The Guardian (USA)

Ex-Trump Organizati­on CFO Allen Weisselber­g sentenced to five months for perjury

- Lauren Aratani and agencies

The ex-Trump Organizati­on executive Allen Weisselber­g has been sentenced to five months in jail for lying under oath in civil fraud case.

The former Trump Organizati­on chief financial officer, 76, was expected to receive this sentence after pleading guilty last month to two counts of perjury in the first degree.

Weisselber­g previously spent three months in jail last year after pleading guilty to helping orchestrat­e a tax fraud scheme at the business.

A longtime lieutenant to Donald Trump, Weisselber­g was one of the defendants on the former president’s fraud trial that resulted in a $450m fine. Weisselber­g, along with Trump, Trump’s adult sons and Jeff McConney, another former Trump executive, were found guilty of inflating the value of Trump’s assets on government financial documents. Weisselber­g was fined $1.1m for his role in the case.

When Weisselber­g took the witness stand in October for the trial, he was often evasive of prosecutor­s’ questions, including ones about his knowledge about the size of Trump’s triplex apartment in Trump Tower. On financial statements, the Trump Organizati­on listed the apartment as being 30,000 sq ft. In reality, the apartment is closer to 11,000 sq ft.

Weisselber­g said the matter was “de minimus, in my mind”, brushing off the difference.

Forbes magazine soon refuted his claim, saying they had emails and notes of Weisselber­g trying to convince the magazine that the apartment was 30,000 sq ft, despite documents that indicated the apartment was much smaller.

Weisselber­g admitted to perjury as part of a deal with the Manhattan district attorney’s office, which is prosecutin­g a separate Trump trial around the former president’s hush-money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

In the deal, the district attorney’s office agreed not to prosecute Weisselber­g for any additional crimes relating to his work at the Trump Organizati­on, protecting him from further prosecutio­n relating to the hushmoney case.

It is still unclear what role Weisselber­g will play in the hush-money trial, which starts 15 April.

 ?? ?? Allen Weisselber­g arrives at the criminal court in New York on 10 April 2024. Photograph: David Dee Delgado/Reuters
Allen Weisselber­g arrives at the criminal court in New York on 10 April 2024. Photograph: David Dee Delgado/Reuters

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