Three times this week, former President Donald Trump’s lawyers have launched last-ditch efforts to delay the start of his first criminal trial in New York. They’ve tried to overturn a gag order against him, argued that the publicity surrounding the case will affect jury selection, tried to swap out the judge in the case and stall the start of the trial while those motions are being adjudicated. And those are just the motions they’ve made in one of the four criminal cases Trump is facing.
The flurry of paperwork that’s been filed in the past few weeks helps illuminate how Trump is managing to burn through a mountain of cash. Lawyering is expensive work, and the phalanx of attorneys Trump has drafting briefs and arguing before the bench doesn’t come cheap. Three separate appellate judges quickly shot down three eleventh-hour attempts from Trump to keep his trial from starting Monday. But regardless of the failure rate of Trump’s motions, given how uncertain his legal calendar is between now and Election Day, it seems like filing futile motions has been money well spent.
The flurry of paperwork that’s been filed in the past few weeks helps illuminate how Trump is managing to burn through a mountain of cash.
There’s no one public source tracking all the various delay tactics that Trump has employed to forestall standing trial. In part that’s because those tactics have been used in multiple jurisdictions with justifications that include supposed constitutional shields and evidence-free claims of bias from the prosecutors, judges and, in the case of Monday’s trial, even the venue itself. Thankfully, the team at Lawfare, a project from the Brookings Institution, has been compiling the documents in the New York case, where Trump stands accused of falsifying records to cover up hush money payments before and after the 2016 election.
Trump has two main lawyers on this case: Todd Blanche, who is working with the two other members of his firm, and Susan Necheles, who was once a defense attorney for a mafia underboss. Between them, they’ve filed at least 25 documents with the court since the beginning of the year, according to the Lawfare tally of the docket. These include standard motions, such as a motion to limit what evidence can be presented at trial. There have also been wild swings, including the attorneys’ motion to have the case thrown out based on Trump’s “presidential immunity” theory, on which the U.S. Supreme Court will be hearing oral arguments this month.
Added together, that’s over 500 pages of documents logged with the New York Supreme Court in less than four months. Some of those documents are one-page “pre-motion letters” that Judge Juan Merchan ordered last month, where the lawyers ask his permission to file new motions as the trial approaches. The longest is a 182-page document from Blanche to support the claim that Trump can’t get a fair trial in Manhattan. That total doesn’t include, though, documents related to this week’s spate of filings with the New York appeals court.








