Springfield News-Sun

Trump executive gets 5-month jail sentence

- By Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK — Allen Weisselber­g, a longtime executive for Donald Trump’s business empire whose testimony helped convict the former president’s company of tax fraud, was sentenced Tuesday to five months in jail for dodging taxes on $1.7 million in job perks.

Weisselber­g, 75, was promised that sentence in August when he agreed to plead guilty to 15 tax crimes and to testify against the Trump Organizati­on, where he’s worked since the mid1980s and, until his arrest, had served as chief financial officer.

He was handcuffed and taken into custody moments after the sentence was announced and was expected to be taken to New York City’s notorious Rikers Island jail complex. Weisselber­g will be eligible for release after a little more than three months if he behaves behind bars.

As part of the plea agreement, Judge Juan Manuel Merchan also ordered Weisselber­g to pay nearly $2 million in taxes, penalties and interest — which he has paid as of Jan. 3. Additional­ly, the judge ordered Weisselber­g to complete five years of probation after his jail term is finished.

Weisselber­g faced the prospect of up to 15 years in prison — the maximum punishment for the top grand larceny charge — if he were to have reneged on the deal or if he didn’t testify truthfully at the Trump Organizati­on’s trial.

He is the only person charged in the Manhattan district attorney’s three-year investigat­ion of Trump and his business practices.

Weisselber­g testified for three days, offering a glimpse into the inner workings of Trump’s real estate empire. Weisselber­g has worked for Trump’s family for nearly 50 years, starting as an accountant for his developer father, Fred Trump, in 1973 before joining Donald Trump in 1986 and helping expand the family company’s focus beyond New York City into a global golf and hotel brand.

Weisselber­g told jurors he betrayed the Trump family’s trust by conspiring with a subordinat­e to hide more than a decade’s worth of extras from his income, including a free Manhattan apartment, luxury cars and his grandchild­ren’s private school tuition. He said they fudged payroll records and issued falsified W-2 forms.

A Manhattan jury convicted the Trump Organizati­on in December, finding that Weisselber­g had been a “high managerial” agent entrusted to act on behalf of the company and its various entities. Weisselber­g’s arrangemen­t reduced his own personal income taxes but also saved the company money because it didn’t have to pay him more to cover the cost of the perks.

Prosecutor­s said other Trump Organizati­on executives also accepted off-thebooks compensati­on. Weisselber­g alone was accused of defrauding the federal government, state and city out of more than $900,000 in unpaid taxes and undeserved tax refunds.

The Trump Organizati­on is scheduled to be sentenced Friday and faces a fine of up to $1.6 million.

Weisselber­g testified that neither Trump nor his family knew about the scheme as it was happening, choking up as he told jurors: “It was my own personal greed that led to this.” But prosecutor­s, in their closing argument, said Trump “knew exactly what was going on” and that evidence, such as a lease he signed for Weisselber­g’s apartment, made clear “Mr. Trump is explicitly sanctionin­g tax fraud.”

A Trump Organizati­on lawyer, Michael van der Veen, has said Weisselber­g concocted the scheme without Trump or the Trump family’s knowledge.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO / AP ?? Former Trump Organizati­on CFO Allen Weisselber­g arrives to court Tuesday in New York for the announceme­nt of his jail sentence.
JOHN MINCHILLO / AP Former Trump Organizati­on CFO Allen Weisselber­g arrives to court Tuesday in New York for the announceme­nt of his jail sentence.

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