Recusal at this point is practically a moot point but for appeal purposes, this just adds to the list of improper actions by Engeron.
Do I understand this correctly?aggiehawg said:
Recusal at this point is practically a moot point but for appeal purposes, this just adds to the list of improper actions by Engeron.
Quote:
"I saw him in the corner [at the courthouse] and I told my client, 'I need to go.' And I walked over and we started talking," Bailey told NBC New York, which first reported the story. "I wanted him to know what I think and why ... I really want him to get it right."
Bailey could not immediately be reached for comment. Al Baker, the court's spokesperson said, "We have no further comment on this matter."
In a statement to ABC News, Bailey pushed back on the allegation that his discussion with Engoron about the case was inappropriate or merits the judge's recusal.
According to Bailey, their discussion only concerned Engoron's September 2023 summary judgment order in which the judge determined Trump committed fraud.
No, you don't have that right. What the judge is required to do is inform the parties of it immediately. He did not do so.Quote:
If a lawyer walks up to a judge and talks to him briefly about an issue that has already been decided, the judge must recuse himself?
The decision was apparently the summary judgement order from September 26, 2023. How long would it be before the judge is permitted to discuss that decision with others?aggiehawg said:No, you don't have that right. What the judge is required to do is inform the parties of it immediately. He did not do so.Quote:
If a lawyer walks up to a judge and talks to him briefly about an issue that has already been decided, the judge must recuse himself?
Further, according to the attorney, it was not a brief conversation in passing. It was much longer than that.
Quote:
According to Bailey, their discussion only concerned Engoron's September 2023 summary judgment order in which the judge determined Trump committed fraud.
About what?aggiehawg said:
Once again, you are misinformed.
More interesting is the motion by Trump's lawyers.aggiehawg said:
Video at the LINK
Quote:
Mr. Bailey told NBC New York that he explained to the court "that a fraud statement at issue in the case was not intended to be used to shut down a major company, especially in a case without clear victim" as "such a ruling would hurt New York's economy."
And that is completely irrelevant as to the judge's improper actions.Quote:
It doesn't sound like his talk with the judge did much to influence the judge.
eric76 said:More interesting is the motion by Trump's lawyers.aggiehawg said:
Video at the LINK
I have not yet completed the motion, but there is something that stands out. At the bottom of page 6, Bailey was clearly in favor of reduced penalties for Trump:Quote:
Mr. Bailey told NBC New York that he explained to the court "that a fraud statement at issue in the case was not intended to be used to shut down a major company, especially in a case without clear victim" as "such a ruling would hurt New York's economy."
It doesn't sound like his talk with the judge did much to influence the judge.
True.aggiehawg said:And that is completely irrelevant as to the judge's improper actions.Quote:
It doesn't sound like his talk with the judge did much to influence the judge.
My actual response: I need more information.fredfredunderscorefred said:eric76 said:More interesting is the motion by Trump's lawyers.aggiehawg said:
Video at the LINK
I have not yet completed the motion, but there is something that stands out. At the bottom of page 6, Bailey was clearly in favor of reduced penalties for Trump:Quote:
Mr. Bailey told NBC New York that he explained to the court "that a fraud statement at issue in the case was not intended to be used to shut down a major company, especially in a case without clear victim" as "such a ruling would hurt New York's economy."
It doesn't sound like his talk with the judge did much to influence the judge.
Your Initial thoughts: it was after the decision and only brief
Provided with this info:
""I know he respects my real estate knowledge," Bailey said. "So I gave it to him. I gave him everything I knew. He had a lot of questions, you know about certain cases. We went over it."
" Sources familiar with the investigation said the probe is examining whether Engoron engaged in an improper conversation about the case with an expert real estate lawyer three weeks before issuing his $454 million penalty ruling."
Your Response:
Just a big pivot to now something else….
In that case, is law school just one big "mental masturbation"?aggiehawg said:
Making up hypotheticals that have nothing to with the case at bar is a waste of time and just mental masturbation.
Yet, the motion explicitly talks about Bailey not wanting to see a decision with large penalties.Foreverconservative said:
Furthermore Bailey is not just some non-vested neutral expert. Bailey has been involved in close to a dozen failed lawsuits against Trump in real estate matters. Bailey is not a fan of Trump, with his past litigations against him hardly not conflicted. For Ergeron to even come close to being compliant to have this ex parte meeting it has to be a non-vested neutral expert, and regardless he still didn't report the meeting to the defense period so he doesn't have a leg to stand on.
I am not in law school, neither are you. You have have already created your own version of the facts which was completely inaccurate.eric76 said:In that case, is law school just one big "mental masturbation"?aggiehawg said:
Making up hypotheticals that have nothing to with the case at bar is a waste of time and just mental masturbation.
I have never claimed to have gone to law school. I understand that you did go to law school. Am I wrong?aggiehawg said:I am not in law school, neither are you. You have have already created your own version of the facts which was completely inaccurate.eric76 said:In that case, is law school just one big "mental masturbation"?aggiehawg said:
Making up hypotheticals that have nothing to with the case at bar is a waste of time and just mental masturbation.
Derailing the thread by going off on a hypothetical argument is a waste of time.
Which would have been correct since this was a made up issue by Engoron. The result is that the punitive actions by NYC will drive investors out of the city.eric76 said:Yet, the motion explicitly talks about Bailey not wanting to see a decision with large penalties.Foreverconservative said:
Furthermore Bailey is not just some non-vested neutral expert. Bailey has been involved in close to a dozen failed lawsuits against Trump in real estate matters. Bailey is not a fan of Trump, with his past litigations against him hardly not conflicted. For Ergeron to even come close to being compliant to have this ex parte meeting it has to be a non-vested neutral expert, and regardless he still didn't report the meeting to the defense period so he doesn't have a leg to stand on.
