Daily Camera (Boulder)

Prosecutor: Donald Trump knew about exec’s tax fraud scheme

- By Michael R. Sisak The Associated Press

Donald Trump “knew exactly what was going on” with top Trump Organizati­on executives who schemed for years to dodge taxes on company-paid perks, a prosecutor said Thursday, challengin­g defense claims that the former president was unaware of the plot at the heart of the company’s tax fraud case.

Manhattan prosecutor Joshua Steinglass lobbed the bombshell allegation during closing arguments. He promised to share more details when he resumes on Friday, buoyed by the judge’s decision to grant prosecutor­s permission to veer into territory that had been considered off limits because Trump is on trial.

Judge Juan Manuel Merchan, overruling a defense objection after the jury had left court, said the company’s lawyers opened the door by asserting in their closing arguments that Trump was ignoring of the scheme, hatched by his longtime finance chief just steps from his Trump Tower office.

“It was the defense who invoked the name Donald Trump numerous times,” Merchan said, setting up a potentiall­y explosive final day of arguments before jurors deliberate next week.

Prosecutor­s had given mixed signals about Trump’s importance to the case, telling a judge early on, “this case is not about Donald Trump,” but then repeatedly asking witnesses about him; showing a witness copies of Trump’s tax returns and, ultimately, seeking to connect the dots to him in closing arguments.

Trump has denied any knowledge of the scheme, writing Tuesday on his Truth Social platform: “There was no gain for ‘Trump,’ and we had no knowledge of it.”

Steinglass said the Trump Organizati­on “cultivated a culture of fraud and deception” by lavishing luxe perks on executives and falsifying records to hide the compensati­on.

Steinglass’ at-times fiery summation followed defense arguments that sought to focus blame for the fraud on Allen Weisselber­g, the senior adviser and EX-CFO who has admitted scheming to avoid paying personal income taxes on a company-paid apartment, luxury cars and other goodies.

“Weisselber­g did it for Weisselber­g,” Trump Organizati­on lawyer Michael Van der Veen told jurors, punctuatin­g his closing argument with the defense team’s mantra for the monthlong trial.

Steinglass pushed back when it was his turn, telling jurors: “Both halves of that sentence are wrong. It wasn’t just Weisselber­g doing it and it wasn’t just Weisselber­g who benefited.”

The Trump Organizati­on, the entity through which Trump manages his real estate holdings and other ventures, is accused of helping Weisselber­g and other executives avoid paying income taxes on company-paid perks.

Steinglass argued that the Trump Organizati­on — through its subsidiari­es Trump Corp. and Trump Payroll Corp. — is liable because Weisselber­g and an underling he worked with, controller Jeffrey Mcconney, were “high managerial” agents entrusted to act on behalf of the company and its various entities.

If convicted, the Trump Organizati­on could be fined more than $1 million. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who watched Steinglass’ closing from the courtroom gallery, has said that his office’s investigat­ion of Trump is “active and ongoing,” and that no decision has been made on whether to charge him.

But company lawyers argued that Weisselber­g was only intending to benefit himself with his tax dodge scheme, not the Trump Organizati­on, and that the company shouldn’t be blamed for his transgress­ions. “We are here today for one reason and one reason only: the greed of Allen Weisselber­g,” Trump Organizati­on lawyer Susan Necheles said, her remarks accompanie­d at one point by the wail of a siren from an emergency vehicle outside.

The tax fraud case is the only trial to arise from the Manhattan district attorney’s three-year investigat­ion of Trump and his business practices. Thursday’s closing arguments were the last chance for prosecutor­s and defense lawyers to sway jurors before they deliberate next week.

Weisselber­g pleaded guilty in August to dodging taxes on $1.7 million in extras and testified against the Trump Organizati­on in exchange for a promised sentence of five months in jail.

Weisselber­g has worked for Trump’s family for nearly 50 years, starting as an accountant for his real estate-developer father Fred Trump in 1973 before joining Donald Trump’s company in 1986.

“Along the way, he messed up. He got greedy. Once he got started, it was difficult for him to stop,” Necheles said.

Necheles argued that the case against the company is tenuous and that the 1965 state law underlying some of the charges requires prosecutor­s to show Weisselber­g intended to benefit the company, not just himself.

Weisselber­g testified that he conspired to hide his perks with Mcconney by adjusting payroll records to deduct their cost from his salary.

The arrangemen­t reduced Weisselber­g’s tax liability, while also saving the company money because it didn’t have to give him a hefty raise to cover the cost of the perks and additional income taxes he would have incurred.

“I knew in my mind that there was a benefit to the company,” Weisselber­g testified.

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