By Jack Queen and Luc Cohen
(Reuters) -Donald Trump’s lawyers on Thursday asked a New York judge to decide a civil fraud case against the former U.S. president in his favor, a long-shot bid coming midway through a trial that threatens to hobble his real estate empire.
The request to effectively end the case came in open court a day after the New York attorney general’s office rested its case against Trump, his two adult sons and 10 of his companies.
The trial is expected to continue through mid-December if the motion is denied.
New York Attorney General Letitia James claims Trump and his family businesses manipulated the value of his golf courses, hotels and other assets by billions of dollars to secure better deals with lenders and insurers and lighten his tax bill.
Trump's lawyers asked Justice Arthur Engoron for a "directed verdict," which is a finding that no one could reasonably rule in favor of the opposing party. Engoron is unlikely to grant the request as he has already found that Trump and 10 of his businesses committed persistent fraud. However, Engoron's ruling covered only one of the seven fraud counts Trump faces.
Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, has testified along with his sons Donald Jr. and Eric Trump and daughter Ivanka Trump. Unlike the others, she is not a defendant in the case.
James is seeking at least $250 million in penalties, as well as restrictions that would effectively bar Trump and his adult sons from the New York real estate business for five years.
Trump has repeatedly accused James, an elected Democrat, and the judge overseeing the trial of political bias and “election interference.”
In defiant and rambling testimony on Monday, Trump acknowledged that his asset valuations were sometimes inaccurate but said they were not relevant to banks and insurers.
Trump's lawyer Christopher Kise built on that argument on Thursday, saying banks that did business with the Trump Organization profited from the loans.
"There's no victim. There's no complainant. There's no injury. All of that is established now,” Kise said.
He also said Trump’s financial statements had clear disclaimers advising banks to independently verify the valuations.
(Reporting by Jack Queen; Additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Noeleen Waldeer, Lisa Shumaker and Alistair Bell)