Trump Organization CFO , Surrenders to Manhatten DA

Andrew Donaldson

Born and raised in West Virginia, Andrew has since lived and traveled around the world several times over. Though frequently writing about politics out of a sense of duty and love of country, most of the time he would prefer discussions on history, culture, occasionally nerding on aviation, and his amateur foodie tendencies. He can usually be found misspelling/misusing words on Twitter @four4thefire and his food writing website Yonder and Home. Andrew is the host of Heard Tell podcast. Subscribe to Andrew's Heard Tell SubStack for free here:

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15 Responses

  1. InMD says:

    I actually think Trump’s many detractors (of which I am one) need to be circumspect about continuing to cheer this on. I’m sure plenty of his associates, maybe even him, could be charged with white collar violations and corruption unlikely to have ever been investigated but for his presidency. All this does is keep him relevant when what we should want is for him to fade off. MSNBC ratings aren’t worth keeping Trump front and center in the collective American psyche.Report

    • Oscar Gordon in reply to InMD says:

      Agree, however, my understanding is that Trump businesses are something of a cancer of grift in the NE, consuming much to slake his ego, and returning very little. I understand the desire to try and dismantle it somehow.Report

      • InMD in reply to Oscar Gordon says:

        I won’t shed any tears for its destruction. Still I saw some article the other day about plummeting ratings for cable news since Trump left office. I want this trend to continue, and if I could ever point to a particular reason I voted Biden (beyond the post I wrote here) that’s it. Trump is a cancer on us and we need him cut out, not fed.Report

        • Oscar Gordon in reply to InMD says:

          I highly doubt any action against Trump will stay out of the news, but the DA/AG doesn’t need to hold press conferences.Report

          • Philip H in reply to Oscar Gordon says:

            There is an opinion piece on CNN this morning that says the DA should seek a gag order since Trump has a long history of very public savaging of his perceived enemies, and such savaging would possibly taint the trial. Lets hope Cy Vance was reading it.Report

    • Michael Cain in reply to InMD says:

      To be honest, my expectations were that unless the DA had a good handle on tens/hundreds of millions of dollars in money laundering, they would just let it go.Report

      • Marchmaine in reply to Michael Cain says:

        Early reporting and all that, but…

        “The charges are believed to involve fringe benefits given to employees, including Weisselberg, sources said.”

        Capone had Tax Evasion; but the coppers finally nabbed Trump on fringies… well, not Trump, but you know.

        I have to believe there’s more, because it does kinda beggar the imagination to think that a prosecutor combing through all of Trump’s financial dealings (is this the DA who also got the tax returns?) coming up with Fringe Benefit violations is…?

        I mean, my estimation of Trump would go up a notch if he could have a DA crawl up his corporate ass and all they could do was arrest the CFO on excess compensation charges.Report

        • InMD in reply to Marchmaine says:

          Lack of indictments after this long IMO speaks for itself, and in the other direction. Obviously I reserve the right to totally change my opinion as facts emerge.Report

          • DavidTC in reply to InMD says:

            Didn’t the prosecutors only get the Trump Organization’s financial records in _March_, when the last appeal failed?

            At which point Mazars USA turned over millions of records.

            I mean, four months, during a pandemic with restrictions still in place, isn’t that long a time to go through millions of records.Report

        • DavidTC in reply to Marchmaine says:

          I think it’s less ‘That is all they could come up with’ and more ‘This is the _incredibly_ obvious thing they wanted to start with and is a slam dunk in court’, with hopes of getting a cooperating witness to go after more.

          All the articles say this is the ‘first’ set of criminal charges.

          And ‘fringe benefits’ is a very poor way to describe this. The allegation is Weisselberg (And most senior executives) basically received almost all his income via the Trump Organization paying for everything. His housing, his cars, his grandkids tuition, actual literal _cash_ (!!!)

          Like, this isn’t some small possible tax fraud, this is as obvious tax fraud as it can possibly get.Report

      • JS in reply to Michael Cain says:

        My read of the situation regarding the Trump Organization is that, for many, many, MANY years they had an understanding with the NYAG called “Don’t look at my stuff”.

