Donald Trump is close to the deadline to post bond in his fraud trial—and he’s screwing himself over even more.

After having reached out to several guarantors and 30 suretors for help posting his $464 million New York bank fraud bond, Donald Trump suddenly wants everyone to know he actually does have the cash.

In a bizarre rant on Friday morning, the man who was found to have defrauded banks and investors by overvaluing himself and the value of his properties claimed that he had accrued the wealth by way of “HARD WORK, TALENT, AND LUCK.”

Trump also admitted he has nearly half a billion dollars in cash.

The confession directly contradicts a filing from his legal team last month arguing that it would be “impossible” to secure a bond covering the full amount of the multimillion-dollar ruling.

Trump’s words will surely help out New York Attorney General Letitia James, who on Wednesday urged an appeals court to ignore Donald Trump’s latest effort to worm his way out of paying the $464 million disgorgement from his bank fraud trial.

  • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    I mean, yeah, he “admitted” it… but knowing how much of a pathological liar he is, it’s also possible that he just wanted to look “successful” to his captive rubes.

    Either way, he is absolutely creating real and serious problems for himself by saying that. And I love that for him.

    • Capt. Wolf@lemmy.world
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      He admitted it just like he claimed he was a billionaire. It doesn’t make it true. The question when he makes statements like this needs to be, “Is it true?” followed by, “To what degree does he believe his own lie?” because at some point, we step into the realm of severe mental illness and delusions of grandeur. Everything else is just posturing to save face for his idiot voter base.

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        I have the money! (all of the sudden)

        I just need time to convert it from Rubles to dollars!

        • Capt. Wolf@lemmy.world
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          “Sure I’ve got the money! Everybody knows I’ve got the money! Crooked Joe Biden knows I’ve got the money, but I’ll say to you what I’d say to him and his fake, crony judges! You’re not getting a red cent from me or America! In fact, when November rolls around and we take back what was STOLEN from us, it’ll be Dirty Joe and his goons who’ll be the ones to pay!”

          *Cue cheering in moron ad nauseum*

    • Lifter@discuss.tchncs.de
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      Yes, one could argue that he is still keeping up with the fraud scheme he was just sentenced for. Could he be charged again?

    • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Worse, the guy may be demented and delusional; he may actually believe his has the money in cash.

      The more I see him talk the more I think he has dementia; worse than biden by far. I’m amazed he gets a free pass on it.

      • GlendatheGayWitch@lemmy.world
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        I know, his mental state hasn’t been very good at any point in his campaigning. I remember seeing a speech of his that interrupted some TV programming shortly after he became president and it was just mindless rambling. I have ADHD and I couldn’t even follow it, it was so bad.

      • emptiestplace@lemmy.ml
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        Yeah.

        Dementia combined with a complete lack of inhibition results in a presence that is much more compelling to idiots compared to someone who periodically stumbles as they attempt to compensate for their cognitive decline.

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          Lack of inhibition can in fact be caused by dementia, as anyone that has worked at a nursing home knows. Don’t think his handlers will let Trump strip on stage, but who knows.

      • tegs_terry@feddit.uk
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        8 months ago

        It’s a question of contrast; Biden has the bearing of a reasonable man when lucid whilst Trump is unhinged at the best of times.

      • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        “I have the money somewhere, I just can’t find it at the moment! It must have been in one of the boxes that the FBI stole in Mar-A-Lago!”

      • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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        To be fair, if he could pay that, there wouldn’t just be a bank account labelled “money for tish james” with a balance of $500m.

        “Can I pay them?” in his case world be a chomped question and he’d need accountants to tell him the answer.

    • Beetschnapps@lemmy.world
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      At this point, the only real news would be if his supporters grew a brain cell and actually began to notice/care about his lying.

      • Malfeasant@lemmy.world
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        If only… Last I saw (have a couple on my Facebook) they’re comparing people who think he doesn’t have the money to people who claim art they don’t like is worth millions of dollars… Holy non sequitur, Batman.

  • Chainweasel@lemmy.world
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    Honestly I don’t believe for a second that he actually has the money. I just don’t think he can handle people (HIS people) knowing that he’s flat fucking broke and at the end of his rope.
    Monday we’ll find out if Schrodinger’s cash was in the box or not.

    • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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      One story I heard was that his lawyers have to come into the room in pairs, because he’ll tell one lawyer Story A and the other one Story B.

      He doesn’t lie like an adult; he lies like a child.

    • Jaysyn@kbin.social
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      I’ve read he legit does have a bit over $500M liquid, but if he touches more than $450M of what remains, loans will automatically start getting called in.

      Loans he can’t pay if he only has $50M liquid left.

      • Snapz@lemmy.world
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        Not sure who was making that value projection, but if it was a trump-involved party, you can definitely count on that being over inflated bullshit.

        We all need to stop regurgitating trump headlines/talking points verbatim without attempting to add some context.

        "its future is fraught with uncertainty. Digital World’s former CEO Patrick Orlando and former Trump business associates Andy Litinsky and Wes Moss have separately sued to ask for more shares for their previous work on the deal.

        It is unclear how and when these cases will be resolved. Even if the deal gets completed next week, Trump will not be allowed to sell any of his shares in the combined company for six months or borrow against them, based on terms he previously agreed."

      • hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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        He gets shares, which they value at that price now. It’s not a successful social media network. The price may drop once floated. He can’t touch the shares for 6 months. Without being propped up, it may be dead by then, although depending on launch, it may still be viable at that point as the election will still be ongoing. However, if he crashes and burns (jail, insovlency) before then, it could also crash and burn. He’s still in his Icarus phase.

        S no, he doesn’t have 3 billion lying around. We also don’t know his debts, which may also be billions.

      • stewie3128@lemmy.world
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        DJT’s public offering needs to be pushed out past the first or second week of May in order to screw Donnie over. He can’t cash out any shares for six months, or use those shares as collateral for six months either.

        If he loses in November, that stick becomes worthless.

    • RestrictedAccount@lemmy.world
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      He said it, so it can only be one of two things:

      1. a bald face lie
      2. channeling the jealousy of his lizard brain

      In this case, option 1 seems most plausible.

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    Quote from Trump on truth social shown in the article:

    THE OFTEN OVERTURNED POLITICAL HACK JUDGE ON THE RIGGED AND CORRUPT A.G. CASE

    Can they not sue him for libel on this?

    Apart from that it’s hilarious that he still tries to claim he is paying for his presidential campaign himself.

    • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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      Courts generally consider broad statements like “rigged” and “corrupt” to be opinions, which by themselves are not grounds for libel. Libel requires stating specific false facts.

      For example, “The election was rigged” is an opinion. But “Two Georgia election workers threw away GOP ballots” is libel.

      • NovaPrime@lemmy.ml
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        Libel requires stating specific false facts

        I know what you mean and what you’re intending here but there is no such thing as “false facts.” It’s lies.

        The election was rigged" is an opinion.

        It is not. It’s a bool statement - true or false. The election was not rigged, that’s a fact. Stating otherwise is a lie.

        • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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          “Rigged” is an opinion.

          I don’t think it was rigged, but people routinely claim that due to the way the Electoral College works, all presidential elections are “rigged” in favor of the GOP. Similar claims have been made of recent Democratic primaries. Or that elections are rigged in favor of wealthy candidates, or incumbents.

          Courts aren’t going to decide whether it’s true that something is “rigged”, they need something more concrete.

      • ericatty@lemmy.ml
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        What about “often overturned”? That seems like a fact that could potentially be proven or disproven.

        Especially if the judge has never been overturned, or never/rarely overturned in the context or timeframe of these cases. Assuming that is a false fact for this judge, I don’t know his stats.

        Another judge on his cases has been potentially been “often overturned” based on percentages of total cases/rulings?

        • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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          “Often” is an opinion about something that has happened. Just like “a lot”.

          Suppose I said “Boeing aircraft often fail” and you haven’t kept up with the news. You can conclude that they have failed, but you won’t know how many times unless you ask more questions.

