- In a second victory Monday for NY AG Letitia James' probe of Trump's business, his former appraisers must now turn over documents.
- Cushman & Wakefield had fought to get the AG's "overly broad" subpoena's quashed.
- The same Manhattan judge who approved the C&W subpoenas held Trump in contempt earlier Monday.
- A Manhattan judge has ordered Donald Trump's longstanding appraisers, Cushman and Wakefield, to turn over documents to New York Attorney General Letitia James.
Earlier Monday, the same judge, New York State Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron, held Trump personally in contempt of court and ordered that he, too, comply with James' subpoenas, which in his case seek his personal business documents.
Trump additionally must pay a $10,000-a-day fine, Engoron ordered.
It is unclear when Trump would begin paying the fine. His lawyer, Alina Habba, said after court that she would move quickly to draft and sign an affidavit that will address the court's concerns by describing specifically where the Trump Organization searched for his documents before coming up empty.
It's getting a little tight for old Trumpy.
Let's see if money bags is going to ignore this subpoena.