Trump institutes emergency petition to prevent sabotage of his tax records after judge refuses motion


The submission immediately followed a ruling by U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero, who denied Trump’s request to overturn his decision on the dismissal of the lawsuit to appeal to the president’s legal team.
Trump’s lawyers told the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that without delay it would result in “quintessential irreparable damage” by allowing the speech for the records to go ahead.

As part of an agreement between the president’s attorneys and the Manhattan district attorney’s office, the ruling would not be up to seven calendar days from Marrero’s decision.

Trump’s lawyers are now asking the appellate court not to allow the statement to be entered into until one week after the appeals court rules on the case.

Trump’s emergency action is the latest attempt to bring a call for eight years of personal and business records and tax returns.

The office of Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance has investigated whether Trump as the Trump Organization has violated state laws in connection with harsh fines made to women who do business with Trump. The investigation also investigated whether business records submitted to the state were falsified and if any tax laws were written, CNN reported.

On Thursday, Marrero ruled that the commitment to Trump’s longtime accountant Mazars USA was valid and New York prosecutors could have access to Trump’s accounting records for a criminal investigation. Trump immediately moved to stay the decision while he appealed.

Marrero denied that request on Friday, saying he did not believe Trump’s argument would win.

“The court is not convinced that Apple review would be successful in any case. This argument may not be enough to show irreparable damage,” Marrero wrote in denial of Trump’s motion.

Trump had submitted Vance to stop his steering of the grand jury of his longtime accounting firm Mazars USA for years.

The ruling sought records from Mazars in connection with Trump, the Trump Organization, its foundation and several related subsidiaries. The requested documents, court cases said, cover not only cases in New York but also in other states such as Florida and California and countries including Turkey, Dubai, Canada and Indonesia.

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