Trump rails at his NYC fraud trial, Judge Engoron cuts him off: ‘Control your client’

NEW YORK — Donald Trump’s blockbuster fraud trial reached a dramatic finale at closing arguments Thursday when the former president made an end-run around a judge’s strict orders to get his two cents on the record.

Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron shot down Trump’s unheard-of request to personally deliver a summation on Wednesday because he wouldn’t promise to veer off topic — but the GOP presidential front-runner still managed to get his way.

Once his lawyers had finished their closing arguments, his attorney, Chris Kise, made a final plea to the judge to let the former president speak. When Engoron then asked Trump if he would abide by the previously laid out ground rules — which commanded him not to enter new testimony or evidence, “deliver a campaign speech,” or disparage the judge, his staff, Attorney General Tish James, and the court system — an emotional Trump didn’t give him an answer, instead launching into a tirade defying the judge’s directive on nearly every level.

“When you say don’t go outside of these things, we have a situation where I’m an innocent man, I’m being persecuted by someone running for office, and I think you have to go outside of the bounds,” Trump said.

“This is a fraud on me. What’s happened here, sir, is a fraud on me.”

Engoron, who started his day dealing with a bogus bomb threat at his Nassau County home, let Trump riff for around six minutes before a stunned courtroom, cutting him off when he chided Engoron’s “agenda” and told the judge, “You can’t listen for one minute.”

“Mr. Kise, please control your client,” Engoron then said.

With that, Trump left the 60 Centre St. courthouse with his Secret Service entourage and son Eric, his codefendant, as the judge adjourned for lunch. Trump headed to his Wall Street skyscraper to address reporters instead of sticking around for the AG’s closing argument.

The stakes couldn’t be higher for Trump in the AG’s civil fraud lawsuit threatening his future as a business tycoon in his native New York. Among other remedies, James is seeking to forfeit a staggering $370 million in illegal profits and to permanently bar Trump, his former finance chief at the Trump Org, Allen Weisselberg, and controller Jeffrey McConney from the real estate industry. She wants to bar his sons for five years.

Trump’s inherited real estate empire is already on its way out of his grasp following Engoron’s pretrial ruling finding him liable for the top fraud claim. Days before the trial started Oct. 2, the judge found him, his sons, Eric and Don Jr., and former top executives at the Trump Organization, Allen Weisselberg and Jeffrey McConney, engaged in persistent and repeated fraud for years by ballooning the value of his properties by billions — like Mar-a-Lago, Fla., and his eponymous Fifth Ave. skyscraper— to reap lucrative loan terms they weren’t entitled to in deals with banks, lenders, and insurance companies.