If there was any lingering confusion about the fact that Trump University, the for-profit school for Donald Trump aspirants, was a shady organization focused on bilking money from susceptible students, the latest revelations from an ongoing federal lawsuit should put those doubts to rest.

According to several former employees of the now-defunct school, whose testimony in a class-action lawsuit was revealed on Tuesday, Trump University staff were pushed to forcefully pressure vulnerable people to sign up for classes, priced up to $35,000, at times using predatory tactics.

“From the very beginning Trump University speakers told students to raise their credit card limits so that they could be ready to purchase real estate. In fact, the speakers then told students to use their increased credit limits to purchase the next level of Trump University,” former sales manager Ronald Schnackenberg wrote in his testimony. Schnackenberg recounted a specific incident in which he was reproached for refusing to sign up a couple, who he said clearly could not afford the $35,000 price of the class. He resigned after watching another salesman convince them instead. “I believe that Trump University was a fraudulent scheme and that it preyed upon the elderly and uneducated to separate them from their money.”

Other reports of unscrupulous behavior included documents showing employees were told to prey on potential students’ “roller coaster of emotions” to persuade them to purchase classes, specifically emphasizing the need to manipulate their desire to make a better life for themselves (preferably, one that matched Trump’s gaudy lifestyle). “Let them know you’ve found an answer to their problems,” one manual read.

The Trump campaign, which seems to be promoting the a similarly vacuous, aspirational message in the world of politics, said in a statement that the lawsuit was filed by a tiny group of dissatisfied students. “Trump University looks forward to using this evidence, along with much more, to win when the case is brought before a jury,” spokeswoman Hope Hicks told the Times.

Out of all the scandals surrounding Trump’s businesses, the Trump University lawsuit may be the most personally irritating to the real estate mogul. The narrative raised in the class-action directly contradicts Trump’s promise that he’s capable of improving people’s financial situations. A federal judge has set a trial date of November 28 for the lawsuit—nearly three weeks after the presidential election—but the conflict could continue to weigh on Trump’s campaign, lending credence to criticism of his businesses practices and amplifying attacks on the billionaire for refusing to release his tax returns.

Already, the Hillary Clinton campaign is leaping on the news to attack Trump, via the most unlikely surrogate: