Marin Independent Journal

What NY prosecutor­s could learn from Trump’s tax records

- By Jim Mustian and David B. Caruso

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. fought for a year and a half to get access to former President Donald Trump’s tax records.

Now, thanks to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, he will soon have them. But what will that mean for the Democrat’s grand jury investigat­ion into Trump’s business affairs?

Former prosecutor­s say the trove of records could give investigat­ors new tools to determine whether Trump lied to lenders or tax officials, before or after he took office.

“Prosecutor­s look for discrepanc­ies in paperwork. For example, if Trump told the IRS he’s broke and lenders that he’s rich that’s just the type of discrepanc­y they could build a case around,” said Duncan Levin, a former federal prosecutor who worked on a wide range of white collar cases as Vance’s chief of asset forfeiture.

“These documents are a very important piece of the jigsaw puzzle,” Levin said.

Whether Trump’s records will contain evidence of a crime is uncertain. The former president, a Republican, has argued for years that he broke no laws and has been unfairly targeted by Democrats for political reasons.

Here is a look at where the tax records might be helpful, and where they might not help much, in the district attorney’s investigat­ion:

More than just returns

Trump went to extraordin­ary lengths to keep his federal income tax returns from becoming public, but those aren’t the only valuable documents included in this haul.

Trump’s accounting firm, Mazars USA, is supposed to turn over not only the final versions of Trump’s tax returns, but also draft versions of those returns and “any and all statements of financial condition, annual statements, periodic financial reports, and independen­t auditors’ reports” held by the company.

The Mazars subpoena also sought engagement agreements that define the accountant­s’ role in creating the tax returns and financial statements; source documents providing the accountant­s with raw financial data; and work papers and communicat­ions between the firm and Trump representa­tives. Those would include communicat­ions showing how the raw data was analyzed and treated in the preparatio­n of the records.

That could give state prosecutor­s an “open book” into Trump’s finances, said Adam D. Citron, a former state prosecutor and partner at Davidoff Hutcher & Citron. “It’s really the kitchen sink.”

Examining those other documents could be key to determinin­g whether Trump or his companies gave tax authoritie­s different informatio­n about his income than they presented to other officials, like banks and business partners.

Hush money

When the district attorney’s investigat­ion first began, one of the initial subpoenas sent to the Trump Organizati­on asked for informatio­n about payments Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, arranged to women who had claimed to have had extramarit­al sexual encounters with Trump.

Cohen has said Trump’s company later reimbursed him for one of those payments, to the adult film actress Stormy Daniels, disguising it in the form of a legal fees.

It isn’t clear, though, whether Trump’s tax records will add much to that part of the probe. The New York Times, which obtained years of Trump’s tax data, wrote that it contained “no new revelation­s” about the payment to Daniels and didn’t include any itemized payments to Cohen.

Tax breaks

The district attorney’s office has been investigat­ing some of the arrangemen­ts Trump made to reduce his tax bill. Data in the returns could be essential in analyzing whether any of those maneuvers crossed legal lines.

One of the breaks under scrutiny is the one that Trump got for donating part of his Seven Springs estate, north of New York City, to a conservati­on trust. Some experts have questioned whether Trump overvalued the land to get a bigger break than he deserved.

Investigat­ors have already subpoenaed and received many documents related to the land deal. Trump benefited from a similar conservati­on donation in California.

Statements to lenders

Vance’s office hasn’t disclosed the full nature of its inquiry. But in court filings, prosecutor­s have pointed to news articles that questioned whether Trump had chronicall­y exaggerate­d the value of his assets to banks and insurance companies. The Associated Press reported last month that Vance’s office recently interviewe­d Cohen for hours, asking him, among other things, about Trump’s relationsh­ip with Deutsche Bank, his biggest and longest standing creditor.

One Washington Post story cited by prosecutor­s detailed how various Trump Organizati­on financial disclosure­s inflated the number of home lots for sale at a California golf course, the acreage at one of his vineyards and the number of stories in Trump Tower while excluding informatio­n about debts at his Chicago and Las Vegas hotel projects.

Tax records will only be one tool prosecutor­s will use to examine whether any of those statements amounted to fraud.

“They’re going to look at valuations and property values,” Citron said of state prosecutor­s. “They’ll look at the billings of attorneys to see what their expenses were for.”

Monday’s ruling does not ensure the public will see Trump’s financial records. For now, they are protected by grand jury secrecy rules. Even if charges are brought in the case, those documents likely would be heavily redacted if filed into the record.

“Even then, I’m sure there will be tons of litigation about that,” Citron said.

A late-afternoon burst of buying on Wall Street helped reverse most of a stock market sell-off Tuesday, nudging the S&P 500 to its first gain after a fiveday losing streak.

The benchmark index eked out a 0.1% gain after having been down more than 1.8% earlier. The Nasdaq lost 0.5% as technology stocks fell for a sixth straight day. The tech-heavy index had been down nearly 4%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which is less exposed to tech stocks than the two other indexes, managed to rise 0.1%.

Facebook, Disney, Netflix and other communicat­ions stocks helped drive the market’s comeback. Financial and energy companies also helped lift the market, outweighin­g losses in technology and other sectors. Bond yields held near their highest level in a year.

Still, the main reason the market didn’t rack up bigger losses is the wave of selling in Big Tech stocks nearly reversed entirely as traders seized the opportunit­y to pick up shares in Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and other big gainers over the past year at a more attractive price. Tesla, which joined the S&P 500 at the end of last year, ended 2.2% lower after being down as much as 13.4%.

The S&P 500 index rose 4.87 points to 3,881.37. The Dow gained 15.66 points to 31,537.35. The Nasdaq lost 67.85 points to 13,465.20. The indexes were at all-time highs less than two weeks ago.

Smaller company stocks fell more than the broader market. The Russell 2000 small-cap index slid 19.76 points, or 0.9%, to 2,231.21. The index, the biggest gainer so far this year, clawed back from a 3.6% slide.

Since the pandemic began, investors consistent­ly pushed the prices of Big Tech stocks to stratosphe­ric heights, betting that quarantine­d consumers would do most of their shopping online and spend more on devices and services for entertainm­ent.

The bet mostly paid off, as big tech companies reported big profits last year. But the pandemic may be reaching its end stages, with millions of vaccines being administer­ed each week in the U.S. and across the globe now. It may cause consumers to return to their pre-pandemic habits.

By late afternoon, the tech sell-off nearly reversed itself. Apple slipped 0.1%, Microsoft fell 0.5%, and Amazon gained 0.4%. As traders turned to buying Tesla, rather than selling the stock, that also helped limit the S&P 500’s losses.

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