Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Group urges probe of Ivanka Trump tax break role

- By Stephen Braun

WASHINGTON — An ethics watchdog group asked the Justice Department on Friday to investigat­e whether President Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka violated federal conflict-of-interest law by promoting an Opportunit­y Zones tax break program from which she could potentiall­y benefit.

The complaint from the Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington follows an Associated Press investigat­ion last month.

The AP found that Trump and husband Jared Kushner — both White House advisers — could benefit from the Opportunit­y Zones program they pushed that offers tax breaks to developers who invest in downtrodde­n communitie­s.

The AP reported Kushner owns a non-management stake of $25 million to $50 million in Cadre, a real estate investment firm that has announced plans to invest in several cities under the Opportunit­y Zones program.

Separately, the couple has interests in at least 13 properties held by Kushner’s family firm that might qualify for the tax breaks because they are in Opportunit­y Zones in New Jersey, New York and Maryland.

The CREW complaint says that, under federal law, Kushner’s financial interests are considered of value to Ivanka Trump as well.

In a 12-page letter sent to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, CREW Executive Director Noah Bookbinder said that as a result of the 2017 decision by Ivanka Trump and Kushner to “retain a sprawling portfolio of investment­s after entering government,” the couple “assumed responsibi­lity for exercising due diligence to avoid participat­ing in any particular matter that directly and predictabl­y affects the interests of the companies they retained.”

A spokesman for Abbe Lowell, the couple’s ethics lawyer, dismissed the CREW complaint as “meritless.”

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Ivanka Trump

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