CNN  — 

Former President Donald Trump arrived in a New York courtroom Monday for the start of the civil fraud trial against him, his eldest sons, their companies and Trump Organization executives.

Opening statements in the civil trial over inflated assets in fraudulent financial statements come less than a week after a shocking ruling by Judge Arthur Engoron that found Trump and his co-defendants are liable for “persistent and repeated” fraud.

The ruling was a significant victory for New York Attorney General Letitia James, who brought the $250 million lawsuit last September alleging that Trump and his co-defendants committed repeated fraud in inflating assets on financial statements to get better terms on commercial real estate loans and insurance policies.

The trial may also give the public a closer look at Trump’s business operations and net worth.

Trump inflated his net worth by as much as $3.6 billion in three separate years between 2011 and 2021, according to the attorney general’s office. Attorneys for Trump have refuted the claims, arguing that asset valuations are highly subjective and that they are still sorting through what the ruling means for the company’s future.

Here’s what to know:

What’s at stake at trial

Trump and his companies could be forced to pay hefty sums in damages for the profits they’ve allegedly garnered through their fraudulent business practices.

Engoron will consider just how much the Trumps and their businesses will have to pay.

The judge is expected to consider claims of business records fraud and insurance fraud alleged in the lawsuit in connection to high-profile properties, though he already determined some broad level of fraud was perpetuated.

The six causes of action are falsifying business records, conspiracy to falsify business records, issuing false financial statements, conspiracy to falsify false financial statements, insurance fraud and conspiracy to commit insurance fraud.

James’ lawsuit also asks the court to consider banning the Trumps from serving as officers of a business in New York and to stop the company from engaging in business transactions for five years.

Seth Wenig/AP
Former President Donald Trump sits in a courtroom at the New York Supreme Court on Monday, October 2.

What’s the impact of the fraud ruling?

The full scope of Engoron’s ruling last week is not clear heading into trial.

At a hearing Wednesday after the ruling came down, Trump attorney Chris Kise asked the judge: “And don’t take this the wrong way, but what in the court’s mind does this trial now look like? Like what are the issues?”

The judge canceled the business certifications of the Trump entities that are defendants in the case, including the Trump Organization. A receiver must now be put in place to “manage the dissolution” of corporate entities, per the order.

Questions remain as to how the receiver would dissolve the properties; whether the ruling would impact properties outside of New York state, including Mar-a-Lago; and whether the Trumps could transfer the New York-based assets into a new company out of state.

Kise said his legal team is unsure what Trump entities are included under the ruling, noting that there are more than 400 or 500 entities.

Engoron said that Trump’s team can have 30 days to produce a plan for the receivership.

Who will testify

Donald Bender, a longtime Trump Organization tax consultant, is expected to testify as the attorney general’s first witness.

The former president, his adult children and his closest business advisers are all listed as potential witnesses for both the attorney general and the defense. Being listed as a potential witness, however, does not mean they will be called to testify.

While Trump can opt to waive his presence at the civil trial, attorneys for the former president have indicated that he is eager to testify in court.

Trump previously sat for a deposition in the case and said Allen Weisselberg, the Trump Organization’s former chief financial officer, and his staff “primarily” prepared the financial statements. Trump said he had little “if any” role in preparing the financial statements after 2015, when he began his campaign for president.

Most of the listed potential witnesses have also testified in videotaped depositions.

Ivanka Trump is listed as a potential witness, though a state appellate court ruled in June that charges against the former president’s eldest daughter should be dismissed because they don’t fall within the statute of limitations.

Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen and several other current and former Trump Organization employees are also listed as potential witnesses. Weisselberg, who served prison time at Rikers Island per a plea deal for criminal tax fraud connected to his time at the company, is also expected to take the stand.

How long will the trial take?

Engoron will be the lone decider in this civil bench trial, rather than a jury of New Yorkers.

The judge set aside three months for the trial, but it’s unclear whether the case will take that long now that Engoron found Trump and his co-defendants liable of fraud.

