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"The most famous judge in America, for a while," on highs and lows of a Trump trial

CBS News reports on Justice Arthur Engoron's experiences during the high-profile civil fraud trial of former President Donald Trump. The article details Engoron's personal encounter with a bomb threat before the trial and his reflections on presiding over the case, which involved intense courtroom dynamics and Trump's defiance of judicial instructions.

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Graham Kates

Reporter

Graham Kates is an investigative reporter covering criminal justice, privacy issues and information security for CBS News Digital. Contact Graham at KatesG@cbsnews.com or grahamkates@protonmail.com

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Updated on: June 17, 2026 / 12:33 PM EDT

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Justice Arthur Engoron was walking his dog in the early morning darkness on Jan. 11, 2024, when he saw police lights in the distance, a lot of them. The New York Supreme Court judge realized they were descending on his home.

"There's been a credible bomb threat against your house. Is there anybody else in the house?" Engoron recalled a police lieutenant asking.

Yes, he replied, his wife and kids. He roused them. They walked away from the house in the cold winter air.

A few hours later, Engoron was in his courtroom, on the bench in front of the most famous and powerful defendant in U.S. history — Donald Trump. In a fitting finale to what had been a dramatic civil fraud trial, marked by near-daily shouting, hundreds upon hundreds of objections , and campaign antics, then-former President Trump went against the judge's instructions to deliver his own closing argument.

Now retired, Engoron sat down with CBS News for his first on-camera interview since the 2023 trial, reflecting on his career and the highs and lows of his moment in the spotlight. He sees a thread from that trial to the wider, harsh public discourse around judges today. It's an environment that led the U.S. Marshals Service recently to ask Congress for increased funds for federal judicial security, citing increased threats.

"I think that there will be some people that will be less inclined to become judges because the threat level has apparently increased," Engoron said. "Those are probably not the people that should be judges, though."

The early morning bomb threat was neither the first nor last threat Engoron received. He told CBS News he was subjected to a cascade of antisemitic and homophobic taunts, and sent an envelope with white powder. Engoron said he still gets harassing phone calls, and recounted a man walking up to him recently at his gym and calling him "a f—ing piece of s–t."

"Judges would know the primary rule: We cannot fight back," Engoron said. "That just goes with the territory. No matter what we're called."

Arthur Engoron, the former judge who presided over President Trump's New York civil fraud trial.

CBS News

The quirky, wise-cracking judge really seemed to get under Mr. Trump's skin. The defendant frequently stepped just outside the courtroom, lambasting the case and Engoron. He and his supporters called the judge a "wack job," "lunatic," "deranged," "corrupt," "radical," and other derogatory names.

The judge never responded, but he drew a red line, which Mr. Trump violated: going after the judge's staff.

A court officer had to escort the judge's law clerk to and from her home after Mr. Trump repeatedly posted and talked about her, Engoron said.

"I sometimes say that law clerks are the greatest invention in the history of the world. They're just there to help … and we want to protect them because they can't protect themselves as much as we can," Engoron said. He added that "of course, it didn't affect my rulings, my thoughts about the case."

Engoron imposed a gag order on Mr. Trump that was replicated in two of Mr. Trump's criminal cases. The 77-year-old, who faced mandatory retirement from the judiciary at the end of last year, revealed that he never before had to bar a defendant from targeting his staff.

The Trump case elevated Engoron to a stature he hadn't experienced before or since, and he enjoyed the recognition.

"Just last night, somebody said, 'You were the most famous judge in America, for a while,'" Engoron said.

"Total strangers would walk up to me, look at me very sincerely and very seriously and say 'thank you.' That's all they would say. I knew what they were talking about," Engoron said, recounting being recognized by a ticket-taker on the Long Island Railroad, and even by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

Engoron is now senior counsel at the Manhattan law firm Phillips Nizer LLP, but he misses the gavel.

"Being a judge is just the greatest job in the world. You get to help society. You get to set precedents. You get all this respect," Engoron said. "When people used to say, 'Your honor,' I would look around, like, who are they talking to? And then I'd realize it's me."

During Mr. Trump's trial, Engoron faced criticism from Trump allies who claimed he pandered to the media. New York Rep. Elise Stefanik said in a letter to the state's Commission on Judicial Conduct that Engoron "infamously smiled and posed for the cameras." One day, from the bench he instructed reporters on how to pronounce his name (En-GOR-on, not EN-gur-on). Another day he said he wanted reporters to note he "bounded" up the steps to the bench.

The criticisms, he said, "were silly."

"Had nothing to do with the…

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Source document: Justice Arthur Engoron's Interview with CBS News

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CBS News (US)IndependentCenter4 days ago
"The most famous judge in America, for a while," on highs and lows of a Trump trial

CBS News reports on Justice Arthur Engoron's experiences during the high-profile civil fraud trial of former President Donald Trump. The article details Engoron's personal encounter with a bomb threat before the trial and his reflections on presiding over the case, which involved intense courtroom dynamics and Trump's defiance of judicial instructions.

Bias read (Center): The article provides a balanced account of Justice Engoron's experience without overtly favoring either side. It focuses on recounting events and reflections without explicit ideological commentary or biased language.

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