Trump says comments on Mexicans good for
restaurant business: documents
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[October 01, 2016]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Donald Trump
said he believed his assertion last year that Mexicans crossing the
border illegally are "rapists" bringing crime were "pretty mainstream"
and should have attracted customers to his new Washington restaurant,
according to court records BuzzFeed News published on Friday.
"I've tapped into something and I've tapped into illegal immigration,"
the Republican presidential candidate said in a June 16 deposition for a
lawsuit against a celebrity chef who dropped out of the restaurant
venture at his new hotel.
Chef Geoffrey Zakarian pulled out after Trump's June 15, 2015 comments
as he announced his bid for the White House.
Trump said Zakarian may have missed an opportunity.
"If he had the restaurant, it would be helped instead of hurt" by the
comments, Trump said in the deposition.
Zakarian, who has appeared in cooking shows like "The Next Iron Chef,"
"Chopped" and "Top Chef," signed a deal with Trump to open the
restaurant in the historic Old Post Office building near the White
House, which Trump won the right to lease and renovate from the U.S.
government.
The project, called the Trump International Hotel, opened on Sept. 12,
almost a year after it was originally expected to begin operating.
Zakarian backed out in July 2015, after the speech Trump gave on June
16, 2015 announcing his candidacy and bemoaning the flow of people
across the southern U.S. border. Zakarian said Trump's comments were out
of sync with his "personal core values."
Several companies, including Macy's Inc, broadcaster NBC and stock car
racing organization NASCAR, also cut ties with Trump after his comments.
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump holds a rally with
supporters at the Suburban Collection Showplace in Novi, Michigan,
U.S. September 30, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Trump, through his subsidiary operating the hotel, sued Zakarian,
alleging the broken deal cost him more than $10 million.
In the deposition, Trump also said his comments about Mexicans
illegally crossing the border had helped him win the Republican
presidential nomination, a sign his views were "pretty mainstream."
The case is Trump Old Post Office LLC et al v. CZ-National LLC, et
al, District of Columbia Superior Court.
(Reporting by Emily Flitter; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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