Miami Herald

Manhattan D.A. has obtained Trump’s tax returns

- BY JONAH E. BROMWICH

Tax and financial records that former President Donald Trump fought to keep secret for nearly 18 months have been turned over to the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, which is investigat­ing possible fraud by Trump and his company, an official said.

The voluminous records, including eight years of personal tax returns, were handed over to prosecutor­s Monday, the same day that the Supreme Court rejected Trump’s final bid to block a subpoena for them.

A spokespers­on for the district attorney, Cyrus Vance Jr., confirmed in an email that the office had received the records just hours after the court issued its brief, unsigned order.

Vance’s investigat­ion, which started more than two years ago, has recently zeroed in on possible tax and bank-related fraud. Investigat­ors are particular­ly concerned with whether the Trump Organizati­on inflated or otherwise manipulate­d the value of its properties to obtain loans and tax benefits.

Trump has excoriated Vance and his investigat­ors, saying that their work is just the latest example of a politicall­y motivated campaign to charge him criminally. In a lengthy statement reacting to the Supreme Court decision, he again called the investigat­ion a “fishing expedition” and a “witch hunt,” linking it to his other legal troubles, including a special prosecutor’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and his two impeachmen­t trials. He vowed to “fight on.”

The work facing Vance’s office is daunting. Prosecutor­s have begun combing through millions of pages of esoteric financial documents, saved as digital files. In addition, an outside consulting firm brought on by Vance is scrutinizi­ng commercial real estate and tax strategies. The office has also enlisted the help of a former federal prosecutor, Mark Pomerantz, who has experience with white collar and organized crime.

Public interest in the case remains at a fever pitch in New York City and other Democratic stronghold­s. It is a key issue in the campaign to succeed Vance as the Manhattan district attorney, though the eight candidates for the office, all Democrats, have for the most part refrained from commenting on the specifics of his inquiry.

Along with the investigat­ion in Manhattan, Trump also faces a criminal inquiry from Fulton County prosecutor­s in Atlanta, who are looking into his attempts to persuade officials to manipulate the election results in Georgia.

Despite the appetite for prosecutio­n among Democrats, experts say that the case against the former president will not be an easy one to make.

“In an office that’s handled many, many highprofil­e cases over many decades, this would be the highest-profile case ever,” said Daniel R. Alonso, who was Vance’s top deputy from 2010 to 2014 and is now in private practice. “We won’t know until we see the evidence how difficult it would be to win conviction­s, but cases like this one are never easy.”

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