The Denver Post

Trump exec strikes deal

Allen Weisselber­g granted immunity by prosecutor­s in federal probe of former Trump lawyer Cohen.

- By Bernard Condon

NEW YORK» He’s one of the longest-serving employees in Donald Trump’s family real estate business. Through triumphs, scandals and bankruptci­es, he was there.

Allen Weisselber­g was handling the books when Fred Trump ran the company in the early 1970s. He was handling them when Donald made his mark with Trump Tower in the early 1980s, then teetered on personal bankruptcy in the 1990s. And he was there when Trump transforme­d the business around his TV celebrity in the new millennium and went on a global licensing spree.

Now the private and loyal Weisselber­g is in the spotlight as the latest Trump confidant — and perhaps the most significan­t — to strike a deal with federal investigat­ors for protection and to tell what he knows. Federal prosecutor­s have granted the Trump Organizati­on’s chief financial officer immunity in the federal probe of former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen as the president lashes out at people “flipping” to the feds.

“Weisselber­g knows everything about Trump entities that have taken in money and spent it,” said Trump biographer Michael D’Antonio, who writes frequently about the president’s businesses. “All of this would come into play if Trump was being audited or investigat­ed for financial crimes.”

Two people with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press about the deal Friday, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter public-

ly. One of them said the immunity agreement was restricted to Weisselber­g’s grand jury testimony last month in the Cohen case — specifical­ly the allegation­s that Cohen paid hush money to two women who claimed to have had affairs with Trump.

Whether the 71-year-old is continuing to help prosecutor­s was unclear. Asked if Weisselber­g was cooperatin­g further, one of the sources declined to comment.

Cohen pleaded guilty to tax and campaign finance violations Tuesday. And while not named in the Cohen case, Weisselber­g is believed to be one of two Trump executives mentioned in court documents who reimbursed Cohen and falsely recorded the payments as legal expenses.

Weisselber­g’s deal comes on the heels of several media reports Thursday that Trump’s longtime friend David Pecker, the CEO of National Enquirer publisher American Media Inc., also has been granted immunity in the Cohen probe, as well as the company’s chief content officer, Dylan Howard.

The Associated Press reported Thursday that the tabloid kept a safe containing documents about hush-money payments and damaging stories it killed as part of its cozy relationsh­ip with Trump leading up to the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Calls and emails to the Trump Organizati­on to reach Weisselber­g and general counsel Alan Garten for comment were not answered. An assistant said both were out of the office Friday.

Weisselber­g, an intensely private, loyal numbers man for Trump, was mentioned on an audiotape that Cohen’s lawyer released in July of Cohen talking with Trump about paying for Playboy model Karen McDougal’s silence in the months leading up to the election. Cohen says on the tape that he already had spoken about the payment with Weisselber­g on “how to set the whole thing up.”

In Cohen’s court appearance in New York to enter his guilty plea Tuesday, Cohen admitted to making payments of $150,000 to McDougal and $130,000 to porn star Stormy Daniels “at the direction” of Trump for the “principal purpose of influencin­g the election.”

The Trump Organizati­on eventually reimbursed Cohen for the $130,000 payment to Daniels, accepting sham invoices and recording the money it sent to Cohen as legal expenses. In court filings, prosecutor­s say two unnamed Trump Organizati­on employees — “executive 1” and “executive 2” — helped set up the reimbursem­ent.

“Please pay from the Trust,” executive 1 is quoted directing to another unnamed employee. “Post to legal expenses.”

The “Trust” refers to the entity that Trump set up after the election to hold his assets. He put the trust in the hands of his adult two sons and Weisselber­g.

The identities of executive 1 and 2 are still unknown. Just because Weisselber­g and the sons were given control, that does not preclude others from handling the business.

Weisselber­g is an unlikely player in the unfolding presidenti­al drama, a low-profile employee who appeared in “The Apprentice” as a judge once but otherwise rarely drew the spotlight. He isn’t even mentioned in many of the biographie­s of his boss.

But as a long-serving employee in the Trump family business, he is rich repository of knowledge, and the idea of him answering questions to investigat­ors under oath poses a new danger for the president as federal prosecutor­s in Washington and New York dig deeper into the president’s business affairs.

From his first job helping with the books for Trump’s father, Fred, in 1973, the Pace University graduate has gotten his fingers into nearly every aspect of the family business — vetting deals, arranging financing, auditing, managing cash — eventually rising to oversee all finances of its far-flung operations.

And aside from Trump, he is perhaps best qualified to answer two of the big questions about the businessma­n turned president over the years: Is he really worth $10 billion, as he claims, and what’s in his tax returns? Trump testified in a case years ago that Weisselber­g was the one who values his properties and other assets, and he has reportedly helped with Trump’s taxes.

In addition to his title as chief financial officer, Weisselber­g holds executive positions at many Trump entities — including director of the Donald J. Trump Foundation, which is being sued by the New York state attorney general for allegedly tapping donations to settle legal disputes among other illegal uses. The White House has dismissed the suit as politicall­y motivated.

Weisselber­g comes off in deposition­s in that case and others over the years as unobtrusiv­e, loyal and undemandin­g.

Asked about what he thought of a last-minute order by Trump to catch a flight to Iowa to tend to some business during the campaign, Weisselber­g said in one deposition that “it doesn’t matter what I thought. He’s my boss. I went.”

He added that it was a rare trip for him. “I have never gone anywhere with Donald,” he said.

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