Las Vegas Review-Journal

SUIT ALLEGES TRUMP CAMPAIGN, FOUNDATION WORKED IN CONCERT

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expenditur­es, even though such foundation­s are explicitly prohibited from political activities.

Trump immediatel­y attacked the lawsuit, characteri­zing it in a Twitter post as an attempt by the “sleazy New York Democrats” to damage him by suing the foundation, vowing not to settle the case.

“The sleazy New York Democrats, and their now disgraced (and run out of town) A.G. Eric Schneiderm­an, are doing everything they can to sue me on a foundation that took in $18,800,000 and gave out to charity more money than it took in, $19,200,000,” Trump wrote. “I won’t settle this case! Schneiderm­an, who ran the Clinton campaign in New York, never had the guts to bring this ridiculous case, which lingered in their office for almost 2 years. Now he resigned his office in disgrace, and his disciples brought it when we would not settle.”

The $10,000 portrait was one of several examples of the foundation being used in “at least five self-dealing transactio­ns,” according to the attorney general’s office, violating tax regulation­s that prohibit using nonprofit charities for private interests.

In 2007, to settle a dispute between the city of Palm Beach and Trump’s Mar-a-lago resort, the foundation paid $100,000 to the Fisher House Foundation, another charity.

In 2012, a man named Martin B. Greenberg sued the Trump National Golf Club after he made a hole-in-one at a fundraisin­g golf tournament that had promised to pay $1 million to golfers who aced the 13th hole, as he did. As part of a settlement, the charitable foundation paid $158,000 to a foundation run by Greenberg.

The foundation also paid $5,000 to one organizati­on for “promotiona­l space featuring Trump Internatio­nal Hotels,” and another $32,000 to satisfy a pledge made by a privately held entity controlled by Trump to a charitable land trust.

The foundation lawsuit and the referrals to the federal agencies are the latest of Trump’s voluminous legal challenges, starting with the ongoing investigat­ion by the special counsel, Robert Mueller, into ties between Trump, his associates and Russia. This week, Trump’s longtime fixer, Michael Cohen, scrapped his own legal team, as he faces an investigat­ion by the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan.

The attorney general’s action is also likely to embolden critics who have accused Trump of flouting legal norms. Trump has suggested that he might pardon himself in the Mueller investigat­ion and has repeatedly assailed the FBI.

“As our investigat­ion reveals, the Trump Foundation was little more than a checkbook for payments from Mr. Trump or his businesses to nonprofits, regardless of their purpose or legality,” said Barbara Underwood, New York’s attorney general, who has been on her job little over a month. “This is not how private foundation­s should function and my office intends to hold the foundation accountabl­e for its misuse of charitable assets.”

Many of the examples cited in the lawsuit were first reported by The Washington Post.

Nonprofit organizati­ons and charities like the Trump Foundation are governed by various state and federal laws that generally preclude them from lobbying, aiding a political campaign, or giving undue benefits that further a person’s self-interests, rather than that of the organizati­on. The restrictio­ns are in place to ensure that donations are used for the expressed purpose of the nonprofits; violations can result in penalties, including revocation of the organizati­on’s nonprofit status.

The attorney general’s office is seeking $2.8 million in restitutio­n from the Trump Foundation, and the foundation and its directors could face several million dollars in additional penalties, depending on how the court rules. The office is also seeking to bar the president from serving as a director, officer or trustee of another nonprofit for 10 years. Likewise, the petition seeks to bar Trump’s three eldest children, Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric, from the boards of nonprofits based in New York or that operate in New York for one year, which would have the effect of barring them from a wide range of groups based in other states.

The action could force Trump’s children to curtail relationsh­ips with a variety of organizati­ons. Last year, for example, Ivanka Trump said she intended to set up a charitable fund supporting “economic empowermen­t for women and girls.” After the election, Eric Trump distanced himself from his charitable foundation, which has also been under investigat­ion by the attorney general’s office related to shifting its resources to the Trump Organizati­on.

The foundation was explicitly “prohibited from participat­ing or intervenin­g in any political campaign on behalf of a candidate,” the complaint notes, adding that Donald Trump himself signed annual IRS filings, under penalty of perjury in which he attested that the foundation did not engage in political activity. “This statutory prohibitio­n is absolute.”

But roughly $2.8 million was raised for the foundation at a 2016 Iowa political fundraiser for the Trump campaign. At the time, Trump skipped a Republican debate and set up his own event to raise money for veterans, though he used the event to skewer his opponents and celebrate his own accomplish­ments.

After the event, his foundation “ceded control over the charitable funds it raised to senior Trump campaign staff, who dictated the manner in which the foundation would disburse those proceeds, directing the timing, amounts and recipients of the grants,” according to the complaint.

That same month, an official at the foundation emailed Lewandowsk­i, who was Trump’s campaign manager at the time, telling him “we should start thinking about how you want to distribute the funds collected.”

Lewandowsk­i, in a reply, wrote that “I think we should get the total collected and then put out a press release that we distribute­d the $$ to each of the groups.” He later sent a list of veterans’ groups “purportedl­y approved by Mr. Trump to receive grants from the Foundation.”

The list was created by another campaign staffer, Lisa Maciejowsk­i Gambuzza, and edited by a third, Stuart Jolly, a political director. And Lewandowsk­i asked that some of the disburseme­nts be made in Iowa in the days before that state’s presidenti­al nominating caucuses, which mark the kickoff of the primary calendar.

Allowing the campaign to control the spending of the foundation’s charitable funds represente­d coordinati­on between the two entities, as well “as an improper in-kind contributi­on of no less than $2.823 million (the amount donated to the foundation) to the campaign,” according to the lawsuit.

Federal election laws bar campaigns from coordinati­ng with nonprofit groups, and from accepting donations from most corporatio­ns, including most nonprofit corporatio­ns, while donations from individual­s are capped at $5,400 per election.

Trump long feuded with Underwood’s predecesso­r, Eric Schneiderm­an, who resigned last month amid a scandal involving allegation­s that he had physically abused a number of his girlfriend­s. Weeks after the 2016 election, Schneiderm­an’s office issued a “notice of violation” to the foundation, which had already attracted scrutiny over its practices, and ordered it to immediatel­y stop soliciting charitable donations in the state.

At the time, Hope Hicks, then a spokeswoma­n for Trump, said, “While we remain very concerned about the political motives behind A.G. Schneiderm­an’s investigat­ion, the Trump Foundation neverthele­ss intends to cooperate fully.”

Schneiderm­an’s resignatio­n raised questions whether his office, which had been at the heart of the Democratic legal resistance against the Trump administra­tion, would persist in such efforts. By filing the lawsuit, Underwood, who is a career prosecutor rather than a politician, seems inclined to do so.

She also recently accused Trump of “underminin­g the rule of law” with his pardon practices. She made the comment when she announced she was continuing an effort begun under Schneiderm­an to change New York’s double jeopardy law so that state and local prosecutor­s would have the power to bring criminal charges against aides to Trump who have been pardoned.

The Trump Foundation has been in legal limbo since after the election, when the president wanted to dissolve it amid growing controvers­y about its practices.

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