What’s next now that Letitia James has sued Donald Trump? A slow-motion, ‘eye-glazing’ battle of lawyers, experts
NY AG Letitia James sued Donald Trump, his three eldest kids, and Trump Organization on Wednesday. Her demands — including $250 million in penalties and the hamstringing of his business in NY — will be fought over for years, experts say. James is now ''just another litigant'' in a slow-moving system that Trump knows how to game, they say. So New York Attorney General Letitia James has sued Donald Trump , his kids, and his company. But don''t bother popping any popcorn over this massive fraud lawsuit anytime soon. Very little will actually happen to Trump, his three eldest children, or the Trump Organization — the former president''s Manhattan-based real estate and golf empire — over the next two years and maybe longer, three former prosecutors with the NY AG''s office told Insider. That''s because litigating the 222-page lawsuit will be a slow, costly slog, they predict. "This is going to be an eye-glazing battle" of experts and lawyers, before the lawsuit even goes to trial, one ex-prosecutor, Armen Morian, said of what''s to come.
What’s next now that Letitia James has sued Donald Trump? A slow-motion, ‘eye-glazing’ battle of lawyers, experts
NY AG Letitia James sued Donald Trump, his three eldest kids, and Trump Organization on Wednesday. Her demands — including $250 million in penalties and the hamstringing of his business in NY — will be fought over for years, experts say. James is now ''just another litigant'' in a slow-moving system that Trump knows how to game, they say. So New York Attorney General Letitia James has sued Donald Trump , his kids, and his company. But don''t bother popping any popcorn over this massive fraud lawsuit anytime soon. Very little will actually happen to Trump, his three eldest children, or the Trump Organization — the former president''s Manhattan-based real estate and golf empire — over the next two years and maybe longer, three former prosecutors with the NY AG''s office told Insider. That''s because litigating the 222-page lawsuit will be a slow, costly slog, they predict. "This is going to be an eye-glazing battle" of experts and lawyers, before the lawsuit even goes to trial, one ex-prosecutor, Armen Morian, said of what''s to come.