Which specific Trump Organization properties have recorded judgments or liens in county filings related to the New York fraud case?

Checked on January 16, 2026
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Executive summary

The New York Attorney General has registered the civil fraud judgment in Westchester County — a procedural step that has resulted in county filings which effectively place liens on Trump Organization properties located there, most notably the Seven Springs estate and the Trump National Golf Club in Briarcliff Manor, Westchester County [1] [2]. Public filings in Westchester do not enumerate an exhaustive list of seized assets, and some reporting stresses that registration is a preparatory move that enables future liens and seizures rather than an immediate transfer of title [3] [4].

1. What was actually filed: a county registration that enables liens

Attorney General Letitia James’s office formally registered the state civil judgment in Westchester County on March 6, a ministerial act that gives the state a vehicle to record liens against properties located in that county as it seeks to collect the roughly half‑billion dollar judgment [3] [1]. Legal observers emphasize that registering the judgment in the county clerk’s database is a technical but necessary step to allow county sheriffs to execute levies or sell property at auction if the debtor does not satisfy the debt or post an appellate bond [4].

2. Which named properties appear in local reporting and filings

Local Westchester reporting and national outlets identify two specific Trump Organization assets tied to those Westchester filings: the Seven Springs estate and the Trump National Golf Club in Briarcliff Manor — both properties are located in Westchester County and were cited by the AG’s office and local clerks as subject to the registered judgment or liens placed in the county records [2] [1] [5]. Business Insider and other outlets have also highlighted Seven Springs as among the largest privately owned Westchester holdings tied to the fraud case registration in that county [6].

3. What the filings do — and do not — prove about seizure plans

The registration itself does not automatically transfer ownership or mean an immediate sheriff’s sale; it merely creates the legal apparatus to assert liens and, if necessary, pursue execution against county‑level assets [3] [4]. AG James has said she would seek to seize assets if Trump cannot pay, but her office has declined to publicly map out a list of intended seizures, and filings in Westchester did not, according to Bloomberg, explicitly identify which individual assets would be targeted in that registration [3] [7].

4. Wider lists of potential targets versus recorded liens

Several outlets produced inventories of Trump properties that could conceivably be subject to execution if collection proceeds — Business Insider, for example, compiled a list of 13 properties across New York that prosecutors could pursue — but those lists represent potential targets based on ownership and jurisdiction, not confirmations of recorded liens beyond the Westchester registration tied to Seven Springs and Trump National Briarcliff [6]. The AG’s own supplemental materials catalog many properties discussed in the fraud trial, yet public county filings that concretely record judgments or liens are currently documented most clearly for Westchester County [8] [2].

5. Legal posture and practical limits — why the picture remains partial

Courts have temporarily stayed collection subject to bond requirements, and appellate processes, bond procurement challenges, and insurer reluctance to underwrite massive appeal bonds complicate any immediate seizure effort; the appeals court paused enforcement contingent on a $175 million posting, underscoring that registration is the opening legal move not the final act [7] [4]. Reporting thus reflects a mix of concrete county filings in Westchester mentioning Seven Springs and Trump National Briarcliff Manor and broader lists of possible properties — with the explicit caveat that many other properties remain potential, not recorded, targets in public filings [2] [3] [6].

Want to dive deeper?
Which Trump Organization properties outside Westchester have been publicly listed by the NYAG as part of the fraud case addendum?
What legal steps must the NY Attorney General take to convert a registered county judgment into a sheriff’s sale of real property in New York?
Which appellate decisions or bond filings have affected the AG’s ability to enforce the $454–$490 million judgment against Trump as of March 2024?