Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TRUMP FINED $2 million over misuse of his charitable foundation.

Charities to split funds in settlement over foundation misuse

- MICHAEL R. SISAK

NEW YORK — A judge Thursday ordered President Donald Trump to pay $2 million to an array of charities as a fine for misusing his own charitable foundation to further his political and business interests.

New York state Judge Saliann Scarpulla imposed the penalty after the president admitted to a series of abuses that were outlined in a lawsuit filed against him last year by the New York attorney general’s office.

Among other things, Trump acknowledg­ed he improperly allowed his presidenti­al campaign staff to coordinate with the Trump Foundation in holding a fundraiser for veterans during the run-up to the 2016 Iowa caucuses. The event was designed “to further Mr. Trump’s political campaign,” Scarpulla said.

Trump issued a statement Thursday evening.

“I am the only person I know, perhaps the only person in history, who can give major money to charity (19M), charge no expense, and be attacked by the political hacks in New York State,” he wrote.

He assailed a series of Democratic attorneys general of New York who were involved with the suit, saying they should have spent their time investigat­ing the Clinton Foundation.

“It has been 4 years of politicall­y motivated harassment,” Trump said.

The Trump Foundation will be dissolved and its $1.7 million in remaining funds will be given to other nonprofits, under agreements reached by Trump’s lawyers and the attorney general’s office.

As part of those agreements, made public Thursday, the two sides left it up to the judge to decide what penalty Trump should pay.

Trump’s fine and the charity’s funds will be split evenly among eight organizati­ons, including Citymeals on Wheels, the United Negro College Fund and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Attorney General Letitia James welcomed the resolution of the case as a “major victory in our efforts to protect charitable assets and hold accountabl­e those who would abuse charities for personal gain.”

“No one is above the law — not a businessma­n, not a candidate for office, and not even the president of the United States,” said James, a Democrat.

The president admitted, among other things, to improperly arranging for the charity to pay $10,000 for a 6-foot portrait of himself. He also agreed to pay back $11,525 in foundation funds that he spent on sports memorabili­a and champagne at a charity gala.

Trump also accepted restrictio­ns on his involvemen­t in other charitable organizati­ons. His three eldest children, who were members of the foundation’s board, must undergo mandatory training on the duties of those who run charities.

Charities are barred from getting involved in political campaigns, but in weighing the Iowa fundraiser, Scarpulla gave Trump credit for making good on his pledge to give $2.8 million that his charity raised to veterans organizati­ons.

Instead of fining him that amount, as the attorney general’s office wanted, the judge trimmed it to $2 million and rejected a demand for punitive damages and interest.

The Trump Foundation said it was pleased by those decisions, claiming that the judge “recognized that every penny ever raised by the Trump Foundation has gone to help those most in need.”

Trump Foundation lawyer Alan Futerfas said the nonprofit has distribute­d approximat­ely $19 million over the past decade, including $8.25 million of the president’s own money, to hundreds of charitable organizati­ons.

Trump also admitted in the agreements to directing that $100,000 in foundation money be used to settle legal claims over an 80-foot flagpole he had built at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., instead of paying the expense out of his own pocket.

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