Santa Fe New Mexican

Prosecutor­s: Trump knew of tax fraud

- By Shayna Jacobs

NEW YORK — Former President Donald Trump knew about a 15-year tax fraud carried out by longtime executives at his namesake company, a prosecutor argued Friday, saying the illegal activity ended when the company cleaned up its business practices around the time Trump entered the White House.

At the close of the Trump Organizati­on’s criminal trial, prosecutor­s introduced the idea that Trump had knowledge of crimes committed by his top deputies.

The claim was a way of supporting their theory the real estate, hospitalit­y and golf company is criminally culpable for and benefited from tax cheating.

“This whole narrative that Donald Trump was blissfully ignorant was just not real,” Assistant District Attorney Joshua Steinglass said during his summation. He asked jurors, who are likely to begin deliberati­ons in the case on Monday, to dismiss the idea that executives who committed crimes had simply gone “rogue.”

At the same time, Steinglass also told the jury that it “doesn’t matter” whether they believe Trump knew about the fraud, because the former president is not considered a conspirato­r in the case.

Trump has not been charged with wrongdoing. Allen Weisselber­g — his former chief financial officer and a Trump family employee for a half-century — pleaded guilty to fraud this summer. Testimony about the fraud from Weisselber­g and Trump Organizati­on comptrolle­r Jeffrey McConney — who was granted immunity automatica­lly by state law when he appeared before the grand jury — were key elements of the prosecutio­n’s case.

Prosecutor­s say the company profited from the fraud in various ways, including by cutting down its payroll costs and by saving on its Medicare tax burden.

For the company to be found guilty of wrongdoing and fined up to $1.6 million, the district attorney must prove that Weisselber­g or McConney had “some intent” to help the company in addition to cutting tax liability for themselves. The fraud involved untaxed luxury apartments, Mercedes-Benzes and private school tuition for Weisselber­g’s grandchild­ren.

In a Truth Social post earlier this week, Trump appeared to refute any suggestion he knew what Weisselber­g and McConney had done, writing that there “was no gain for ‘Trump’” and that “we had know knowledge of it.”

Defense attorney Susan Necheles reminded jurors in her summation Thursday that Weisselber­g and McConney had testified that Trump “did not know how things were reported on Allen Weisselber­g’s tax returns” and argued that Trump did not know about his executives’ tax crimes.

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