Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump took $17 million in insurance for damage few remember

- BY JEFF HORWITZ AND TERRY SPENCER

PALM BEACH, Fla. — Donald Trump says he received a $17 million insurance payment in 2005 for hurricane damage to Mar-a-Lago, his private club in Palm Beach. But The Associated Press has found little evidence of such large-scale damage.

Two years after a series of storms, the real estate tycoon said he didn’t know how much had been spent on repairs, but acknowledg­ed he pocketed some of the money. He transferre­d funds into his personal accounts, saying that under the terms of his policy “you didn’t have to reinvest it.”

“Landscapin­g, roofing, walls, painting, leaks, artwork in the — you know, the great tapestries, tiles, Spanish tiles, the beach, the erosion,” he said of the storm damage. “It’s still not what it was.”

Trump’s descriptio­n of extensive damage does not match the versions of Mar-a-Lago members and even Trump loyalists. In an interview about Mara-Lago’s history, Trump’s longtime former butler, Anthony Senecal, recalled no catastroph­ic damage. He said Hurricane Wilma, the last of a string of storms which barreled through in 2004 and 2005, flattened trees behind the estate, but the house itself only lost some roof tiles.

“That house has never been seriously damaged,” said Senecal, discussing Mar-a-Lago’s luck with hurricanes. “I was there for all of them.”

Just over two weeks after Wilma, Trump hosted 370 guests at Mar-a-Lago for the wedding of his son Donald Jr. Wedding photograph­s by Getty Images showed the house, pools, cabanas and landscapin­g seemingly in good repair.

Valuations for Mara-Lago are subjective, but Forbes estimated the 110,000-square-foot property’s value at $150 million in its most recent appraisal of Trump’s net worth. Tim Frank, Palm Beach’s planning administra­tor at the time of the hurricanes, said $17 million in work would have required “dozens, maybe scores of workers.”

Palm Beach building department records showed no permits for constructi­on on that scale after the storms. The only permits that appeared hurricane-related were $3,000 in repairs to storm-damaged outdoor lighting and the vacuuming of sand from the property’s beachfront pool.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States