For the first time in a decade, former President Donald Trump himself will be sworn in Monday to testify in open court. His testimony in the New York civil fraud case again him and his company follows three days of questioning of his sons/co-defendants Eric and Don Jr., with his daughter Ivanka still set to testify, as well. Even if Trump is on his best behavior and avoids the sort of wild tangents he followed in his deposition for this case back in April, the prosecution is even less likely to get a straight answer out of him than it was his sons.
Follow MSNBC’s live blog coverage of Ivanka Trump’s testimony here.
In Trump’s world, he is as little at fault for anything that goes wrong as he is quick to claim credit for victories that weren’t his. There’s always a scapegoat for his many failures. And his sons’ testimony shows he has passed on this trait to his children.
In Trump’s world, he is as little at fault for anything that goes wrong as he is quick to claim credit for victories that weren’t his.
Trump Jr. shrugged off any suggestions that his signature on falsified documents was at all his responsibility. Yes, he is an executive vice president at the Trump Organization and, along with Eric and former chief financial officer Weisselberg, one of the trustees who ran the company while his father was in office. But he told prosecutors Wednesday that he had “no knowledge” of accounting or the complexities of the forms with his name on them. Instead, he blamed accountants at Mazars, lawyers in the Trump Organization and Weisselberg, who pleaded guilty to tax fraud last year and is also a co-defendant in the current case. (Weisselberg also testified against the Trump Organization in last year’s criminal case against the company, which was found guilty of tax fraud and fined $1.6 million.)
But former Trump accountant John Bender testified during the beginning of the trial that the Trumps were the source of the inflated numbers in the financial statements used to obtain loans. When Trump’s lawyers tried to blame any inaccuracy in the forms on Bender during cross-examination, he countered that it was on the family to give him correct information to determine the value of properties and Trump’s overall net worth. Bender also told prosecutors that he’d learned that Trump and his company had been withholding other documents from him as he compiled those statements, even though Weisselberg sent him letters saying otherwise.








