The Guardian (USA)

Trump donor who once owned prostituti­on case day spa offered access to president

- Associated Press in Miami

A company run by a donor to Donald Trump claimed it could provide Chinese clients with a chance to mingle and take photos with the president, along with access to his private club in Palm Beach, Florida.

It remains unclear how much Li Yang charged for the services and whether she was ever hired to provide them.

But the company’s claims and other eyebrow-raising activity, first reported by the Miami Herald and Mother Jones, mark the latest in a litany of complicati­ons and ethical issues stemming from Trump continuing to own and operate a private club where dues-paying members and their guests rub shoulders with the president and his family, friends, White House staff and mem

bers of his cabinet.

The AP has previously reported that aides who accompany the president on trips to the club are always alert for club members and guests who like to buttonhole the president. They raise pet projects, make policy suggestion­s and share oddball ideas ranging from the benefits of nuclear-powered cars to personal plans for peace in the Middle East.

Former administra­tion officials have described the lengths to which aides have gone to try to run interferen­ce, including reserving the dinner table next to Trump’s to keep as close an eye on him as possible and scanning guest lists for visitors who might prove problemati­c.

Yang appears to be a relative newcomer to Palm Beach’s political scene. GY US Investment­s LLC, a company she registered in 2017, according to Florida state documents, describes itself on a now-defunct, mostly Chinese website as an internatio­nal business consulting firm.

The firm “provides public relations services to assist businesses in America to establish and expand their brand image in the modern Chinese marketplac­e”, according to a translatio­n of the page accessed through an internet archive service.

That has included, the website claims, access to presidenti­al dinners and roundtable­s, White House events, photo opportunit­ies and “VIP” activities including the “opportunit­y to interact with the president, the minister of commerce and other political figures”.

The site also featured numerous photograph­s, including a picture of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club and photograph­s of Yang with Trump, Florida governor Ron DeSantis, transporta­tion secretary Elaine Chao and former White House aide Sebastian Gorka.

Yang is described on the website as the company’s “founder CEO”, as well as a member of a “presidenti­al fundraisin­g committee” and a “presidenti­al club member”.

Yang and the company did not respond to messages seeking comment, nor did the Trump Organizati­on, Mara-Lago club or the Republican National Committee.

Christian Ziegler, vice-chairman of the Republican party of Florida, played down the significan­ce of the webpage and photos Yang has posted of herself with the president and other prominent Republican politician­s.

“Anyone can buy tickets to any event and I’m assuming that is what she had done,” Ziegler said. “I’ve never met the lady and I could never pick her out of a police lineup.”

He added: “I know the media, Democrats, the left is going to try to do everything to connect her with us, but she had zero role with us. It just looks like she attended some events and took some pictures.”

In China, however, pictures can be an end unto themselves, giving an appearance of influence. Pictures with famous people are especially valued in the country, where personal relationsh­ips and connection­s carry special weight in business and politics.

Mother Jones on Saturday offered details on Yang’s efforts to provide Chinese clients access to Trump and his circle.

The Miami Herald on Friday published a photo of Yang with Trump at a Super Bowl party at his West Palm Beach country club and reported on the link between Yang and the spa where New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, a friend of Trump, was charged with soliciting prostituti­on. Yang was a former owner of the spa.

Yang wasn’t charged in a multiagenc­y anti-human traffickin­g operation that resulted in 25 arrests, including that of Kraft, and shut down 10 Asian day spas in South Florida last month. None of the spas is registered to Yang or her family. She sold the Jupiter spa to Hua Zhang around 2013. Zhang was charged with racketeeri­ng and running a house of prostituti­on and has pleaded not guilty.

Yang’s family still owns several South Florida spas.

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