Former President Donald Trump leaves the courtroom during a break in his civil fraud trial on Oct. 17 in New York.

Stefan Jeremiah/AP


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Stefan Jeremiah/AP


Former President Donald Trump leaves the courtroom during a break in his civil fraud trial on Oct. 17 in New York.

Stefan Jeremiah/AP

Former President Donald Trump and his three oldest children are taking the witness stand over the next two weeks.

Starting Wednesday, the legal team for the New York attorney general will call up members of the Trump family to testify in a civil trial that alleges fraud was knowingly committed by the Trump Organization and Trump himself.

Donald Trump Jr., who is a vice president of the Trump Organization, is slated to testify first, followed by his younger brother Eric, another vice president of the family’s landmark business. Both, alongside their father, are defendants in the trial.

The former president is expected to take the witness stand next Monday, marking the first time he is formally called up to publicly testify in any of his pending trials.

Ivanka Trump, the former president’s daughter, is also scheduled to testify next week. She is not a defendant.

The family will answer questions before New York Judge Arthur Engoron, who is presiding over the trial. Engoron has already ruled that the Trump Organization committed fraud. However, several issues remain to be resolved at trial, including whether the fraud was committed on purpose and how much of a penalty should be paid if the defendants are found liable.

Former Trump allies have already testified

Last week, Engoron heard testimony from Michael Cohen, a former Trump lawyer and known “fixer” who turned against his former boss.

During his testimony, Cohen said that Trump had asked him to “increase the total assets based upon a number that he arbitrarily” selected.

Cohen said his responsibility, along with that of former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, “was to reverse-engineer the very different asset classes, increase those assets in order to achieve the numbers” that Trump had asked for.

But Cohen’s past convictions, which include lying under oath to Congress and to a bank, along with his former guilty pleas to tax evasion and breaking campaign finance laws, were brought up by both the attorney general’s and Trump’s lawyers.

Earlier in the trial, Engoron heard testimony from Weisselberg, a defendant in the trial. He is accused of signing off on fraudulent financial statements in question.

One of the statements he was asked about in court is related to the former president’s own penthouse.

According to documents shown during the trial, the Trump Tower triplex was marked as being almost 11,000 square feet in 1994, not the 30,000 square feet that appears on financial statements used in later years.

A Forbes magazine article originally shed light on the discrepancy in 2017. Weisselberg testified that he didn’t pay attention to this specific property. He said he couldn’t remember whether he discussed the financial statements with Trump as they were finalized.

Eric Trump stands in the hallway outside the New York City courtroom where his family’s civil fraud case is underway, on Oct. 25.

Ted Shaffrey/AP


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Ted Shaffrey/AP


Eric Trump stands in the hallway outside the New York City courtroom where his family’s civil fraud case is underway, on Oct. 25.

Ted Shaffrey/AP

Gag order still active

Trump was fined $10,000 and called up to the witness stand last week for violating a gag order put in place by Engoron during the first week of the trial.

The order prohibits any parties from making comments about any of the judge’s staff.

Trump was already fined $5,000 for violating the same gag order after a Truth Social post about the judge’s clerk was made and stayed on the Trump campaign website.

“I am very protective of my staff,” Engoron said, and threatened future “severe sanctions.”

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