The first question really is: why would you need to store the same value in two separate columns in the same table? What do you need this for? Doesn't seem to make a lot of sense to me....
Since the value of the IDENTITY column is only available once the row has actually been inserted, there is no way to get that value and set it to another column before the row has indeed been saved to the database table.
That basically leaves three options to get that value and store it somewhere else:
you can write an AFTER INSERT trigger that just set the other column to the value that's just been inserted in the IDENTITY column
you could wrap the whole saving process into a stored procedure which you call from your C# code (instead of just saving the object) and you would do the INSERT of the row, then get the newly created IDENTITY value and update the row again with that new value. But that would cause an UPDATE to happen - which you seem to say is impossible for you because of an UPDATE trigger (not quite clear on why this should be a problem....)
you can write two lines of C# code to get the IDENTITY value after it's been inserted (and available in the ID property of your object) and then store the object a second time. But that, too, would cause an UPDATE to happen - which you seem to say is impossible for you because of an UPDATE trigger (not quite clear on why this should be a problem....)
So I guess your best option would be an INSERT trigger to do this.
Try something like this:
CREATE TRIGGER trInsertEmpNews
ON dbo.EmpNews AFTER INSERT
AS BEGIN
UPDATE dbo.EmpNews
SET DisplaySeq = i.ID
FROM INSERTED i
WHERE dbo.EmpNews.ID = i.ID
END