The Guardian (USA)

Allen Weisselber­g: ex-Trump finance chief given five months for tax fraud

- Guardian staff and agencies

After testimony that helped convict Donald Trump’s company of tax fraud, Allen Weisselber­g, a longtime senior executive, was given five months in jail for accepting $1.7m in perks without paying tax.

Weisselber­g, 75, was promised the sentence in August when he agreed to plead guilty to 15 tax crimes and testify against the Trump Organizati­on, where he has worked since the mid-1980s and was chief financial officer at the time of his arrest.

Moments after the sentence was announced, Weisselber­g was handcuffed and taken into custody. He will probably be held at Rikers Island in New York City, becoming eligible for release after a little more than three months.

As part of the plea agreement, the judge, Juan Manuel Merchan, ordered Weisselber­g to pay nearly $2m in taxes, penalties and interest, which as of 3 January he had paid. The judge also sentenced Weisselber­g to five years’ probation.

Weisselber­g would have faced up to 15 years in prison, the maximum punishment for the top grand larceny charge, had he reneged on his deal or not testified truthfully.

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

In a statement on Tuesday, the DA, Alvin Bragg, said: “In Manhattan, you have to play by the rules, no matter who you are or who you work for.”

Weisselber­g, he said, “used his highlevel position to secure lavish work perks such as a rent-free luxury Manhattan apartment, multiple MercedesBe­nz automobile­s and private school tuition for his grandchild­ren – all without paying required taxes.”

Saying Weisselber­g “and two Trump companies have been convicted of felonies” and pointing to the executive’s jail sentence, Bragg hailed what he called “consequent­ial felony conviction­s” that “put on full display the inner workings of former President Trump’s companies and its CFO’s actions”.

Weisselber­g told jurors he conspired with a subordinat­e to hide more than a decade’s worth of perks. He said they fudged payroll records and issued falsified W-2 forms.

In December, a Manhattan jury convicted the Trump Organizati­on and found that Weisselber­g’s arrangemen­t saved the company money because it didn’t have to pay him more.

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

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.”

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

Prosecutor­s said Trump “knew exactly what was going on” and that evidence, such as a lease he signed for Weisselber­g’s apartment, made clear that “Mr Trump is explicitly sanctionin­g tax fraud”.

Weisselber­g said the Trumps stayed loyal to him and that Trump’s eldest sons, entrusted to run the company while their father was president, gave him a $200,000 raise after an internal audit found he had been reducing his salary and bonuses by the cost of the perks.

The firm continued to pay Weisselber­g $640,000 in salary and $500,000 in holiday bonuses. It punished him only nominally after his arrest in July 2021, reassignin­g him to senior adviser.

He even celebrated his 75th birthday at Trump Tower, with cake and colleagues in August – just hours after finalizing the plea agreement.

 ?? Photograph: Carlo Allegri/Reuters ?? Allen Weisselber­g with Donald Trump at Trump Tower in Manhattan in May 2016.
Photograph: Carlo Allegri/Reuters Allen Weisselber­g with Donald Trump at Trump Tower in Manhattan in May 2016.

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