Los Angeles Times

Guilty plea by Trump’s ex-chief of finance

Perjury charge stems from testimony given at former president’s civil fraud trial.

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NEW YORK — Allen Weisselber­g, the former chief financial officer of the Trump Organizati­on, pleaded guilty Monday in New York to perjury in connection with testimony he gave at the former president’s civil fraud trial.

Weisselber­g, 76, surrendere­d to the Manhattan prosecutor’s office earlier Monday and entered state court in handcuffs and wearing a mask, before pleading guilty to five counts of perjury.

Prosecutor­s accused Weisselber­g of lying under oath when he answered questions in a deposition in May and at the October trial about allegation­s that Donald Trump lied about his wealth on financial statements given to banks and insurance companies.

Weisselber­g will be sentenced to five months in jail, the judge said.

Weisselber­g’s lawyer, Seth Rosenberg, didn’t return a request for comment earlier Monday.

After the New York Times reported last month that Weisselber­g was in negotiatio­ns to plead guilty to perjury, Judge Arthur Engoron, who presided over the fraud trial, ordered attorneys to provide details related to the Times’ report.

Trump is appealing Engoron’s judgment ordering him to pay more than $454 million in fines and interest for submitting fraudulent informatio­n about his asset values on years of financial records.

Weisselber­g’s new criminal case comes just weeks before Trump is scheduled to stand trial on separate allegation­s that he falsified business records. That case involves allegation­s that Trump falsified company records to cover up hush money payments made during the 2016 campaign to bury allegation­s that he had extramarit­al sexual encounters. Trump has pleaded not guilty and denies wrongdoing.

Former Trump lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen has said Weisselber­g had a role in orchestrat­ing the payments, but he has not been charged in that case, and neither prosecutor­s nor Trump’s lawyers have indicated they will call him as a witness. That trial is scheduled to begin March 25.

Weisselber­g’s case is separate from the criminal case that Manhattan Dist. Atty. Alvin Bragg brought against Trump last year.

Weisselber­g previously served 100 days in jail last year after pleading guilty to dodging taxes on $1.7 million in off-the-books compensati­on from the Trump Organizati­on. He is still on probation. Before that he had no criminal record.

He left New York City’s notorious Rikers Island in April, days after Trump was indicted in his New York hush money criminal case.

Under that plea deal, Weisselber­g was required to testify as a prosecutio­n witness when the Trump Organizati­on was put on trial for allegedly helping executives evade taxes. He did so carefully, laying out the facts of his own involvemen­t in evading taxes but taking care to not implicate Trump, telling jurors that his boss was unaware of the scheme.

 ?? Yuki Iwamura Associated Press ?? ALLEN Weisselber­g will serve time behind bars.
Yuki Iwamura Associated Press ALLEN Weisselber­g will serve time behind bars.

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