The Commercial Appeal

EX-CFO incriminat­es Trump sons in testimony

- Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK – How did Donald Trump’s oldest sons – entrusted to run his real estate empire when he became president – react when they learned that a top executive was scheming to dodge taxes on lavish corporate perks?

They gave him a raise, according to testimony Friday at the Trump Organizati­on’s tax fraud trial.

Allen Weisselber­g, the Trump Organizati­on’s former chief financial officer, testified that Eric Trump raised his pay by $200,000 after an internal audit spurred by Trump’s 2016 election found that he had been reducing his salary and bonuses by the cost of the perks.

The raises boosted Weisselber­g’s annual pay to $1.14 million, extra cash he said he used to pick up the tab for things Trump and the company had previously been paying: rent on a Manhattan apartment, Mercedesbe­nz cars for him and his wife, his grandchild­ren’s private school tuition and more.

The company continues to pay Weisselber­g his usual $640,000 in salary and $500,000 in holiday bonuses and punished him only nominally after his arrest in July 2021, reassignin­g him to senior adviser and moving him to a different office at Trump Tower. He is now on a paid leave of absence.

Weisselber­g discussed his pay boost on his third and final day of testimony at the trial.

He testified that Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., both executive vice presidents at the Trump Organizati­on, knew from the audit that Weisselber­g had not reported his company-paid apartment as taxable income, as required by law.

Weisselber­g told jurors he stopped his scheme after the audit. Soon after, he said, he asked Eric Trump for a raise, conveying to him that “since the practice was no longer going on, I would need some additional income to pay for those expenses.”

Weisselber­g said Eric Trump, who handles day-to-day operations at the company, signed off on his raise and is now in line to approve his latest $500,000 Christmas bonus – even as Weisselber­g prepares to shuffle off to New York City’s infamous Rikers Island jail complex.

Other executives accused of scheming to avoid taxes on company perks also kept their jobs and pay, Weisselber­g said. They include his son, former Central Park ice rink manager Barry Weisselber­g, and the company’s chief operating officer, Matthew Calamari Sr.

Weisselber­g, 75, pleaded guilty in August to taking $1.7 million in off-thebooks compensati­on.

His plea agreement requires him to testify as a prosecutio­n witness in exchange for a five-month jail sentence. Weisselber­g, who had been facing as many as 15 years in prison, said he previously rejected an offer of one to three years in prison.

Manhattan prosecutor­s allege that the Trump Organizati­on helped top executives avoid paying taxes on company-paid perks and that it is liable for Weisselber­g’s wrongdoing because he was a “high managerial agent” entrusted to act on its behalf.

The tax fraud case is the only criminal trial that has arisen from the Manhattan district attorney’s three-year investigat­ion of Trump and his business practices.

Trump, who announced Tuesday that he is running again for president in 2024, is not expected to appear at the trial. But he signaled Friday that he has been following along, defending Weisselber­g and bashing prosecutor­s in posts to his Truth Social platform.

Trump wrote that the case had “fallen apart” after Weisselber­g testified Thursday that neither Trump nor Trump’s family was involved in his tax avoidance scheme.

How did Donald Trump’s oldest sons – entrusted to run his real estate empire when he became president – react when they learned that a top executive was scheming to dodge taxes on lavish corporate perks?

They gave him a raise, according to testimony Friday at the Trump Organizati­on’s tax fraud trial.

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