Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial in New York has definitely gotten under his skin. Yet he was far calmer at his arraignment in June on 30-plus counts of unlawfully retaining classified documents. So, why is he stressing over his fraud prosecution?
Part of the reason is image. Trump’s self concept and public persona alike rest on his King of All Real Estate construct. Although New York Attorney General Letitia James has already exposed how much of it is a fiction, the trial will methodically unspool his legend over several weeks or months, witness by witness, email by email, spreadsheet by spreadsheet.
But it’s more than that. The remedies the AG is seeking — which the former president himself acknowledges constitutes a sort of “corporate death penalty” — are the only ones he can’t campaign away.
If restored to the presidency, he can pardon himself for his alleged federal crimes. He can also arguably force the Manhattan and Fulton County district attorneys, who might not be able to try their cases against him before the 2024 election, to stop on the ground that prosecuting a sitting president is constitutionally verboten.
But the only way out of James’ civil suit is through it (and then appeals). And before then, the court could impose serious penalties: temporary bars on acquiring New York real property and borrowing from any lender registered in the state; permanent bars on serving as an officer or director of any company in the state; an independent monitor to direct (and correct) all financial reporting and controls; even a potential receiver to oversee the unwinding of his metaphorical trophy case — and with that person’s prospective appointment, even the possible liquidation of his properties.