        Why they had that understanding is speculative (although I would speculate furiously about how Trump’s go-to move was to use David Pecker to blackmail people into not investigating him, highlighted by brazenly trying it against Jeff Bezos), but it’s clear while the previous AG seemed unable to investigate Trump and his various subsidiaries (even when, as the case with his charity, someone else had literally done all the legwork and dumped the entire “Obvious crime is obvious” onto the public), the current one sees no problem with it.

        And judging from what I’ve heard about this indictment, it’s all tax evasion of the most blatant sort, the kind only idiots or those who have spent decades getting away with it are comfortable trying.

        Stuff like “How about I just pay your kid’s private school tuition, and since it’s not salary, neither of us pay taxes on it!” kind of tax evasion. Same with renting or giving out apartments either free or below rate, all the sort of tax dodges you associate with a “business owner” with five employees who thinks he’s a genius tries. And whose accountant tries very hard to make him stop doing.Report

        • DavidTC in reply to JS says:

          And judging from what I’ve heard about this indictment, it’s all tax evasion of the most blatant sort, the kind only idiots or those who have spent decades getting away with it are comfortable trying.

          Yeah, seriously.

          People vastly underestimate how many small business owners try to avoid taxes.

          I once spent several days explaining to a small business owner that, no, you do indeed have to collect sales tax on ‘processing fees’, regardless of what they are called, and _I_ wasn’t going to set up his e-commerce system to avoid that…if he wanted to break the law, he could after I left. And I’m not a fricking accountant, I just googled it because obvious tax evasion of ‘selling at a low price and adding a lot in fees to avoid taxes’ is obvious and thus, I assumed, probably not legal!

          He, of course, assumed no one had ever thought of that before, I guess. They all think that, that no one has ever thought of the very clever ways they are going to avoid the law. Small business owners are the weirdest sort of pretty-egoists and people who think they are amazingly clever you have ever met, and in reality most of them are just moderately competent at what they do and managed to make a significant pile of money into a pile of money that is slightly larger…or not. They certainly aren’t the geniuses they think they are, and often Dunning-Kruger keeps them from realizing that.

          And Trump, for all the money he throws around, is actually exactly that sort of small business owner (I’m not sure I’d call him ‘moderately competent’.)…although his tax evasion is much larger. His ego is much, much larger too, and he’s very sure that no one will ever figure out anything he does, he assumes as he blatantly writes a check from his charity to pay a fine that his business incurred, an actual real thing he did, least we all forget.

          Just blatant, obvious, illegal stuff. It’s not weird this stuff is being found.Report

          • JS in reply to DavidTC says:

            A friend of mine got a surprise divorce about….8 years ago? 10?

            And by “surprise” I mean “she thought everything was fine but her husband had been wanting to divorce her for years but had waited until their youngest child started full time kindergarten”

            He’d handled the finances and she’d quit her job to care for the kids until they got into public school, as it was financially better than her working with daycare costs, and he made good money.

            When he decided, about five years prior, that he wanted a divorce he’s stopped putting money into her retirement accounts and instead doubled up on his. Pretty much every bill, investment, loan, or credit card he pretty much arranged so that he’d spring a divorce on her with him having all the assets, and her having all the debt.

            He then popped up with “I want a divorce” followed by “I keep my retirement funds, you keep yours, and we split the house and bills, but I’ll pay you X dollars a month for the first year so you can get on your feet. It’s a better deal than if you get a lawyer, so you shouldn’t bother.”. Not because he thought a lawyer would see through his clever work, but because he truly thought what he’d done was clever, legal, innovative. He’d won at law.

            She got a lawyer. Who looked over it all and told her “Your husband is the most common sort of idiot. Judges see this amateur attempts at asset hiding twice a day, every day, during divorces. They have no patience with it.

            Your husband just ensured, as I’m guessing his lawyer his explaining to him, that you’ll walk out of this divorce with far more than he does. ”

            And she did. She could have gotten more, if she’d gone to court or really pressed him, but she just wanted to walk out with a fair split and primary custody (the 50%+1 of split custody).

            Her husband, a rather bright engineer, thought he was a genius who found a divorce loophole no one ever had. You know, hiding martial assets under one name and pretending they weren’t common assets.

            And as much of a jerk as he was, he was far, far smarter than Donald Trump.Report

  2. Saul Degraw says:

    How much of a schemdrik does someone need to be a fall guy Donald Trump?Report