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Donald Trump took the stand in his New York civil fraud trial, but reports out of the courthouse quickly detailed the former president’s attacks on prosecutors and the judge himself.
With cameras prohibited from covering the proceedings, news networks were left with a bit of a relay race. Reporters inside the courthouse gave a running account of Trump’s testimony to those outside, who then went live with the details, as anchors in studio turned to legal experts for analysis.
On CNN, correspondent Paula Reid, outside the Manhattan courthouse, reported at around 10:30 a.m. ET that “for the first time on the stand so far, Trump has really taken a shot at the judge, suggesting, ‘I’m sure the judge will rule against me, because the judge always rules against me.’”
Reid added, “My law license is pretty dusty, but that is not something that witnesses are advised to say on the stand, even if that’s the way you feel.”
Reid reported that the judge, Arthur Engoron, then asked Trump’s attorney if “that comment was necessary to answer the question that Trump had been asked.” The judge, according to Reid, then said, “Look, you can attack me. Do whatever you want. But answer the question.’” Engoron also said that Trump’s allegation — that he always rules against him — was “not true.”
Moments earlier on MSNBC, Vaughn Hillyard, also outside the courthouse, reported that the former president “went on the attack against the attorney general, the U.S. attorney’s office, to the point of taking us on a non-tangental argument that Donald Trump is making to the judge that he is being unfairly targeted in his lawsuit.” Engoron then said that Trump “needed to be more concise with his answers,” Hillyard reported.
Fox News didn’t exclusively concentrate on Trump’s testimony, but did feature a box in the corner of the screen noting it was happening, along with updates. Commentator Andy McCarthy attacked the civil trial as politically motivated and “so out of whack with the infraction.”
“They’re talking about a case where you have no victims of fraud, disgorging him of a quarter of a billion dollars or more of profits and putting him out of business, under circumstances where there is not a single person or a single entity that actually got defrauded here,” McCarthy said.
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