Judge doesn't stop trial, but pauses dissolving of Trump Org
A New York appellate judge declined to pause Donald Trump's ongoing civil fraud trial, after attorneys for Trump sought a stay of the trial while they appeal Judge Arthur Engoron's summary judgment ruling last week that decided the core of the case.
Judge Peter Moulton issued the ruling minutes after hearing oral arguments from both sides. While he did not pause the trial, he did stop the immediate cancelation of Trump's business certificates that Engoron had ordered last week.
"This is everything owned or controlled by the defendant. Once you dissolve you dissolve," defense attorney Christopher Kise argued in an afternoon hearing convened at the Appellate Division's First Department. "It's chaos. It's chaos right now."
The New York attorney general's office balked at halting the trial.
"There's just absolutely no basis for an interim stay of trial that's already been going on for a week," said Deputy Solicitor General Judy Vale. "It has been an enormous endeavor to get this off the ground."
Trump's defense insisted a pause was warranted given the magnitude of the potential consequences for Trump's business.
"We're not seeking delay. We're seeking a fair trial," Kise said before the judge ruled that the trial would continue.
The trial is scheduled to resume Tuesday morning.