Kuwait Times

US Senator calls for probe into promotion of Kushner Cos deal

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SHANGHAI: The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee has called for an investigat­ion into “potentiall­y fraudulent statements and misreprese­ntations” made by companies promoting investment in a property developmen­t involving the family company of White House advisor Jared Kushner.

Citing a May 12 report by Reuters, Chuck Grassley, a Republican senator from Iowa, requested a review of claims made by Chinese migration agency Qiaowai and the US Immigratio­n Fund (USIF) in the marketing of the One Journal Square project in Jersey City, New Jersey to potential investors in China. Grassley flagged his concerns to the Department of Homeland Security and the Securities and Exchange Commission in a May 24 letter that was later posted on his website.

Jupiter, Florida-based USIF contracted with Beijing-based Qiaowai to market projects including One Journal Square to potential investors through the controvers­ial EB-5 scheme. The program offers qualified foreign investors the chance at a green card in exchange for a $500,000 investment in a US business.

Kushner Companies is also working with KABR Group, a private equity fund, on the One Journal Square project, according to marketing materials on Qiaowai’s website. The developers are seeking to raise $150 million, or 15.4 percent of the funding, from EB-5 investors. Because the SEC considers some EB-5 investment­s securities, companies and individual­s that market these investment­s must comply with US securities laws.

EB-5 schemes must also comply with immigratio­n rules. Under United States Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services (USCIS) guidelines, EB-5 investors must put their capital at risk and the green card is not guaranteed. USCIS is part of the Department of Homeland Security. In an emailed response to a request for comment on Grassley’s letter, Stu Loeser, a spokesman for USIF, said:

Gross distortion­s

“Qiaowai and US Immigratio­n Fund are fully in compliance with all laws relating to the sale of securities to immigrant investors. These allegation­s are gross distortion­s and unsupporte­d by the facts.” Reuters previously revealed that Qiaowai’s promotiona­l materials online and on social media, including for the One Journal Square project, sometimes referred to a green card guarantee or “safeguard” and the safety of capital invested in EB-5 projects. After Reuters contacted Qiaowai for comment, these phrases were deleted. Qiaowai has also dropped the phrase “government-supported” from its online promotion of the One Journal Square project.

“It is a fundamenta­l rule of the EB-5 program that an applicant’s investment must remain “at risk” up to the end of the alien’s conditiona­l permanent resident status, and a “guaranteed” investment fails this basic EB-5 test; if Qiaowai is in fact guaranteei­ng the safety of the investment principal, all related EB-5 petitions should be rejected by USCIS,” wrote Grassley, who has long advocated for reform of the EB-5 program.

Qiaowai’s assurances to investors that their green cards were guaranteed and their funds were safe appeared to violate US securities laws, Grassley’s letter said. It also cited a report on the project’s promotion by the New York Times. Kushner Companies and the SEC declined to comment. Qiaowai, KABR Group and the Department of Homeland Security did not respond to requests for comment over the weekend.

Chinese investors account for around 80 percent of the nearly 10,000 EB-5 visas issued annually. Criticism of the program has centered on instances of fraud and the fact that most of the funds in a program originally intended to help impoverish­ed areas have instead gone to wealthy urban districts. Despite these concerns, earlier this month, Congress extended the EB-5 program until September 30.

The Chinese road show for One Journal Square earlier this month also attracted criticism. Kushner Companies apologized for Nicole Kushner Meyer’s reference to her brother, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, during the road show. The company stressed that he was only mentioned in order to make clear that he was not involved with the project. Kushner Companies representa­tives skipped some later road show events. Jared Kushner, whose White House portfolio includes relations with China, sold his stake in Kushner Companies to a family trust early this year. — Reuters

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