Inside New York Supreme Court to cover a hearing in Michael Cohen's civil suit against Trump demanding that the president underwrite his legal expenses.
@CourthouseNews More specifically, the defendant is Trump Organization LLC, which is represented by Marc Mukasey, Giuliani ally and son of former AG Michael Mukasey.
@CourthouseNews Judge Joel Cohen kicks things off by asking about the Trump Org's alleged oral agreement to indemnify Cohen in July 2017, well before the FBI’s raid on his home, hotel and office threw both men into legal jeopardy.
He notes it's chronologically "nebulous."
Judge Cohen: "How can an agreement like that pass muster?"
Service advisory note: Wrangling over contractual matters is by nature, a bit technical. Will try to simplify and report in real time.
Cohen's attorney notes that, even though the agreement was allegedly struck long before the raid, it originated from the same special counsel investigation.
"It's one and the same," he said.
Judge Joel Cohen appears skeptical that an oral agreement from two years ago can extend indefinitely to cover Cohen's then-unanticipated prosecution in SDNY and related congressional probes.
"I think that is the hardest question you have: How does that contract survive?"
Michael Cohen's attorney says that discovery will show documents shedding light on the scope of the indemnification.
Justice Joel Cohen asks how he knows that.
Michael Cohen's atty claims they know about invoices and emails demonstrate that.
Style note: In SDNY, which I usually cover, U.S. District Judges are "judges."
In New York Supreme, judges are "justices." Switching to the appropriate honorific from here on out.
Justice Cohen: You have to show something from them acknowledging that there is something of an actual agreement.
Justice Cohen turns to Trump Org's attorney Mukasey, stating what he calls the "blindingly obvious" fact that they deny a contract existed.
Mukasey mocks the notion that Trump Org's Alan Garten agreed to an open-ended indemnification of everything including Cohen's prosecution, congressional investigation and back taxes.
"I don't think that the law as I understand it requires you to suspend disbelief," he says.
Justice Cohen pushes back that contractual indemnifications can be very broad.
Mukasey proffers a hypothetical.
"I can agree to take you out to dinner," he said.
"Not anymore, you can’t," the justice deadpans.
Mukasey disputes that an agreement essentially says that all legal expenses, all costs are covered without duration.
A lot of back-and-forth arguments about New York's statute of frauds, requiring that certain contracts be memorialized in writing.
Mukasey: "A writing saying 'We agree to pay your bill' does not suggest the existence of a contract."
Justice Cohen grills Mukasey on whether to green light discovery
"Maybe if there was more smoke," Mukasey says, searching for the file would be justifiable.
Mukasey gives a new riff on an old expression: "How many lawyers can dance on the head of a bill?"
Justice Cohen lightly chuckled at the one, muffled by his hand.
Michael Cohen's counsel reviews the vast scope of the case: prosecution, congressional testimony, and 70 hours of interviews.
"The stakes here are incredibly high," he says.
Justice interjects: "We’re here for a more pedestrian kind of matter. This is about who pays the bills."
Justice Cohen reserves decision.
(For context: This appeared to be a reference to Mukasey’s earlier hypothetical. “Bill” can refer to a dinner bill or anything.)
Hearing is over. No ruling.
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Trump DOJ opposes the release of SPLC grand jury transcripts, but what the memo *doesn't* say speaks volumes. Feds don't dispute the SPLC's account of the Trump admin's "gross misrepresentations" about the informant program.
Instead, the US Attorney says that's "not relevant."
Why that matters.🧵
The SPLC's motion seeking the grand jury records rattled off a series of "false statements" by Trump and his surrogates about Charlottesville and the informants program.
By the DOJ's own account, the SPLC's informant program was cheap and effective.
For a fraction of a *percentage* of their annual budget, SPLC penetrated the nation's worst hate groups and published their secrets with info from their turncoats.
The DOJ's case assumes donors felt defrauded by this. buff.ly/cwTnYg6
The Trump DOJ alleges that the SPLC spent about $3 million on informants over the course of a *decade.*
Check out of the SPLC's revenue and expenditures from 2024, the last fiscal year records were public. That's a typical year, and it's a drop in the bucket. projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/org…
In return, SPLC infiltrated the KKK, the neo-Nazis, and other extremist groups, and they shared their secrets with federal law enforcement until Kash Patel put an end to that last October.
Two Trump appointees on the D.C. Circuit panel blocked Boasberg from even INVESTIGATING contempt of court related to the March 2025 flights to El Salvador.
The dissent: "Without the contempt power, the rule of law is an illusion, a theory that stands upon shifting sands."
This is the second time Judges Rao and Walker granted a writ of mandamus, an "extraordinary" rebuke of a lower court judge.
But Walker went out of the way to praise Boasberg, saying he was in a tough spot even as Walker overruled him.
The nuance here will be important to note in light of the Trump DOJ's campaign to vilify Boasberg, whose D.C. Circuit peers largely stood up for him even when his rulings didn't hold.