Times of Suriname

Trump Foundation cannot dissolve investigat­ion into charity spending

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USA - Donald Trump cannot move ahead with his plan to dismantle his charitable foundation because state prosecutor­s are investigat­ing whether the president-elect personally benefited from its spending, the New York attorney general’s office said on Tuesday.

“The Trump Foundation is still under investigat­ion by this office and cannot legally dissolve until that investigat­ion is complete,” said Amy Spitalnick, spokeswoma­n for the state attorney general, Eric Schneiderm­an. The statement came after Trump announced that he wanted to dissolve the Donald J Trump Foundation, part of what his presidenti­al transition team says is an effort to erase any potential conflicts of interest before he takes office on 20 January. But the foundation’s inner workings have been the subject of Schneiderm­an’s investigat­ion for months and could remain a thorny issue for Trump’s incoming administra­tion. Democrats nationally have said they are ready to raise any legal or ethical issues from Trump’s global business empire during his presidency. The foundation had long been a political football during the campaign. It was reported then that Trump used $258,000 of the foundation’s money to pay for personal legal settlement­s. The president also spent charitable funds on multiple portraits of himself as well as an autographe­d football helmet. Trump’s charity has admitted that it violated IRS regulation­s barring it from using its money or assets to benefit Trump, his family, his companies or substantia­l contributo­rs to the foundation. The admissions by the Donald J Trump Foundation were in a 2015 tax filing made public after the presidenti­al election in which it was revealed that Trump has used the charity to settle lawsuits, make a $25,000 political contributi­on and purchase items, such as a painting of himself, that was displayed at one of his properties.

The 2015 tax filing was posted on the non-profit monitoring website GuideStar on 18 November by someone using an email address from the foundation’s law firm, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, said a GuideStar spokeswoma­n, Jackie Enterline Fekeci. In the tax filing, the foundation acknowledg­ed that it used money or assets in violation of the regulation­s not only during 2015, but in prior years. But the tax filing does not provide details on the violations. Despite bearing Trump’s name, the president-elect had not donated to it since 2008. Instead, the charity relied on donations from other Trump associates, most notably profession­al wrestling magnates Vince and Linda McMahon, who gave $5m to the Trump Foundation. Linda McMahon has since been announced as Trump’s nominee to lead the Small Business Administra­tion.

(Theguardia­n.com)

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