Chattanooga Times Free Press

Accounting firm says Trump’s financial statements aren’t reliable

- BY MICHAEL R. SISAK

NEW YORK — The accounting firm that prepared former President Donald Trump’s annual financial statements says the documents, used to secure lucrative loans and burnish Trump’s image as a wealthy businessma­n, “should no longer be relied upon” after New York’s attorney general said they regularly misstated the value of assets.

In a letter to the Trump Organizati­on’s lawyer Feb. 9, Mazars USA LLP advised the company to inform anyone who had gotten the documents not to use them when assessing the financial health of the company and the ex-president. The firm also said it was cutting ties with Trump, its highest-profile client.

Mazars’ letter, made public in a court filing Monday, came just weeks after New York Attorney General Letitia James said her civil investigat­ion uncovered evidence that Trump and his company used “fraudulent or misleading” valuations of its golf clubs, skyscraper­s and other properties to get loans and tax benefits.

“While we have not concluded that the various financial statements, as a whole, contain material discrepanc­ies, based upon the totality of the circumstan­ces, we believe our advice to you to no longer rely upon those financial statements is appropriat­e,” Mazars General Counsel William J. Kelly wrote to his Trump Organizati­on counterpar­t, Alan Garten.

Kelly told Garten that Mazars could no longer work with Trump because of a conflict of interest and urged him to find another tax preparer. Kelly said several Trump-related tax returns still needed to be finished, including those of the former president and first lady.

The Trump Organizati­on said in a statement it was “disappoint­ed that Mazars has chosen to part ways,” but took Kelly’s letter as a positive because the accounting firm hadn’t found material discrepanc­ies in Trump’s financial statements.

The letter “confirms that after conducting a subsequent review of all prior statements of financial condition, Mazars’ work was performed in accordance with all applicable accounting standards and principles and that such statements of financial condition do not contain any material discrepanc­ies,” the Trump Organizati­on said. “This confirmati­on effectivel­y renders the investigat­ions by the DA and AG moot.”

Kelly said Mazars performed its work on Trump’s financial statements “in accordance with profession­al standards” but that it could no longer stand by the documents in light of James’ findings and its own investigat­ion. Kelly said Mazars’ conclusion­s applied to Trump’s 2011-2020 financial statements. Another firm handled Trump’s 2021 financial statement.

James’ office included a copy of Kelly’s letter in a court filing as she seeks to enforce a subpoena to have Trump and his two eldest children, Donald Jr. and Ivanka, testify under oath. A state court judge, Arthur Engoron, is scheduled to hear arguments Thursday in the subpoena dispute.

James, a Democrat, said Monday that given the evidence, “there should be no doubt that this is a lawful investigat­ion and that we have legitimate reason” to question Trump, a Republican, and his children, both of whom have been Trump Organizati­on executives.

Trump’s lawyers have argued that any testimony they give could be used against them in a parallel criminal investigat­ion being overseen by the Manhattan district attorney’s office — a probe that led to tax fraud charges last year against the Trump Organizati­on and Allen Weisselber­g, its longtime chief financial officer.

Trump has given his Statement of Financial Condition — a yearly snapshot of his holdings — to banks to secure hundreds of millions of dollars worth of loans on properties such as a Wall Street office building and a Florida golf course, and to financial magazines to justify his place among the world’s billionair­es.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN, FILE ?? A woman walks past the Trump Building in New York’s financial district in January 2021.
AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN, FILE A woman walks past the Trump Building in New York’s financial district in January 2021.

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