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
Former President Donald Trump attends closing arguments in his civil fraud trial in New York on January 11.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Trump holds a brief media appearance on January 11 as the New York attorney general's office presented closing arguments.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Court police stand outside the New York State Supreme Court during closing arguments on January 11.
Adam Gray/AFP/Getty Images
Trump's daughter Ivanka leaves for a lunch break after testifying in the case on November 8. She discussed her role in negotiating loans for her father's purchases of the Doral golf resort in Florida and the Old Post Office in Washington, DC.
Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images
Trump gestures a zipped lip in front of reporters as he walks out of a New York courtroom during a break in his civil fraud trial on November 6.
Jabin Botsford/Pool/Getty Images
The former president sits in the courtroom on November 6.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
Eric Trump exits the courtroom for a lunch recess during the civil fraud trial on November 2. He and his brother Donald Trump Jr. were pressed about their knowledge of and involvement with their father's financial statements.
Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Donald Trump Jr. walks out of court after testifying on November 1. During his 90-minute testimony, Trump Jr. said he was not involved in the preparation of his father's financial statements at any point in time — including after his father became president in 2017 and he was appointed trustee on his father's revocable trust.
Alex Kent/AFP/Getty Images
Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's one-time lawyer and fixer, leaves the courtroom after testifying against Trump on October 24. Cohen's testimony directly implicated the former president, saying he was directed by his former boss to inflate Trump's net worth on financial statements to hit an arbitrary number.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
Former Trump Organization Executive Allen Weisselberg, left, sits in the courtroom during during the trial on October 10.
Jeenah Moon/Pool/Reuters
Donald Trump listens during the trial on October 4.
Jeenah Moon/Pool/Reuters
Eric Trump, right, attends the proceedings on October 4.
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images
Donald Trump is seen on camera while speaking to the media on October 4.
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images
Trump speaks to the media assembled at the New York Supreme Court on October 4. He again criticized New York Attorney General Letitia James, along with the statute of the law used to sue him, on his way to the courtroom.
Anthony Behar/SIPA/AP
A guard stands at the entrance of New York's Trump Tower on October 3, the second day of the trial.
Dave Sanders/Pool/The New York Times/AP
Trump is flanked by members of his legal team on October 3. The former president, who's actively campaigning for a second term, faces an increasingly packed calendar of criminal and civil litigation as the 2024 election nears. He faces four criminal indictments handed down this year, as well as other civil litigation.
Laura Oliverio/CNN
Police keep watch outside the court on October 3.
Dave Sanders/Pool/The New York Times/AP
Judge Arthur Engoron presides over the trial on October 3. A week earlier, Engoron ruled that Trump and his co-defendants were liable for fraud.
Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images
Trump speaks to the media as he arrives to court on October 3.
Laura Oliverio/CNN
Police set up gates outside the courthouse on October 3.
Laura Oliverio/CNN
Coverage of the trial is seen on the front page of the Wall Street Journal on October 3.
Laura Oliverio/CNN
A media member prepares outside the court on October 3.
Brendan McDermid/Pool/Reuters
Trump sits in the courtroom on October 2, the first day of the trial.
Laura Oliverio/CNN
Demonstrators stand outside the court before the start of the trial on October 2.
Brendan McDermid/Pool/Getty Images
James, center, sits in the front row of the courtroom on October 2.
Laura Oliverio/CNN
Members of the media set up outside New York's Trump Tower on October 2.
Craig Ruttle/AP
Trump speaks during a lunch break on October 2. He criticized Engoron and said the case against him was a "disgrace."
Brendan McDermid/Pool/Reuters
Trump sits in the courtroom on October 2. The trial is expected to run until December 22, the judge said.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
A box is carried at the courthouse before the start of the trial October 2.
Seth Wenig/AP
Trump speaks to the media at the New York Supreme Court on October 2. On his way to the courtroom, Trump said the civil fraud trial is a "continuation of the single greatest witch hunt of all time." He also called it "a scam and a sham."
Eduardo Munoz/Reuters
James gives a short statement to the media before the start of the trial on October 2. "My message is simple: No matter how powerful you are, no matter how much money you think you may have, no one is above the law," she said.
Brendan McDermid/Reuters
Trump's son Eric watches his father speak after arriving to the courthouse on October 2.
Laura Oliverio/CNN
A view of New York's Trump Tower on October 2.
Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg/Getty Images
New York State Court Officers stand outside the New York Supreme Court on October 2.

The trial is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. ET and end at 4:30 p.m. each day except Fridays, when the trial will adjourn at 1 p.m. for the judge to tend to other court business.

Increased security has been put in place in downtown Manhattan ahead of the trial, a spokesperson for the New York State Unified Court System told CNN.

Trump’s busy litigation calendar

The former president, who’s actively campaigning for a second term, faces an increasingly packed calendar of criminal and civil litigation as the 2024 election nears.

When Trump’s attorneys in this civil case sought to delay the trial, the New York attorney general argued that even a brief delay would “wreak havoc” on the trial schedule as it could cause conflicts with his upcoming cases in other courts.

Trump faces four criminal indictments handed down this year, as well as other civil litigation.

A second go-around with writer E. Jean Carroll in Manhattan federal court over civil defamation claims is scheduled to go to trial in January. Trump, who was already found liable for defamation by a jury in a similar case with Carroll last year, can waive his appearance at that civil trial.

Two criminal cases against Trump are scheduled for trial in March in New York and Washington, DC.

In DC, the federal election interference case brought by special counsel Jack Smith is expected to go to trial in early March.

In New York, the former president faces 34 counts of falsifying business records to conceal the reimbursement of hush money payments made to an adult film actress. The judge in that case has signaled he might shift the trial start date to accommodate the action in DC.

Smith’s case alleging Trump mishandled classified documents is slated to go to trial in Florida federal court in late May.

A trial date has not been set in the election subversion case against Trump and more than a dozen co-defendants in Fulton County, Georgia. However, the trial judge has determined it will not begin before the end of this year, teeing up the potential for additional scheduling conflicts in the thick of the 2024 election cycle.

Trump has pleaded not guilty in all four cases.