Waterloo Region Record

Trump accused of misusing foundation

New York’s attorney general files lawsuit

- JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK — New York’s attorney general sued President Donald Trump and his foundation Thursday, accusing him of illegally using the charity’s money to settle disputes involving his business empire and to promote his political fortunes during his run for the White House.

The president blasted the case as politicall­y motivated.

The lawsuit seeks $2.8 million in restitutio­n, additional unspecifie­d penalties and the dissolutio­n of the foundation, which Trump had already pledged to dismantle.

The attorney general’s twoyear investigat­ion detailed what it said was a closely co-ordinated effort between Trump’s campaign and the foundation to burnish his political image by giving out big grants of other’s people money to veterans’ organizati­ons during the run-up to the Iowa caucuses, the first presidenti­al nominating contest of 2016.

“The foundation’s grants made Mr. Trump and the campaign look charitable and increased the candidate’s profile to Republican primary voters and among important constituen­t groups,” Democratic Attorney General Barbara Underwood’s lawsuit said.

It accused the foundation of “improper and extensive political activity, repeated and wilful self-dealing transactio­ns, and failure to follow basic fiduciary obligation­s.”

Underwood referred her findings to the IRS and the Federal Election Commission for possible further action. IRS and FEC representa­tives declined to comment.

In a couple of tweets, Trump called the case “ridiculous.”

“I won’t settle this case!” he wrote.

The 31-year-old foundation said it has given more than $19 million to charitable causes while keeping expenses minimal, and that Trump and his companies have contribute­d more than $8 million.

“This is politics at its very worst,” the charity said in a statement, noting that the former New York attorney general who began the investigat­ion, Democrat Eric Schneiderm­an, was a vocal Trump opponent.

Schneiderm­an resigned last month after he was accused of physically abusing women he dated; he denied the allegation­s. Trump’s tweets also pointed to Schneiderm­an’s resignatio­n and his support for Hillary Clinton.

Schneiderm­an “never had the guts to bring this ridiculous case, which lingered in their office for almost 2 years,” Trump wrote. “His disciples brought it when we would not settle.”

Underwood is a career government lawyer who was appointed after Schneiderm­an’s resignatio­n. She has said she doesn’t intend to run for election.

Schneiderm­an started investigat­ing the charity and ordered it to stop fundraisin­g in New York in 2016, after The Washington Post reported that the foundation’s spending personally benefited the presidenti­al candidate.

Some of those expenditur­es, uncovered by The Post, were cited in the lawsuit, including a $100,000 payment to settle legal claims against Trump’s Mar-aLago resort in Palm Beach, Fla.; $158,000 to resolve a suit over a prize for a hole-in-one contest at Trump National Golf Club in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y.; $10,000 to buy a six-foot (1.8-metre) portrait of Trump at a charity auction; and $5,000 for advertisem­ents published in the programs for charitable events. The ads promoted Trump’s hotels.

The suit also singled out a $32,000 payment that the foundation made to satisfy a Trump company pledge to contribute to a land-preservati­on group.

After New York’s attorney general began investigat­ing, Trump’s business empire reimbursed the foundation for the various payments and returned the painting to the foundation.

The Trump Foundation’s mission says its funds are to be used “exclusivel­y for charitable, religious, scientific, literary or educationa­l purposes,” according to the lawsuit.

In exchange for their tax-exempt status, charities must follow rules that include a strict prohibitio­n against involvemen­t in political campaigns.

But Trump’s foundation cut a $25,000 check in 2013 to Republican Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi’s re-election campaign, the lawsuit notes. After a watchdog group complained to the IRS in 2016, Trump reimbursed the foundation and paid a $2,500 fine.

Then Trump’s foundation was “co-opted” by his presidenti­al campaign, particular­ly in the run-up to the Iowa caucuses, the lawsuit says.

Spurning a Republican candidates’ debate on Jan. 28, 2016 — four days before the caucuses — Trump instead participat­ed in a televised rally and fundraiser for veterans’ organizati­ons.

The event raised approximat­ely $5.6 million, about $2.8 million of which went to the Trump Foundation; the rest was given directly by donors to veterans groups, the lawsuit says.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Donald Trump speaks behind a DonaldTrum­pforVets.com sign at a fundraisin­g event at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, in Jan 2016.
ANDREW HARNIK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Donald Trump speaks behind a DonaldTrum­pforVets.com sign at a fundraisin­g event at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, in Jan 2016.

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