What to know about ongoing lawsuits and investigations surrounding the president-elect
When lawyers filed a class action lawsuit in 2010 against Trump University, they could hardly have expected that six years later they’d be coming up against the president-elect in the courtroom.But that’s exactly what stands to happen during the trial, which is 
scheduled to start on Nov. 28, as Trump and his lawyers will defend 
against allegations that Trump University defrauded students by 
presenting itself as an accredited institution and pressuring people to 
spend up to $35,000 for classes taught by people advertised as “hand 
picked” by Trump.
The
 Trump University lawsuit isn’t the only legal headache hanging over the
 president-elect. New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman (who
 also brought a case against Trump University in 2013), is investigating Trump’s foundation,
 after it was found in October to have violated state law by soliciting 
donations without the proper charity certification. Additionally, the 
FBI is conducting a preliminary inquiry into former Trump campaign 
manager Paul Manafort’s foreign business ties, NBC reports, a potential conflict that had already caused Trump to distance himself from Manafort. And Trump has sued two D.C. restaurateurs for pulling out of deals to operate in his new hotel.
“It is unusual for a president-elect to be entering the Oval Office 
with these types of live legal issues involving the business entities 
that he had been running,” says Caleb Burns, a partner at Wiley Rein LLP
 focused on election law and government ethics.
Trump will now have to juggle these trials and investigations while 
also getting his administration in place by Jan. 20, when he becomes 
leader of the free world. It is perhaps ironic that the husband of his 
general election opponent paved the way for the potential legal problems
 that may follow him into the Oval Office; in a 1997 case involving 
then-President Bill Clinton and Paula Jones, who was suing him for 
sexual harassment, the Supreme Court ruled that a sitting president 
isn’t immune from litigation over actions done before taking office.
But Burns cautions that there’s a crucial difference between the case
 Clinton dealt with and the ones confronting Trump: Clinton was sued 
personally, whereas Trump’s cases concern disputes with businesses that 
he is or was involved with. “Those matters will continue to progress and
 make their way through the legal process, but those matters aren’t 
aimed at Donald Trump personally,” Burns says. “Therefore they in all 
likelihood will not have much of an effect on his presidency.” It also 
means that in cases like these in which Trump is a witness, not the 
defendant, judges might be more reluctant to compel the president to 
testify. “My instinct would be that a judge would take great pains to 
avoid that situation,” Burns says.
The most immediate issue for Trump is the Trump University trial 
beginning this month. With Trump’s new status as president-elect, U.S. 
District Judge Gonzalo Curiel has advised both sides to consider a 
settlement rather than trial, “given all else that’s involved.” Trump’s 
attorney Daniel Petrocelli indicated Trump might be willing to settle, 
despite Trump’s past reticence. “I could settle these cases for peanuts…
 but I’m not a settler,” Trump told TIME of the case last November. 
Petrocelli has also said he’ll file a formal request to delay the trial 
until after Trump’s inauguration.
If the parties do not agree to a settlement, however, Trump will have
 to testify, though Judge Curiel will allow him to do so via video 
rather than appearing in court. And Curiel denied a request Thursday to 
ban campaign statements from the trial. This could include any speeches,
 tweets, sexual misconduct allegations, tax history, corporate 
bankruptcies or details about his charitable foundation. It could also 
include inflammatory statements Trump made about Curiel; in May, Trump 
called Curiel “a hater” and “very hostile” and said Curiel’s Mexican heritage creates a “conflict of interest” given Trump’s hardline immigration stance.
Trump’s lawyer argued this campaign information “carries an immediate
 and irreparable danger of extreme and irremediable prejudice to 
defendants, confusion of issues and waste of time.” But Curiel wrote on 
Thursday that he wouldn’t issue a “blanket ruling” because Trump’s 
attorneys did not specify which statements they wanted banned.
Voters knew they were choosing a businessman to be their president, and a litigious one, at that. A USA Today analysis
 found that Trump and his businesses have been involved in at least 
3,500 legal actions in federal and state courts during the past three 
decades. Trump prides himself on deal-making and standing tough to 
opponents, at least in posture. But as Trump cedes control of his 
foundation and businesses to members of his family, which he’s signaled 
that he’ll do, Burns says these cases will largely become their problem.
 President-elect Trump, after all, will soon have much bigger things to 
worry about.

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