NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York state appeals court threw out on Thursday an approximately half-billion dollar penalty that Donald Trump had been ordered to pay after a judge found that the U.S. president fraudulently overstated the value of his properties and other assets to bolster his family business.
The decision by a five-judge panel of the Appellate Division in Manhattan represented a defeat for New York Attorney General Letitia James, whose office brought the civil fraud lawsuit against Trump
in 2022.
Judges on the appellate court had signaled skepticism toward the case during oral arguments last September.
Trump was appealing a judgment entered by Justice Arthur Engoron in a state court in Manhattan, following a three-month nonjury trial.
Engoron found that Trump inflated his wealth over several years before first becoming president in 2017, to dupe lenders and insurers into providing better terms to the Trump Organization.
In February 2024, the judge ordered Trump to pay $454.2 million in penalties plus interest, which has continued to accrue.
Trump was personally liable for nearly 98% of the judgment, with his eldest sons Donald Trump Jr and Eric Trump and former Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg responsible for the remainder.
Referring to Trump and other Trump Organization figures, Engoron said their "complete lack of contrition and remorse borders on pathological."
Engoron also banned Trump and the Trump Organization from applying for loans from banks registered in the state for three years, and effectively barred Donald Trump Jr and Eric Trump from running the business for two years.
The appeals court put these restrictions on hold during the appeals process, while letting a court-appointed monitor for the Trump Organization continue her work.
Trump has denied wrongdoing. His lawyers argued that the penalty was too high and that James had overreached.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York)