Trump signed checks at issue in tax fraud scheme, ex-CFO testifies
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[November 18, 2022]
By Luc Cohen and Karen Freifeld
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Former U.S. President
Donald Trump signed checks for Christmas bonuses for executives at his
namesake company as if they were independent contractors, longtime chief
financial officer Allen Weisselberg testified on Thursday.
But Weisselberg said Trump did not conspire with him on the tax fraud
scheme for which the Trump Organization is on trial.
Paying employees as independent contractors is one way prosecutors in
the Manhattan district attorney's office say Trump's real estate company
misled tax authorities during a 15-year period. The scheme also included
paying personal expenses for employees, prosecutors said.
Trump has not been accused of wrongdoing. Weisselberg pleaded guilty in
August and agreed to testify as part of a plea deal.
Weisselberg said on Thursday that he, controller Jeffrey McConney, and a
handful of other executives at Trump's real estate company between
around 2005 and 2017 received bonuses from Trump Organization companies
as non-employee compensation that saved them and the company taxes.
"For years, Donald Trump always wanted to sign the bonus checks,"
Weisselberg said. "I would usually bring them in."
Asked by prosecutor Susan Hoffinger if Trump understood they were for
employees, Weisselberg said, "Correct."
But under cross-examination by Trump Organization lawyer Alan Futerfas,
Weisselberg said he conspired with McConney, but not with any member of
the Trump family.
"It was my own personal greed that led to this," said Weisselberg, who
is on paid leave from the company. He testified that he is still
receiving his salary of $640,000 per year and hopes to get another
$500,000 bonus in January.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump
speaks at a rally to support Republican candidates ahead of midterm
elections, in Dayton, Ohio, U.S. November 7, 2022. REUTERS/Gaelen
Morse/File Photo
Weisselberg, 75, admitted to evading taxes on $1.76 million of
income when he pleaded guilty. McConney is immune from prosecution
for the tax fraud because he testified before the grand jury that
indicted both Weisselberg and the Trump Organization.
The company has pleaded not guilty and has argued that Weisselberg
acted to benefit himself.
Weisselberg on Thursday also said Trump cut checks for his
grandchildren's private school tuition. He said Trump himself
offered to make the payments after Weisselberg saw him do so for his
own grandchildren's tuition.
"I said, 'Don't forget I'm going to pay you back for this,'"
Weisselberg said. But he said he and Trump never discussed how.
Weisselberg said he eventually reduced his salary and bonus by the
amount of the tuition payments Trump covered, as well as rent for a
luxury Manhattan apartment paid for by the company. That reduced his
taxable income.
The questionable practices eventually came to an end in 2017 when
Trump became president, Weisselberg said.
"We were going through an entire cleanup process of the company to
make sure that since Mr. Trump is now president, everything was
being done properly," Weisselberg said.
Under questioning by Futerfas, Weisselberg said he betrayed the
trust the company placed in him.
Asked whether he was embarrassed by what he did, he choked up and
replied, "More than you can imagine."
(Reporting by Luc Cohen and Karen Freifeld in New York; Editing by
Matthew Lewis)
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