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Prosecutors investigating Trump are focusing on longtime finance chief: report

The Trump Organization stalwart has worked with the ex-president for decades

Josh Marcus
San Francisco
Monday 01 March 2021 20:20 EST
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Trump Tower in New York City
Trump Tower in New York City (Getty Images)

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State prosecutors in New York City are reportedly focusing on the long-time chief financial officer of the Trump Organization as part of their investigation into potential fraud within the ex-president’s businesses.

Allen Weisselberg, 73, originally worked for Donald Trump’s father, and has worked for the Trump Organization for decades, where he knows the businesses’ intimate inner workings.

Unnamed sources told the New York Times on Monday that as part of the Democratic Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R Vance Jr’s fraud investigation, prosecutors have been asking about Mr Weisselberg, a potential prelude to securing his cooperation against the former president as part of the wide-ranging business probe.

The Trump Organization and a lawyer for Mr Weisselberg did not respond to a request for comment fromThe Independent

Mr Trump has called the investigation a “witch hunt” and a “fishing expedition.”

The probe began in 2018, as authorities looked into campaign-season hush money payments Mr Trump funnelled to two women who claimed they’d had affairs with the then-candidate, which he denies. 

Since then, investigators have reportedly expanded the scope of the search, probing high-profile deals around the famous Trump Tower, various Trump hotels, and an estate belonging to Mr Trump in Westchester County.

They’re reportedly investigating whether the former president’s businesses inflated the value of their assets to get good loans, and deflated their value to avoid high taxes, and they’ve subpoenaed the Trump Organization’s main lenders, Deutsche Bank and Ladder Capital, the latter of which previously sold its Trump loans to investors.

Both institutions are reportedly cooperating with the investigation, as is Michael Cohen, the president’s former fixer and lawyer who was sent to prison for three years on federal campaign finance charges surrounding the hush money payments. During congressional testimony, Mr Cohen said the Trump finance chief orchestrated the hush money scheme.

In February, the investigators won a major victory after the Supreme Court enabled them to get eight years’ worth of Mr Trump’s financial records, following a vigorous attempt from the former president to keep them secret.

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