he had used that description in an October 2021 sworn deposition.
Trump’s daughter Ivanka was criticized by James for saying she did not know whether she had personally met with bankers, or could confirm the contents of her own emails.
James also rejected arguments by Donald Trump and his sons Donald Jr. and Eric that she lacked standing to sue and “acted contrary to the ancient and customary norms” governing prosecutors, saying Engoron had already rejected their contention that she was pursuing a political “witch hunt.”
Earlier in January, Donald Trump ended two legal challenges to James’ lawsuit, after a Florida judge imposed $937,989 of sanctions against him and his lawyer for filing a “completely frivolous” lawsuit accusing Hillary Clinton of trying to rig the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Jonathan Oatis)