          • ericatty@lemmy.ml
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            What if I say you often get speeding tickets while driving, but you’ve never been stopped by the cops for anything, or you got one speeding ticket 10 years ago? If I keep repeating that you “often get speeding tickets” and it gets you fired - did I not hurt you with a lie?

            Notice I’m not accusing you of speeding. I’m saying you often get ticketed, something that can be verified

            He’s not accusing the judge of “often making wrong or bad decisions” He is saying “often overturned decisions” Has the judge been overturned in these proceedings? Because another federal judge in one of his other cases has been overturned, but he’s not posting about that judge being unfair or “often overturned”

            I feel like there’s a difference, but maybe using “often” murks it up just enough. Like using alleged, “it’s possible”, or “people say” to spread rumors.

            • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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              If you say I often get speeding tickets, that’s the same as saying that I’ve gotten speeding tickets and you think I’ve gotten too many.

              The first part is false only if I’ve never gotten one. The second is an opinion.

              I would be surprised if any judge never had any part of any decision changed on appeal. Appeals courts exist to modify what judges do, it just goes with the territory. Engoron is no different this regard, in fact Trump himself was partly successful in appealing one of his orders.

    • TransplantedSconie@lemm.ee
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      That opens an attack avenue for appeal. Do nothing until he can’t appeal it, then you blindside him with libel and take another 100 mill.

      • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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        Read it again. There is no slanderous or libelous statement, as dumb as it is. Somebody was handling the wording very carefully.

        “OFTEN OVERTURNED” - Haven’t looked into it, but possible fact or subjective to the speaker’s point of view at the very least.

        “POLITICAL HACK JUDGE” - Derogatory at best, and not mentioning the specific names or false allegation.

        “CORRUPT AG CASE” - Again, subjective, and referring the case, not the AG or Judge.

        What a fucking idiot to invite more consternation, but unless you specifically say something like “Judge Tom Smith took bribe money to fuck over my case”, there isn’t a solid argument for Libel or Slander.

            • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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              Exactly. If he had made a corruption allegation against the AG directly, then there is a possible case.

              This shithead spends 24/7 with caretakers carefully wording his every sentence outside of speeches because he just definitively lost a defamation case, TWICE. I’d be surprised if he gets off the leash enough to actually do it again. Terrible lawyers if he does.

              • NovaPrime@lemmy.ml
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                You paint him and his sycophants as pr masterminds suddenly, something they’re certainly not and have never been. You attribute too much intelligence and competence to him and his people.

            • Beryl@lemmy.world
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              English isn’t my first language, but I’d read it more like " the case brought by the corrupt AG" rather than " the corrupt case brought by the AG".

              • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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                Yes, but he gets to decide which version he meant when it suits him to do so.

                In this case, the ambiguity of his terrible wording works in his favour.

      • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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        Contempt of court only applies to behavior in the courtroom, or when the judge has issued a specific order.

        Trump isn’t in the courtroom and was never banned from criticizing the judge or prosecutor, so there is no basis for contempt of court.

          • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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            Right, because Judge Engoron intentionally left himself and the prosecutor out of his gag order.

            Wisely so, because otherwise it would have been overturned. Everyone has a 1st Amendment right to criticize public officials like judges and prosecutors, but staff not so much.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      It seems like bad precedent for a judge to sue a participant in the trial for what they’re saying about the trial.

      He could hold Trump in contempt, but I think he doesn’t see the reason to bother with it, since he’s already engaged in fucking Trump’s world up pretty significantly.

      Plus, if he did sue for libel, how would he ever get paid? It’s like a never ending cycle.

      • skulblaka@startrek.website
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        Plus, if he did sue for libel, how would he ever get paid?

        It’s hardly even about getting paid at this point, I just want to see them rack up the high score. Left to his own devices I’m very confident that Trump can increase his own punitive damages beyond the actual GDP of the US.

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      The burden for libel or slander on a public official is pretty high. It pretty much has to go well past criticizing the government in an unambiguous way because government officials prosecuting people for criticizing them is Bad™

      I doubt you’d see anything unless he claimed the judge did some specific act of moral turpitude on a specific occasion.
      Yelling at the government about mismanagement and impropriety is just about as close as you can get to what the first amendment is for, in a nutshell.

