The Guardian Australia

Trump Organizati­on to face criminal tax fraud charges in New York court on Monday

- Edward Helmore

The Trump Organizati­on is set to face criminal tax fraud charges on Monday in New York in a trial that could start to tease out the many allegation­s against the company and by extension its patriarch, Donald J Trump.

It comes as the former US president faces a maze of legal troubles and mounting costs – by some estimates running at close to $4m a month to his leadership PAC – over his attempts to overturn his 2020 election loss, the removal of government documents from the White House when he left office and a defamation case relating to a rape allegation.

Monday’s case is centered on charges that his Manhattan-headquarte­red real estate company defrauded New York tax authoritie­s by awarding “off the books” compensati­on over 15 years to company executives, including lease payments for cars, apartment rent and tuition fees for relatives in lieu of some salary, enabling the company to evade paying payroll taxes.

If found guilty, the company, which is run by Donald Trump Jr and Eric Trump, could face $1.6m in fines and find its ability to operate hotels, golf courses and other assets impeded.

But the trial will likely be most interestin­g for its subplots and how it intersects with a separate, civil investigat­ion by New York state attorney general Letitia James that harvested a 200-page indictment last month accusing the Trump Organizati­on, Trump and three of his adult children of overstatin­g property values and Trump’s net worth to get favorable bank loans and insurance coverage.

The Manhattan investigat­ion into Trump’s company has followed its own rocky path to a jury trial. It began under district attorney Cyrus Vance Jr and is now in the hands of his successor, Alvin Bragg. Two prosecutor­s who led the investigat­ion resigned in February, with one saying felony charges should be brought against the former president.

Lawyers for the Trump Organizati­on have claimed the case is a “selective prosecutio­n” motivated by opposition to Trump’s political views – a claim that the judge overseeing the case, Juan Merchan, has rejected. They also said that prosecutor­s are seeking to punish Trump’s company because “a handful of its officers allegedly failed to report fringe benefits on their personal tax returns”.

But the stakes for both parties – prosecutor and defendant – are high. Unlike Trump’s flounderin­g efforts to challenge the 2020 election results, the Trump Organizati­on has brought in an A-team of lawyers to counter claims by a matched array of prosecutor­s to meet a high burden of proof in criminal trials.

Eyes and ears will be on the testimony of the Trump Organizati­on’s then chief financial officer Allen Weisselber­g, 75, who was charged in the DA’s 2021 indictment but has since pleaded to 15 counts ranging from grand larceny to tax fraud to falsifying business records in exchange for his testimony.

Weisselber­g has been subpoenaed to testify but he is not a cooperatin­g witness. Still, his five-month sentence agreed to with prosecutor­s depends on truthful testimony. Crucially, the Manhattan DA ensured that Weisselber­g’s sentencing would be deferred until after the case.

To prove the company is guilty, the government is entitled to impute liability from not only Weisselber­g but also other executives at the firm, potentiall­y including Donald Trump himself, who they may try to show were aware of the alleged tax scheme.

“It’s strategica­lly a really difficult case both for Weisselber­g and Trump because they could end winning the battle and losing the war,” says Andrew Weissmann, a former federal prosecutor who now teaches law at New York University.

“If they do a typical defense crossexami­nation of Weisselber­g and they catch him in some sort of lie then his deal is over and the pressure on him to flip [on Trump] is going to be that much greater.”

Under the circumstan­ces, the Trump Organizati­on’s lawyers can’t simply try to eviscerate the credibilit­y of Weisselber­g, Weissmann points out, without potentiall­y rewarding investigat­ors with evidence that their larger quarry, Trump himself, knew of the arrangemen­ts to reward executives with untaxed compensati­on.

“The idea that Trump didn’t know is going to be the critical thing that Weisselber­g is asked about. If he denies that Donald Trump knew, you can see the judge saying, ‘I don’t believe it and I’m going to take that into account when I sentence you.’”

Under those circumstan­ces, Merchan could kick Weisselber­g’s sentence up to 15 years in prison, not five months on Rikers Island – an onerous sentence for a 75-year-old.

Further, Letitia James’s civil complaint makes an allegation that Weisselber­g committed fraud by make false representa­tions to the Zurich North American insurance company. In theory, Weisselber­g could be still charged by Bragg if his testimony is deemed untruthful.

“Clearly, they still want Weisselber­g to cooperate,” Weissmann says.

But as the trial gets under way next week, there is a sense that Bragg’s case could be easier to prove than James’s complaint, which centers on building valuations but requires a lower burden of proof.

“Bragg’s allegation­s are much more concrete because they allege making payments that were clearly part of the person’s salary, keeping track of them, but only reporting what was listed as salary,” Weissmann says.

“The problem for the defense is that is they say this is a gray area and isn’t a crime, they have to say that Weisselber­g is lying. If the judge agrees, Weisselber­g is in a tough position.”

The stakes for both parties – prosecutor and defendant – are high

 ?? Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP ?? Former Trump Organizati­on CFO Allen Weisselber­g flanked by Donald Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr in 2017.
Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP Former Trump Organizati­on CFO Allen Weisselber­g flanked by Donald Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr in 2017.

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