Donald Trump's company to be sentenced for 15-year tax fraud
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[January 13, 2023]
By Karen Freifeld and Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Donald Trump on Friday will learn how the company
that bears the former U.S. president's name will be punished after being
found guilty of scheming to defraud tax authorities for 15 years.
A New York state judge will impose the sentence after jurors in
Manhattan found two Trump Organization affiliates guilty of 17 criminal
charges last month.
The sentencing comes three days after Justice Juan Merchan of the
Manhattan criminal court ordered Allen Weisselberg, who worked for
Trump's family for a half-century and was the company's former chief
financial officer, to jail for five months after he testified as the
prosecution's star witness.
Trump's company faces only a maximum $1.6 million penalty, but has said
it plans to appeal. No one else was charged or faces jail time in the
case.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office, which brought the
case, is still conducting a criminal probe into Trump's business
practices.
Bill Black, a professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School
of Law specializing in white-collar crime, called the expected penalty a
"rounding error" that offers "zero deterrence" to others, including
Trump.
"This is a farce," he said. "No one will stop committing these kinds of
crimes because of this sentence."
The case has long been a thorn in the side of the Republican former
president, who calls it part of a witch hunt by Democrats who dislike
him and his politics.
Trump also faces a $250 million civil lawsuit by state Attorney General
Letitia James accusing him and his adult children Donald Trump Jr.,
Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump of inflating his net worth and the value of
his company's assets to save money on loans and insurance.
Bragg and James are Democrats, as is Bragg's predecessor Cyrus Vance,
who brought the criminal case. Trump is seeking the presidency in 2024,
after losing his re-election bid in 2020.
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Allen Howard Weisselberg, the former
Trump Organization CFO, appears for sentencing for tax fraud scheme
in New York State Supreme Court in the Manhattan borough of New York
City, U.S., January 10, 2023. Curtis Means/Pool via REUTERS
At a four-week trial, prosecutors offered evidence that Trump's
company covered personal expenses such as rent and car leases for
executives without reporting them as income, and pretended that
Christmas bonuses were non-employee compensation.
Trump himself signed bonus checks, prosecutors said, as well as the
lease on Weisselberg's luxury Manhattan apartment and private school
tuition for the CFO's grandchildren.
"The whole narrative that Donald Trump was blissfully ignorant is
just not real," Assistant District Attorney Joshua Steinglass told
jurors in his closing argument.
Weisselberg's testimony helped convict the company, though he said
Trump was not part of the fraud scheme. He also refused to help
Bragg in his broader investigation into Trump.
The Trump Organization had put Weisselberg on paid leave until they
severed ties this week. His lawyer said the split, announced on
Tuesday, was amicable.
Weisselberg, 75, is serving his sentence in New York City's
notorious Rikers Island jail.
State law limits the penalties that Justice Merchan can impose on
Trump's company. A corporation can be fined up to $250,000 for each
tax-related count and $10,000 for each non-tax count.
Trump faces several other legal woes, including probes related to
the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, his retention of
classified documents after leaving the White House, and efforts to
overturn his 2020 election loss in Georgia.
(Reporting by Karen Freifeld and Jonathan Stempel; editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
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