San Francisco Chronicle

Condo buyers promised meet-greet with Trump Jr.

- By Jeffrey Gettleman and Suhasini Raj Jeffrey Gettleman and Suhasini Raj are reporters for the New York Times.

MUMBAI, India — What’s one of the best ways right now to crack into the Trump family inner circle?

Buy a swanky condominiu­m in India.

Indian developers are promising to fly the first group of buyers in a new Trump Towers project to New York for an event with Donald Trump Jr., according to Indian news reports and a video on one of the developers’ websites.

The glitzy project, which will rise high above Gurugram, a suburb of New Delhi, has become the latest matter to draw questions about the way the Trump family is handling its convergenc­e of business and politics. Reports in the Indian press last week, followed by a Washington Post article Thursday, have brought new accusation­s of influence peddling.

But the Indian developers aren’t shying away from their offer to get the first buyers of these condos in front of Trump Jr., President Donald Trump’s oldest child, who helps run the family’s real estate empire.

According to an article by the Press Trust of India that appeared in The Hindustan Times on Jan. 10, Pankaj Bansal, the director of one of the Indian property developers, said: “About an initial 100 buyers will fly to the U.S. where Donald Trump Jr. will host them.”

The apartment project consists of two glittering 600-foot towers, among the tallest in the area, featuring apartments that have 22-foot-high ceilings, infinity pools and floor-to-ceiling windows. Picture lots of marble and lots of glass.

A video included on the website of Tribeca Developers, one of the other Indian partners, features a segment of a news broadcast on the project, reiteratin­g the promise to meet a Trump.

“Buy a flat, meet Trump Jr.!” the video says.

According to Indian news reports, the developers sold 20 units in the first day of sales in January.

Ethicists in the United States expressed concern about the conflict-ofinterest issues raised by such inducement­s.

Norman L. Eisen, who was the ethics counsel for President Barack Obama, said it was “outrageous that access to the Trump family is once again being sold — this time to foreign purchasers, no less.”

He added: “This is a brazen violation of ethics best practices, but not alas a surprising one; it is of a piece with the access to the Trump family that members at domestic Trump properties get for their often steep fees.”

Richard W. Painter, who was the ethics counsel for President George W. Bush, said the India deal was “inappropri­ate, but legal.”

He urged the Trump children to publicly declare that they will not discuss government policy with customers. “They could dramatical­ly reduce their risk if they categorica­lly make it clear that they will not discuss U.S. government interests with anyone with whom they have an actual or prospectiv­e financial relationsh­ip,” Painter said.

The news release for the project, which does not mention the offer of access to Trump Jr., goes on about its various bells and whistles, making the project sound something like a cruise ship — with a golf course attached.

 ?? Asmita Parelkar / New York Times 2016 ?? A new Trump Tower in a suburb of New Delhi similar to this one in Mumbai is seeking tenants.
Asmita Parelkar / New York Times 2016 A new Trump Tower in a suburb of New Delhi similar to this one in Mumbai is seeking tenants.

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