Was there animosity between Bailey and Trump?Ellis Wyatt said:Which would have been correct since this was a made up issue by Engoron. The result is that the punitive actions by NYC will drive investors out of the city.eric76 said:Yet, the motion explicitly talks about Bailey not wanting to see a decision with large penalties.Foreverconservative said:
Furthermore Bailey is not just some non-vested neutral expert. Bailey has been involved in close to a dozen failed lawsuits against Trump in real estate matters. Bailey is not a fan of Trump, with his past litigations against him hardly not conflicted. For Ergeron to even come close to being compliant to have this ex parte meeting it has to be a non-vested neutral expert, and regardless he still didn't report the meeting to the defense period so he doesn't have a leg to stand on.
Bailey wouldn't want a large judgment because it impacts real estate investors other than Trump. He would still want Trump to be guilty.
Engoron is a prime example of someone who has never done anything punishing someone who has done a lot. Envy. Hatred. And no doubt greed.
Yes.eric76 said:In that case, is law school just one big "mental masturbation"?aggiehawg said:
Making up hypotheticals that have nothing to with the case at bar is a waste of time and just mental masturbation.
you're really not good at factseric76 said:
Regarding the question of facts, here are some of the more basic facts:
1) Bailey was talking to a client when he saw the judge.
yes
2) Bailey wanted to discuss an issue with the judge -- that of too big a penalty being bad for the economy of New York.
Where is the fact and how is it known?
3) He walked over to the judge and engaged him in conversation.
no, he walked over(fact), they spoke(fact)
4) The conversation, according to Bailey, was about the summary judgment from September, 2023.
again, not an established fact unless there is a recoding. He might provide testimony but that is not necessarily a fact. One persons testimony to a conversation could be quite different from the other parties recollection. To label one or the other as fact would be inaccurate.
5) The judge did not appear to be influenced by the conversation, at least in regard to the damages imposed. If he was influenced, then it seems likely that the damages would have been higher.
How is this known? Your answer implies a subjective interpretation of witnessed events. Were you there?
6) The judge did not divulge the conversation to the prosecution or to the defense.
true
I still don't see how 2) and 4) fit together if he really wanted to discuss the summary judgment from 2023 in order to influence the penalty in the final verdict.
In general regarding 6), I assume that judges understand the law and their duties under it. Since this judge did not inform the prosecution and the defense of the conversation, he must not have felt any legal need to inform them. It would be interesting to read a full explanation of why he felt that he was not required to inform the parties.
As for whether or not Trump was found guilty, I didn't care. As far as how much the penalties are, I don't care. As far as whether the appeal succeeds, I don't care. I'm perfectly happy to leave that up to the legal system in New York. Whatever they do is up to them and whatever they do is not going to upset me.
The whole case was somewhat bizarre.
We agree.pacecar02 said:eric76 said:
Regarding the question of facts, here are some of the more basic facts:
1) Bailey was talking to a client when he saw the judge.
yes
Didn't read the news reports or the motion, did you?Quote:Quote:
2) Bailey wanted to discuss an issue with the judge -- that of too big a penalty being bad for the economy of New York.
Where is the fact and how is it known?
Does the fact that we stated the same thing in a slightly different manner mean that we are saying different things?Quote:Quote:
3) He walked over to the judge and engaged him in conversation.
no, he walked over(fact), they spoke(fact)
Since there was no recording, are you saying that none of this happened? What we have is what Bailey siad. I thought that was well understood since Engeron has yet to comment on it as far as I know.Quote:Quote:
4) The conversation, according to Bailey, was about the summary judgment from September, 2023.
again, not an established fact unless there is a recoding. He might provide testimony but that is not necessarily a fact. One persons testimony to a conversation could be quite different from the other parties recollection. To label one or the other as fact would be inaccurate.
So he wanted Engeron to refrain from imposing a very large penalty and Engeron imposed a very large penalty is somehow evidence that his comments to the judge were pursuasive?Quote:Quote:
5) The judge did not appear to be influenced by the conversation, at least in regard to the damages imposed. If he was influenced, then it seems likely that the damages would have been higher.
How is this known? Your answer implies a subjective interpretation of witnessed events. Were you there?
Your so-called "posting style" is bizarre.Quote:you're really not good at factsQuote:
6) The judge did not divulge the conversation to the prosecution or to the defense.
true
I still don't see how 2) and 4) fit together if he really wanted to discuss the summary judgment from 2023 in order to influence the penalty in the final verdict.
In general regarding 6), I assume that judges understand the law and their duties under it. Since this judge did not inform the prosecution and the defense of the conversation, he must not have felt any legal need to inform them. It would be interesting to read a full explanation of why he felt that he was not required to inform the parties.
As for whether or not Trump was found guilty, I didn't care. As far as how much the penalties are, I don't care. As far as whether the appeal succeeds, I don't care. I'm perfectly happy to leave that up to the legal system in New York. Whatever they do is up to them and whatever they do is not going to upset me.
The whole case was somewhat bizarre.
Already done. Second post from the top of this page. Paragraph 4 in the quote from the news article.fredfredunderscorefred said:
"The conversation, according to Bailey, was about the summary judgment from September, 2023."
can you post a link to where he said that?
🚨🚨🚨 Justice Engoron sustains, in part, Trump’s subpoena on attorney Adam Bailey who bragged about informally trying to influence the Court. Developing… https://t.co/tWMhAYeOzc pic.twitter.com/syIDlqPNve
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JUST IN: Trump lawyer Mike Davis just told NY AG Letitia James -
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