Accountant faces pressure to turn on Trump in criminal probe
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[March 08, 2021]
By Joseph Tanfani and Jason Szep
(Reuters) - When lawyers asked Donald Trump
more than a decade ago to identify who estimated values on some of his
signature properties, he shrugged and pointed to his longtime
accountant, Allen Weisselberg.
“I think ultimately probably Mr. Weisselberg,” he said, testifying in
2007 in a defamation lawsuit he brought against a journalist, a case
that hinged on whether Trump had inflated the value of his business
empire. “I never got too much involved, other than I would give my
opinion.”
A judge dismissed that suit, but Trump’s comments illustrate the
challenges now facing Weisselberg, 73, as he comes under scrutiny in
Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance’s investigation into whether the
former U.S. president and his Trump Organization committed financial
crimes.
Few people have been as deeply involved in Trump’s finances as
Weisselberg, a trusted figure in Trump’s family business who began
working for Trump’s father, Fred, in 1973 at the company’s Brooklyn
office, paying bills and tracking the rental payments from apartment
towers.
Legal experts and a source familiar with the criminal investigation say
prosecutors’ apparent goal is to convince Weisselberg to cooperate with
the probe into Trump’s dealings.
“They want him to turn,” said the person familiar with the
investigation.
A spokesman for Vance declined to comment. Lawyers for Weisselberg and
Trump did not respond to requests for comment.
The Manhattan district attorney said in an August filing that the office
is investigating “possibly extensive and protracted criminal conduct” at
the Trump Organization, though he has not fully disclosed the scope of
the probe. In a September filing, he said “mountainous” misconduct
allegations could justify a grand jury probe into possible tax fraud,
insurance fraud and falsifying business records.
Vance’s office and a separate civil probe by New York Attorney General
Letitia James are both examining whether Trump misrepresented the value
of his assets for tax benefits, among other potential violations.
Weisselberg’s unique position in the Trump Organization puts him among a
small number of people who could provide prosecutors with crucial
evidence of intent to commit fraud. Legal experts say Trump may try to
put distance between himself and any controversial valuations of his
properties and businesses by citing Weisselberg’s role as financial
gatekeeper, as he did in the 2007 defamation case.
“It may very well be that Weisselberg will be Trump’s defense in a
criminal case,” said Michael Bachner, a defense attorney who once worked
as a prosecutor with Vance in the Manhattan office.
If Trump argues that he merely relied on the advice of his accountants
and lawyers, Weisselberg could be in the position of having to take the
heat himself for any potentially fraudulent dealings, Bachner said -
unless the accountant makes a deal with prosecutors and implicates
Trump.
“If I’m Trump, I’ve got to be nervous about this,” he said.
The source familiar with the investigation said that, in addition to
scrutinizing Weisselberg, prosecutors also asked questions about his
sons, who also had connections with Trump: Jack Weisselberg, a director
at Ladder Capital - a real estate investment firm that’s been a creditor
for four Trump properties - and Barry Weisselberg, who managed skating
rinks under Trump contracts with New York City.
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Trump tower is pictured amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
pandemic in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S.,
January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
Ladder Capital did not respond to requests for comment. Other Ladder
executives, but not Jack Weisselberg, appear on loan documents
involving Trump.
Jack and Barry Weisselberg did not respond to requests for comment.
UNIQUE POSITION OF TRUST
On March 1, after the U.S. Supreme Court denied Trump's last-ditch
effort to keep his tax records private, Vance’s office obtained
millions of pages of records on Trump’s taxes and finances. His
office has also added a prosecutor experienced in organized crime
and corruption, Mark Pomerantz, to the Trump investigation team, and
interviewed staff at Ladder Capital.
As the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer and executive
vice president, Weisselberg developed a unique position of trust
with Trump, according to interviews with four former Trump
Organization officials. The accountant handled Trump’s personal
finances as well as the company’s most sensitive financial
information, the officials said.
Barbara Res, Trump’s former construction manager, said Weisselberg
was part of the Trump family’s inner circle, but he kept an
unassuming profile. “He was the only one of the executives who would
refer to Donald as Mr. Trump,” she said. “He was that kind of guy.”
Res said Trump trusted Weisselberg as a pair of eyes to make sure
Trump’s other accountants and lawyers were doing their jobs. “Allen
wouldn’t go outside the company,” she said. “Allen wouldn’t talk;
Allen could be trusted to keep things quiet.”
When Trump’s former lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, arranged for a
hush-money payment to porn actress Stormy Daniels, Weisselberg was
involved in cutting the checks, Cohen testified in a February 2019
hearing held by a committee of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Weisselberg obtained limited immunity from federal prosecutors to
provide information in the investigation that targeted Cohen; he was
not charged with wrongdoing. Cohen pleaded guilty to tax evasion and
campaign finance violations.
Vance could seek a court order granting him access to Weisselberg’s
testimony in the federal case against Cohen, legal experts said.
During the 2019 committee hearing, Cohen identified Weisselberg as
one of the Trump executives who knew that Trump inflated assets in
statements to insurance companies for the purpose of reducing
premiums. In response to questions from Democratic Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Cohen said he could not confirm a New York
Times report on whether Trump under-reported values on inherited
real estate to reduce his taxes.
“Who would know the answers to those questions?” she asked.
“Allen Weisselberg,” Cohen said.
(Reporting by Jason Szep and Joseph Tanfani; editing by Brian
Thevenot)
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