Trump Organization Is Charged in 15-Year Tax Scheme - The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/01/nyregion/allen-weisselberg-charged-trump-organization.

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Trump Organization Is Charged in 15-Year Tax Scheme


The company was accused of a “sweeping and audacious illegal payments scheme” in compensating executives to help them avoid
paying taxes.

By Ben Protess, William K. Rashbaum and Jonah E. Bromwich

July 1, 2021 Updated 3:46 p.m. ET

The Trump Organization, the real estate business that catapulted Donald J. Trump to tabloid fame, television riches and ultimately the
White House, was charged Thursday with running a 15-year scheme to help executives avoid paying taxes by compensating them off
the books.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office, which has been conducting the investigation, also accused a top executive, Allen H.
Weisselberg, of dodging taxes on $1.7 million in perks that should have been reported as income. Mr. Weisselberg, Mr. Trump’s long-
serving and trusted chief financial officer, faced grand larceny, tax fraud and other charges.

“To put it bluntly, this was a sweeping and audacious illegal payments scheme,” Carey Dunne, general counsel for the Manhattan
district attorney, said when the defendants appeared for their arraignment in State Supreme Court in Manhattan.

The charges against the Trump Organization and Mr. Weisselberg — whom Mr. Trump once praised for doing “whatever was
necessary to protect the bottom line” — ushered in a new phase of the district attorney’s sweeping inquiry into the business practices
of Mr. Trump and his company.

Mr. Weisselberg pleaded not guilty. “He will fight these charges in court,” his lawyers, Mary E. Mulligan and Bryan C. Skarlatos, said
in a statement.

In a statement issued after the arraignment, lawyers for the Trump Organization called the case inappropriate and unjustified, saying
the case should be resolved by civil tax authorities.

“In our view, this case was brought because the companies’ name is Trump,” read the statement from the lawyers, Alan S. Futerfas,
Bettina Schein and Susan R. Necheles. “This case signals that it is now open season for local prosecutors to target federal political
opponents and adversaries.”

The 15-count indictment, which charged the Trump Organization with committing a scheme to defraud, criminal tax fraud and
falsifying business records, accused the company of a long-running conspiracy to help executives, including Mr. Weisselberg, evade
taxes on perks and bonuses while at the same time decreasing the company’s own tax obligations.

It also charged Mr. Weisselberg with failing to pay taxes on leased Mercedes-Benzes, bonuses and a rent-free apartment paid for by
the company. The indictment also charged him with grand larceny, accusing him of essentially cheating the I.R.S. out of tax revenue.

And while the indictment is narrowly focused on the scheme to evade taxes based on the provision of the benefits, the charges could
lay the groundwork for the next steps in the investigation, which will focus on Mr. Trump.

The broader investigation into Mr. Trump and his company’s business practices is continuing. The prosecutors in the office of the
Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., have been investigating whether Mr. Trump and the Trump Organization manipulated
property values to obtain loans and tax benefits, among other potential financial crimes, The New York Times has reported.

The indictment on Thursday follows months of an increasing pressure campaign on Mr. Weisselberg to offer information that could
help that inquiry. Prosecutors had subpoenaed Mr. Weisselberg’s personal tax returns and bank records, reviewed a raft of his
financial dealings and questioned his ex-daughter-in-law — all part of an effort to gain his cooperation.

Mr. Trump was not charged. But an indictment of the company that carries his name strikes a blow to the former president just as he
has resumed holding rallies. Even if Mr. Trump parlays the charges into some immediate good will from his supporters — he has
denounced the investigation as political persecution — he could face the costly distraction of a trial if he attempts to mount another
presidential campaign.
Mr. Weisselberg has worked for the Trump family since the 1970s and has been under
increasing pressure to cooperate with an investigation into their business dealings. Evan
Vucci/Associated Press

The charges also could strain his company’s finances and jeopardize its relationship with business partners who had stood by the
Trump Organization even after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, which prompted a backlash against the former president.

Mr. Trump won the presidency by portraying himself as a political outsider with the business acumen to shake up Washington. But the
company whose name he made famous on his reality television show, “The Apprentice,” might eventually be associated as much with
criminal charges as it is with the hotels and golf courses that bear his name. If the company is found guilty, it could face fines or other
penalties.

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Mr. Trump mentioned the investigation only in passing during a Fox News town hall appearance Wednesday. As he listed his history
of legal battles, he said, “New York radical left prosecutors come after me.”

“You got to always fight,” he said. “You got to keep fighting.”

An accountant who began his career working for Mr. Trump’s father nearly a half-century ago, Mr. Weisselberg has served as the
Trump Organization’s financial gatekeeper for more than two decades and recently ran the business with Mr. Trump’s adult sons while
Mr. Trump was in the White House.

