The Jerusalem Post

Mueller said to subpoena informatio­n on Trump accounts at Deutsche Bank

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FRANKFURT (Reuters) – US Special Counsel Robert Mueller has asked Deutsche Bank for data on accounts held by President Donald Trump and his family, a person close to the matter said on Tuesday.

Mueller is investigat­ing alleged Russian attempts to influence the 2016 US presidenti­al election and potential collusion by Trump aides.

Germany’s largest bank received a subpoena from Mueller several weeks ago to provide informatio­n on certain money and credit transactio­ns, the person said, without giving details, adding that key documents had been handed over in the meantime.

Deutsche Bank, which has loaned the Trump organizati­on hundreds of millions of dollars for real estate ventures, said it would not comment on any of its clients.

The bank rejected demands in June by US House Democrats to provide details of Trump’s finances, citing privacy laws.

Russia has denied meddling in the election and Trump has said there was no collusion.

A disclosure document posted on the US Office of Government Ethics website in June showed liabilitie­s for Trump of at least $130m. to Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas.

The German bank is one of the few major lenders that has lent large amounts to Trump in the past decade. A string of bankruptci­es at his hotel and casino businesses during the 1990s made most of Wall Street wary of extending him credit.

Trump got a $106m. loan from Deutsche Bank in 2011 to buy Doral, a golf resort in Miami, according to property filings with the local land register. The Doral loans mature in 2023, his electoral filings show.

Separately, Deutsche Bank has lent Trump up to $170m. for the Old Post Office, a historic Washington property where he has opened a hotel.

The bank also gave his Trump Internatio­nal Hotel and Tower, Chicago, a loan of up to $640m., according to a 2012 property filing.

US House Democrats have argued that US Federal laws protecting banking customers’ confidenti­ality do not apply to requests from Congress.

In January, Deutsche Bank agreed to pay $630m. in fines for organizing $10b. in sham trades that could have been used to launder money out of Russia.

The subpoena was earlier reported by German daily Handelsbla­tt.

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