Trump arrives in Manhattan ahead of deposition in New York Attorney General Letitia James' case

Former President Donald Trump arrived in Manhattan late Wednesday evening, he revealed on social media, as he is set to appear before New York Attorney General Letitia James for a deposition on Thursday. 

In September, James accused Trump and three of his children of fraud and filed a lawsuit in New York State court in Manhattan. Thursday’s deposition is expected to lay out evidence that the Trumps acted intentionally to misrepresent the values of real estate properties to obtain favorable loans and tax benefits, according to Reuters. 

In a series of posts on Truth Social, Trump called the lawsuit "another unjust & ridiculous persecution of The 45th President of the United States."

The former president also said he would use the case to prove his own business successes.

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"I built a GREAT & prosperous company, employed thousands of people, built magnificent structures all over the World, but particularly in New York, & now have to prove it to this LOWLIFE who campaigned on [an] ‘I will get Trump’ platform, even before knowing anything about me!" Trump wrote.

He added: "I will finally be able to show what a great, profitable, and valuable company I built, actually, some of the greatest real estate assets anywhere in the world."

Trump, who has already announced his bid for the 2024 presidency, said New York AG’s pursuit of him came in "strict coordination and association" of President Biden and the White House.

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The Republican candidate also faces a separate case in New York with District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

Bragg charged Trump with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to allegedly repay his former attorney, Michael Cohen, who made payments to two adult film actresses who claimed to have sexual encounters with Trump.

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In a final tweet, Trump added: "The A.G. case should be tried in front of the Commercial Division, not in front of a highly partisan, Trump-hating judge who was sought out, or ‘shopped,’ by Peekaboo James."

He also called the case "very unfair."

"New York State should be ashamed of this injustice!" Trump concluded.

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Trump previously filed his own lawsuit against James after she filed the initial case.

He is also suing Cohen.

On Wednesday, Trump’s legal team filed a more-than 30-page federal lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida against Cohen, seeking more than $500 million.

In the lawsuit, Trump alleges a breach of his attorney-client relationship, unjust enrichment, and more.

Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

Trump’s GOP rivals try to grab media coverage, but he dominates with Fox interview


Nikki Haley ranks high on the list of Republicans who don’t want to directly criticize Donald Trump. 

In fact, she deflects every question about the front-runner and insists only the media are asking her about this.

But she came up with a not-so-subtle method of taking a few swipes at her rivals. It’s called the confidential memo. And I can’t exactly say it has no fingerprints.

The Haley campaign simply leaked the memo to Axios – which touted it as a scoop. An Axios reporter confirmed it came from the campaign (duh). And a leaked memo is sexier to journalists than, say, a sitdown interview.

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Haley has raised $11 million in six weeks, and the memo from campaign manager Betsy Ankney says: "Donald Trump had a pretty good Q1, if you count being indicted as 'good.'"

Zing!

"Still, it’s increasingly clear that Trump’s candidacy is more consumed by the grievances of the past and the promise of more drama in the future, rather than a forward-looking vision for the American people." Perfectly fair shots – but why couldn’t Haley say these things herself? Who is she fooling? Perhaps she thinks she’s avoiding a Trump counterattack by laundering it through the press. The memo also says of Ron DeSantis that he’s "not ready for prime time." 

Still, the memo didn’t make much news, not in this environment. Sen. Tim Scott announced a presidential exploratory committee yesterday. Which means he’s running. 

The Senate’s only black Republican is an attractive candidate with a compelling life story, which he summarizes as "from cotton to Congress." 

In a video, Scott stressed his optimistic message: "I know America is a land of opportunity, not a land of oppression. I know it because I lived it." But given the nature of today’s GOP, Scott has to be regarded as a long shot. And as more Republicans jump in, they increase the chances of Trump cruising to the nomination as they divide the opposition vote.

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Both Haley and Scott got a sliver of the coverage that Trump attracted, not surprisingly, by sitting down with Fox’s Tucker Carlson.

The former president was full of provocative responses, such as saying he’ll stay in the race even if he’s convicted in the Stormy Daniels case. When he was brought in for the arraignment, "They were actually crying. They said ‘I'm sorry.’ They'd say ‘2024, sir, 2024.’ And tears are pouring down their eyes." 

Will Joe Biden stay in the race?

"Look, I watch him just like you do, and I think it's almost inappropriate for me to say it. But I deal with other people. I don't see – I don't see how it's possible.

And it's not an age thing."

Then what is it? 

Trump delivered his standard riff about the president being surrounded by "smart" but "vicious" left-wingers, as if Biden isn’t really in charge.

In a particularly strange series of exchanges, Trump said Biden "is not top of the line" and then proceeded to praise dictators around the globe.

Vladimir Putin? "Very smart," said Trump, despite the fact that he has decimated his military and committed countless war crimes by invading Ukraine.

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"People ask me, how smart is Xi? I say, top of the line. You've never met anybody smarter. How smart is Kim Jong-un? Top of the line."

But was Kim, who inherited his job, smart enough to make a nuclear deal with Trump? No.

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Whether you agree or disagree with Trump’s comments, they’re all designed to generate buzz and be replayed (and even denounced) on television. That leaves those with leaked memos and exploratory groups in the shadows, and it leaves the indicted former president even more of a front-runner than he was a week ago.