Famously hard-working — he once said he took “no vacations” — Mr. Weisselberg gained an unparalleled view into the inner
workings of the company and its bare-knuckled brawls with business partners. Mr. Weisselberg “knows of every dime that leaves the
building,” Corey Lewandowski, a former Trump campaign official, wrote in the book he co-authored, “Let Trump Be Trump.”

Now that he faces charges, Mr. Weisselberg, who is 73 years old, still could cooperate with the prosecutors. If he ultimately pleads
guilty and strikes a deal, he could do considerable damage to Mr. Trump, who for decades has depended on his unflinching loyalty,
once declaring with “100 percent” certainty that Mr. Weisselberg had not betrayed him.

The two started working together closely in the late 1970s, with Mr. Weisselberg putting in time on nights and weekends to handle
projects for Mr. Trump, the ambitious son of his boss, Fred Trump. Mr. Weisselberg said in a 2015 deposition that he had been helping
with Mr. Trump’s tax returns since at least the 1990s, when Mr. Trump made him the organization’s chief financial officer.

Mr. Weisselberg has remained steadfastly loyal to the company even as his own name surfaced during congressional and federal
investigations into Mr. Trump. While Mr. Weisselberg was never a target of those investigations, he has long been a central focus of
the district attorney’s inquiry, which began in August 2018.

As the prosecutors have zeroed in on the benefits he and his family received from Mr. Trump, they have examined tens of thousands of
dollars in private school tuition for one of Mr. Weisselberg’s grandchildren, a rent-free apartment on the Upper West Side of
Manhattan and leased Mercedes-Benz vehicles.

Mr. Weisselberg was not the only senior company executive to receive similar perks. Until 2018, when the company reined in the
benefits, it provided a number of employees with Mercedes-Benzes.

Those types of benefits are generally taxable, though there are exceptions, and the tax rules can be murky.
Cyrus R. Vance Jr., the Manhattan district attorney and a Democrat, has been
investigating Mr. Trump and his business practices since August 2018. Jefferson Siegel for
The New York Times

Even if Mr. Weisselberg declines to cooperate, the charges represent a major milestone for Mr. Vance, a Democrat who twice beat Mr.
Trump at the U.S. Supreme Court in a battle to obtain the former president’s tax records. That victory reinvigorated the investigation,
touching off months of grand jury subpoenas and witness testimony.

Of all the investigations that have loomed over Mr. Trump and his inner circle in the past few years — two impeachments, one special
counsel inquiry into ties with Russia and criminal charges against a half dozen former aides — only Mr. Vance’s case has reached into
the top rungs of the Trump Organization and taken aim at the company itself.

Still, the stakes remain high for Mr. Vance. Although he is not seeking re-election after three terms, the district attorney has faced
criticism in the past for treading lightly with other powerful defendants. The Trump investigation will arguably be the most enduring
part of his legacy.

When Mr. Vance’s office opened its broader investigation, it began with an examination of hush-money payments made during the
2016 presidential campaign to two women who said they had affairs with Mr. Trump. In particular, the prosecutors scrutinized how the
company accounted for $420,000 it gave Michael D. Cohen, Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyer, partly as reimbursement for money
he paid to buy the silence of one of the women, Stormy Daniels, a pornographic film actress who said she had an affair with Mr. Trump.

Mr. Cohen is cooperating with Mr. Vance’s investigation, which grew out of 2018 federal charges against him.

In congressional testimony two years ago, Mr. Cohen pinned blame on Mr. Weisselberg, saying that he had helped devise a strategy to
mask the Trump Organization’s reimbursements to Mr. Cohen.

In his final days in office, Mr. Trump was said to have considered pardoning Mr. Weisselberg, but ultimately did not do so. Federal
prosecutors never accused Mr. Weisselberg of wrongdoing.

For years, Mr. Weisselberg kept a low profile at the Trump Organization, often eclipsed by his bombastic boss. One of Mr.
Weisselberg’s rare moments in the spotlight came during a cameo as a judge on “The Apprentice,” in which he discussed dog
grooming.

Mr. Weisselberg’s family has also long been entwined with Mr. Trump. One of Mr. Weisselberg’s sons, Barry, has been the manager of
Trump Wollman Rink in Central Park, and another son, Jack, works at Ladder Capital, one of Mr. Trump’s biggest lenders.

Mr. Vance’s office has subpoenaed Ladder Capital and spoken to some of its employees about the lending process, according to people
with knowledge of the matter. There has been no indication that prosecutors suspect either of Mr. Weisselberg’s sons of wrongdoing.

Prosecutors have also questioned Mr. Weisselberg’s former daughter-in-law, Jennifer Weisselberg, who is in the midst of a contentious
court battle with her ex-husband, Barry, over custody of their children.

Ms. Weisselberg has said that prosecutors had asked her about the tuition payments as well as gifts Barry Weisselberg received from
Mr. Trump, including an apartment on Central Park South and several cars that were leased for him.
Kate Christobek and Sean Piccoli contributed reporting.

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