Current:Home > NewsJudge threatens to hold Donald Trump in contempt after deleted post is found on campaign website -PrimeWealth Guides
Judge threatens to hold Donald Trump in contempt after deleted post is found on campaign website
View
Date:2025-04-27 14:36:51
NEW YORK (AP) — Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial judge threatened Friday to hold the former president in contempt, raising the possibility of fining or even jailing him because a disparaging social media post about a key court staffer remained visible for weeks on his campaign website after the judge had ordered it deleted.
Judge Arthur Engoron said the website’s retention of the post was a “blatant violation” of his Oct. 3 order requiring Trump to immediately delete the offending message. The limited gag order, hours after Trump made the post on the trial’s second day, also barred him and others involved in the case from personal attacks on members of Engoron’s judicial staff.
Engoron did not immediately rule on potentially sanctioning Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, but noted that “in this current overheated climate” incendiary posts can and have led to harm.
Trump, who returned to the trial Tuesday and Wednesday after attending the first three days, wasn’t in court on Friday. During his appearance this week, he reserved his enmity for Engoron and New York Attorney General Letitia James, whose fraud lawsuit is being decided at the civil trial. Neither are covered by Engoron’s limited gag order.
Trump lawyer Christopher Kise blamed the “very large machine” of Trump’s presidential campaign for allowing a version of his deleted social media post to remain on his website, calling it an unintentional oversight.
Engoron, however, said the buck ultimately stops with Trump — even if it was someone on his campaign who failed to remove the offending post.
“I’ll take this under advisement,” Engoron said after Kise explained the mechanics of how Trump’s post was able to remain online. “But I want to be clear that Donald Trump is still responsible for the large machine even if it’s a large machine.”
Engoron issued a limited gag order on Oct. 3 barring all participants in the case not to smear court personnel after Trump publicly maligned his principal law clerk, Allison Greenfield, in what the judge deemed a ”disparaging, untrue and personally identifying” Truth Social post. The judge ordered Trump to delete the post, which he did, and warned of “serious sanctions” for violations.
The post included a photo of Greenfield, posing with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., at a public event. With it, Trump wrote that it was “disgraceful” that Greenfield was working with Engoron on the case.
Before Trump deleted the post from his Truth Social platform, as ordered, his campaign copied the message into an email blast. That email, with the subject line “ICYMI,” was automatically archived on Trump’s website, Kise said.
The email was sent to about 25,800 recipients on the campaign’s media list and opened by about 6,700 of them, Kise told Engoron after obtaining the statistics at the morning break. In all, only 3,700 people viewed the post on Trump’s campaign website, the lawyer said.
“What happened appears truly inadvertent,” Kise said. The lawyer pleaded ignorance to the technological complexities involved in amplifying Trump’s social media posts and public statements, calling the archiving “an unfortunate part of the campaign process.”
“President Trump has not made any statements of any kind about court staff, has abided by the order completely, but it appears no one also took down the ICYMI — in case you missed it — link that is in the campaign website in the back pages,” Kise explained.
New York law allows judges to impose fines or imprisonment as punishment for contempt. Last year, Engoron held Trump in contempt and fined him $110,000 for being slow to respond to a subpoena in the investigation that led to the lawsuit.
James’ lawsuit accuses Trump and his company of duping banks and insurers by giving them heavily inflated statements of Trump’s net worth and asset values. Engoron has already ruled that Trump and his company committed fraud, but the trial involves remaining claims of conspiracy, insurance fraud and falsifying business records.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Man is 'not dead anymore' after long battle with IRS, which mistakenly labeled him deceased
- See Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani's Winning NFL Outing With Kids Zuma and Apollo
- The Best Gifts for Men – That He Won’t Want to Return
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- 5-year-old boy who went missing while parent was napping is found dead near Oregon home, officials say
- 'Wanted' posters plastered around University of Rochester target Jewish faculty members
- 4 arrested in California car insurance scam: 'Clearly a human in a bear suit'
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- UConn, Kansas State among five women's college basketball games to watch this weekend
Ranking
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- UConn, Kansas State among five women's college basketball games to watch this weekend
- More human remains from Philadelphia’s 1985 MOVE bombing have been found at a museum
- Demure? Brain rot? Oxford announces shortlist for 2024 Word of the Year: Cast your vote
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Could trad wives, influencers have sparked the red wave among female voters?
- Manhattan rooftop fire sends plumes of dark smoke into skyline
- Mike Tyson employs two trainers who 'work like a dream team' as Jake Paul fight nears
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
FBI raids New York City apartment of Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan, reports say
Amazon's 'Cross' almost gets James Patterson detective right: Review
KFC sues Church's Chicken over 'original recipe' fried chicken branding
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Top Federal Reserve official defends central bank’s independence in wake of Trump win
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign chancellor to step down at end of academic year
More than 150 pronghorns hit, killed on Colorado roads as animals sought shelter from snow