· Like Clinton, Trump has a platoon of private lawyers in addition to the White House counsel. While the White House lawyers are paid government salaries, by taxpayers, the Trump White House has not...
For a surprising amount of the time it’s the taxpayer paying those legal bills the government lawyers get paid between $133000 and $185,000. they aren’t working on things that result of policy decisions that are being challenged but rather they are trying to making the case that it is not unconstitutional for Trump’s businesses to earn profits from foreign governments and …
 · The MAGA PAC paid the law offices of Michael van der Veen just over $575,000. Van der Veen and Bruce Castor, who also works at the firm, were part of Trump’s second impeachment defense team. David...
 · According to a new report from Business Insider, Donald Trump is furious about the fact that he is currently hemorrhaging money just to pay for all of his legal fees. And by the way, outside of the New York investigation, which of course is the big one, but outside of that one, there are two dozen lawsuits against the former president of the ...
 · The GOP agreed to pay $1.6 million of Trump's legal fees from NY investigations into his private businesses, reports say Tom Porter Dec 17, 2021, 3:48 AM President Donald Trump addressing the...
True North Law, which led a failed fight in swing state Michigan, was paid over $270,000 for its services in January by the same committee. Harvey & Binnall, which was involved in a failed legal fight in Nevada, received over $300,000 in payments from January through June by the Trump PAC, according to the filings.
Trump’s political action committees spent $7.9 million on legal matters related to the 2020 recount and his impeachment fight.
Hilbert declined to comment on the payments made by the PAC to his firm. But he again pushed the idea that there were election irregularities in Georgia.
None of the FEC records shows legal service payments to Rudy Giuliani, who has called the president a client and publicly challenged the results of the election.
That firm led failed legal fights in Georgia. According to The Wall Street Journal, Kurt Hilbert , a founder of the firm, was on an infamous January phone call between Trump and the Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. Trump urged Raffensperger to overturn then-President-elect Joe Biden’s victory in the state.
Jenna Ellis, one of Trump’s legal advisors during the recount, was paid more than $22,000 for her services.
Trump’s lawyers reaped a windfall during his impeachment trial.
Trump Is FURIOUS About How Much His Legal Fees Are Costing Him. According to new reports, Donald Trump is fuming over how much money he is having to spend to defend himself from all of the lawsuits that he is currently facing, not to mention the investigation in New York.
According to a new report from Business Insider, Donald Trump is furious about the fact that he is currently hemorrhaging money just to pay for all of his legal fees. And by the way, outside of the New York investigation, which of course is the big one, but outside of that one, there are two dozen lawsuits against the former president ...
Self-proclaimed billionaire President Donald Trump is turning to rich Republican party donors to help cover the costs of some of his hefty legal fees related to investigations into his campaign’s alleged ties to Russia. Government watchdog advocates say that move breaks political norms and escalates the power wealthy people have over politics. Effectively, the big donors can offset Trump’s personal costs by donating to the legal fund, lining his pockets without directly handing over money.
Robert and Diana Mercer both gave almost $100k each to the legal fund in August—after it had been reported that the funds could soon be used to help ease the Russia scandal’s burden on Trump’s personal bottom line. No surprise here: The Mercers are awash in influence with the Trump administration, and the family backed him early and heavily. They’re Breitbart funders; daughter Rebekah Mercer was on the transition team.
Richard and Suzanne Kayne are big donors to UCLA. Richard founded Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, which deals heavily in oil and gas and energy infrastructure—pipelines. He’s donated to various other Republican campaigns.
In short, he doesn’t appear to be a Trump fanboy as much as a fanboy for capitalism (and deregulation of financial markets).
The RNC gave Trump the legal fees amid an investigation being conducted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who has been looking into whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia to help sway the 2016 presidential election. On Wednesday, the New York Times reported that Mueller asked the White House for documents related to several questionable actions by Trump, including a meeting he had with Russian officials the day after F.B.I. Director James Comey was fired.
Charles Schwab maxed out his legal fund donation in July. In an odds-defying coincidence, his 21-year-old granddaughter Samantha had a “volunteer” job in the White House Office of Legislative Affairs as of spring. The elder Schwab also gave bigly to the inauguration, and given his financial industry ties, he is likely bigly interested in rolling back financial regulations.
The president's 3,500 lawsuits were first reported back when Trump was just a presidential candidate in 2016. An investigation by USA Today analysed legal filings across the U.S. and concluded that the number of cases was "unprecedented" for a presidential nominee. USA Today also found that Trump had been involved in more litigation than five other top American real-estate developers combined.
As Zirin claimed, hundreds of individuals who have done work for Trump have said that he refused to pay after their services were rendered, according to a separate investigation by USA Today.
However, numerous businesses and individuals have shared their stories with USA Today and other media outlets, highlighting how Trump refused to pay after their services were complete. When they pressed for payment, representatives of the Trump Organization allegedly threatened legal action, forcing individuals or businesses to accept less money than they had been promised.