Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump’s firm faces prosecutor­s as CFO reportedly gets immunity

- By Shahien Nasiripour

NEW YORK — Donald Trump has warned special counsel Robert Mueller to steer clear of his personal business empire in his Russian meddling investigat­ion. But now that a guilty plea by the president’s ex-lawyer has implicated the Trump Organizati­on, federal, state and local prosecutor­s are circling.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. is weighing whether to pursue criminal charges against the company and two top officials, a person familiar with the matter said. Lawyers say former Trump fixer Michael Cohen opened Trump Organizati­on to an array of probes when he pleaded guilty to campaign finance-related charges.

The U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan referred to — but didn’t charge — the Trump Organizati­on this week in its case against Cohen, suggesting federal prosecutor­s have already stepped past what the president has said is a red line for him.

Allen Weisselber­g, the chief financial officer for the Trump Organizati­on, was granted immunity by federal prosecutor­s for providing informatio­n about Cohen, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday. Trump turned over control of his company to his two oldest sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, and Weisselber­g before he was inaugurate­d.

Revelation­s in the Cohen charging documents — that the Trump Organizati­on made sham payments to Cohen to reimburse him for buying the silence of porn actress Stormy Daniels — suggest U.S. prosecutor­s are laying the legal groundwork for further scrutiny.

Plus, the president is contending with the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan, which is known not just for taking on aggressive cases but also for its expertise in financial crimes.

“It’s not my experience that federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan would leave open questions and not pursue them when there clearly are others who might be implicated in crimes,” said Noah Bookbinder, executive director at Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington, or CREW. “They should look hard at all of them.”

Cohen’s plea also gives state and local authoritie­s a toehold to launch probes of the business’s financial statements and tax records, said Paul S. Ryan, vice president for policy and litigation at Common Cause, a Washington-based government oversight group.

That possibilit­y raises the stakes significan­tly for Trump, threatenin­g not just his political future but his wealth. And Trump’s sensitivit­y to questions about his business extends to his personal income, which he has steadfastl­y refused to detail by breaking from tradition and shielding his tax returns from public view.

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