The Mercury News Weekend

Federal agency clears Trump ownership of DC luxury hotel

- By Michael Biesecker

WASHINGTON — The federal agency overseeing Donald Trump’s lease for a luxury hotel in Washington ruled Thursday that his inaugurati­on as president doesn’t violate terms of the agreement barring government officials from profiting from the property.

In a letter to the Trump Organizati­on, General Services Administra­tion Contractin­g Officer Kevin M. Terry says he has determined that the president’s business is in “full compliance” because profits from the hotel won’t go directly to Trump while he’s president.

The 2013 lease for the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel expressly forbids any federal official from participat­ing or benefiting from the project, a $200 million renovation of historic Old Post Office building a few blocks from the White House.

Numerous ethics experts have questioned whether Trump violated the terms of his lease the moment he took the oath of office.

Steven Schooner, a professor of government procuremen­t law at George Washington University, called Thursday’s ruling unpersuasi­ve and damaging to the credibilit­y of the GSA.

“It has never been easier for a foreign government, lobbyist or special-interest group to funnel money directly to the president of the United States and his family,” said Schooner, who served in the Clinton administra­tion and contribute­d to President Barack Obama’s presidenti­al campaign and other Democrats.

Trump announced in January he was transferri­ng control of his business empire to his adult sons, but he still maintained a direct tie to the company through a trust. Trump is the sole beneficiar­y of the trust and can revoke it at any time.

Richard W. Painter, who was the lead White House ethics attorney for President George W. Bush, is among a group that days after Trump was inaugurate­d filed a lawsuit alleging he was violating the Constituti­on by allowing his busi- nesses to accept payments from foreign government­s.

The lawsuit claims the “emoluments clause” prohibits Trump from receiving money from diplomats for stays at his hotels or foreign government­s for leases of office space in his buildings. The lawsuit is pending in the Southern District of New York.

“The economic benefit from this lease goes to him whether or not the hotel LLC holds onto it and no matter how many trusts they form to hold the hotel or to hold the money,” Painter said Thursday. “The focus should be on the economic reality of the transactio­n and it is very clear what that is. He gets the profits from this lease.”

According to the GSA’s letter, Trump restructur­ed the governance of numerous corporate entities involved with the Washington hotel to remove himself as an officer. In a series of meetings, officials with the Trump Organizati­on told the government that while Trump is president, no proceeds from the hotel business will be paid out to the holding company, DJT Holdings LLC. That company is owned by a trust benefiting Trump.

The profits from the hotel will accrue in an account under the corporate entity that holds the lease, Trump Old Post Office LLC.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? According to the General Services Administra­tion, President Donald Trump is not in violation of the emoluments clause by being president at the same time as he leases a hotel in the historic Old Post Office building near the White House.
ALEX BRANDON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES According to the General Services Administra­tion, President Donald Trump is not in violation of the emoluments clause by being president at the same time as he leases a hotel in the historic Old Post Office building near the White House.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States