The Constitution is not a suggestion. It is the law of the land. One of its clearest protections is found in the Eighth Amendment, which prohibits “excessive fines.” This safeguard was written to prevent government officials from turning financial punishment into a political weapon.
That is exactly what New York’s appellate court found when it struck down Attorney General Letitia James’s $500 million penalty against Donald Trump. The court did not erase the fraud finding — it agreed Trump had exaggerated asset values. But the judges also made an unavoidable point: there was no victim in the crime itself. No banks lost money. No insurance companies were defrauded. All were repaid, many with interest, and some even profited from the transactions.
In that light, the half-billion-dollar fine was not restitution. It was punishment for punishment’s sake, detached from any harm and therefore a violation of the Constitution’s ban on excessive fines. The penalty was unconstitutional because it bore no relation to damages or loss.
Read: New York Appeals Court Overturns $500 Million Penalty in Trump Fraud Case
Yet James is now appealing to the state’s highest court in an attempt to revive what the lower court has already declared unconstitutional. This is not the pursuit of justice. It is the pursuit of optics. By disregarding the very constitutional limits she swore to uphold, James turns law into a political weapon.
The danger is far larger than this one case. If government can impose devastating financial penalties where there is no victim and no loss, then the Constitution becomes meaningless. Today it is Trump. Tomorrow it could be any citizen who falls out of favor with those in power.
Yet her legal battles don’t stop there. The Department of Justice has now launched an investigation into James herself—probing whether she violated Donald Trump’s civil rights in pursuing the very case she now clings to. Federal prosecutors have subpoenaed her office, public records, and have even convened a grand jury. The investigation is unusually broad, also encompassing her separate case against the NRA and raising mortgage fraud allegations relating to her personal real estate transactions.
Read: The Heat Is On: Special Prosecutor Reportedly Seen Outside Letitia James’s Brooklyn Home
Adding to the political theater, Special Attorney Ed Martin—appointed to lead the probe—staged a bizarre, media-ready visit outside her Brooklyn home, and even called for her resignation in a letter—actions her legal team condemned as unprecedented, politically motivated, and potentially norm-breaking.
By doubling down on a fine declared unconstitutional and facing a sprawling DOJ inquiry, Letitia James’s appeal to “accountability” increasingly looks like a bid for political survival. In the end, her battle to reverse the courts risks eclipsing the very ideals of justice she claims to champion.