      The fact that he’s wrong and a loathsome asshole doesn’t change that he’s allowed to say it.

    • minibyte@sh.itjust.works
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      Isn’t that what they’re doing with Biden? If Dems lose this race it’s because they shot themselves in the foot at the start.

      • JoeBigelow@lemmy.ca
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        Except Biden isn’t senile, he’s just old. And anybody trying to compare his mental state to Trump’s based solely on what we can plainly see on camera, is doing so in bad faith. That’s not counting what the actual transcript of the Special Counsel investigation said, that he has a seemingly photographic memory.

        • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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          Their comment wasn’t a comparison to Biden but a comparison to the DNC pushing Biden.

          No one is happy about how old EITHER of them are.

          • hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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            The were comparing mental state. One is past their prime, one lives in a different reality and has multiple psychological and neurological issues.

            A better candidate than Biden would be good. It would be hard to find a worse candidate than trump if you tried.

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    How could this man bring the republic so close to ruin? Our democracy must be in a perilous state indeed.

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      I think we have many citizens that need to recognize that the founding fathers were humans and not divine utopia engineers.

      We should change some stuff to make the country better. Many of the big things were designed to be very hard to change though. That makes me worry that things will have to get that much worse before the people & politicians are ready to actually do something.

      • hannes3120@feddit.de
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        As a German I’m proud of our constitution, too, and I think it does a great job at making it as hard as possible for something like the Nazis to easily happen again.

        That doesn’t mean that it was perfect all the time and is unchangeable.

        I think it’s insane how the US things their constitution is the pinnacle of democracy - especially since it was the first one and others iterated on our

        • Zink@programming.dev
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          I think it is closely tied to the American exceptionalism programmed into many people like it’s a law of nature.

          Like literally, in their heads, it’s that we are God’s chosen country, and I guess that’s makes our founding documents infallible.

          • said by somebody who just drove back home after being out in rural America where houses have signs with trump’s face and “miss me yet?” Then down the road another house has “FUCK BIDEN” on a flag. I couldn’t tell today, but they may have tastefully modified it to say “FU BIDEN.”

          😆 … ☹️ … 🤯

          • TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
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            It’s a religion.

            A weird civic religion like nothing that came before it.

            The founding fathers are thir prophets, constitution is their holy scripture, the flag their holy icon and the anthem their hymn.

            You don’t just change scripture :coughamendmentscough:, you don’t even read it - you get a priest to interpret it and tell you what it means in this context. You take it on faith that the things in it are infallible and eternal, even though you don’t understand them or know what they are.

            Look at it through the lens of civic-relgious fundamentalism, and most of America makes a horrible kind of sense.

  • Cosmic Cleric@lemmy.world
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    If he ends up getting enough money from other people, do we really want a President who is so beholden (aka ‘owes them’) to others in the office?

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      Well they elected him when he was a Putin owned stooge. And his family is owned by the Saudis.

      So what the hell are a bunch of rubes fleeced for a few hundred million gonna do?

    • Mossy Feathers (She/They)@pawb.social
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      I hate trump supporters, but I’d rather him be beholden to Americans than a foreign country. Sadly though, I know that this isn’t an either/or situation. Even if he wasn’t indebted to Americans, he’s still indebted to foreign agents.

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    Clearly one of those old school business wankers who see “must pay within 90 days” and pays at the last minute on the 90th day on principle.

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    ‘Rap snitches, tellin’ all their business

    Sit in the court and be their own star witness

    “Do you see the perpetrator?”

    Yeah, I’m right here

    Fuck around, get the whole label sent up for years’ -MF Doom, Mr. Fantastik

  • Rapidcreek@lemmy.world
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    Heard recently that the Trump run is like a paper bag full of water. One of these days the bag will burst and everything will run out.

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    I’m glad the writer with The New Republic doesn’t mince words.

    Still this is the classic Trump strategy of doubling-down when backed in a corner. If it’s worked for him all his life why would he do any different now?

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    If he has the money, why does he still beg like a fake Vietnam vet?

    Today is the day to show the cards. I strongly suspect he will come up empty-handed. Because that would match his personality.