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Showing posts with label TAX FRAUD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TAX FRAUD. Show all posts

Monday, September 20, 2021

Trump schemes to take McConnell out

 

Today’s Action: Stop the Line 3 oil sands pipeline!


Pfizer says COVID vaccine is safe and effective for kids ages 5 to 11

Today's Top Stories:

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Trump actively recruiting senators to "depose" Mitch McConnell as the GOP leader

The disgraced ex-president is still reportedly furious that McConnell did nothing to stand in the way of Joe Biden's certification, because self-obsession is a hell of a drug.

Take Action: Tell Congress to expand Medicare!


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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Mississippi governor crumbles after getting called out for his worst-in-the-US response to COVID

Gov. Tate Reeves just gave a master class in what not to say when you're overseeing the worst response in the nation to the pandemic.

Take Action: Demand Fox be held liable for vaccine disinformation that’s getting people killed!


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Support Charles Booker — the progressive Senate candidate with a real shot at unseating Rand Paul

Charles Booker: This. This is our chance to flip Kentucky blue and send America's worst senator packing.


Senate parliamentarian ruling likely sinks Democrats immigration efforts in 2021
Senate Democrats likely will not be able to include a pathway to legalization for millions of immigrants in their $3.5 trillion bill to expand the country's social safety net after new guidance from the Senate parliamentarian Sunday night.

Take Action: Tell President Biden to tax the wealthy to fund the infrastructure plan!


$100,000 donation by Matt Gaetz raises all the eyebrows
On the day Trump’s second impeachment trial began in the Senate, the campaign for embattled Rep. Matt Gaetz — currently under federal investigation since the summer for alleged sex crimes with an underage teen — made by far its largest ever political contribution: $100,000 to a mysterious nonprofit created to defend the then-president.


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Beto planning Texas comeback in governor’s race

O'Rourke's entry into the race would give Democrats a high-profile candidate with a national fundraising network to challenge Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in the Lone Star State.

Take Action: Demand the Texas legislature overturn the Governor deadly decision to lift the mask mandate!


Fauci says Americans should stay away from COVID-19 booster shots until they're eligible
Some people have been seeking a third shot before the official sign-off.


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Centrists pull FATAL stunt

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Beyond dangerous.


Joe Manchin wants to push Biden’s social-spending package to the back burner
Manchin’s new timeline — if he insists on it — would disrupt plans by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to vote on the sweeping budget reconciliation package this month.


Nearly 900 state legislators urge Supreme Court to uphold Roe v. Wade in major abortion case
Arguments in the case involving Mississippi's 15-week abortion ban are scheduled to begin this fall.

Take Action: Add your name to repeal the Hyde Amendment and make abortion safe, legal, and affordable!


France's Emmanuel Macron to talk to Biden amid "grave crisis" over nuclear submarine deal with Australia
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Sunday that France "would have had every reason to know that we have deep and grave concerns" about the capability of France's Attack class subs, which he said cold not meet Australia's strategic interests.


Trump Organization back in court fighting tax fraud charges
Another week, another round of court hearings for the former guy's inner circle.


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...


Today’s Action: Stop the Line 3 oil sands pipeline!

It should have been enough that recent Line 3 oil sands pipeline permits were granted by lackeys in the Trump administration that believe climate change is a hoax, or that doing so broke treaties made with First Nations, or that a code red report on climate change should have the entire planet working to end our reliance on fossil fuels, but, in defiance of all good reason, construction continues on the dangerous Line 3 pipeline. 

Just last Thursday, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources ordered Enbridge Energy, the pipeline’s owner, to pay $3.3 million for already damaging a sensitive aquifer during construction for Line 3 after the company dug 8 feet deeper than they told the state they would. It’s clear that Enbridge does not feel bound to any sort of environmental regulations, and President Biden has an obligation to end construction on Line 3 immediately, 

The Line 3 pipeline is more than just a mistake — it’s a gamble with some of our most sensitive ecosystems and marginalized communities. Write President Biden and tell him to make good on his climate campaign promises and stop construction on Line 3 now! Send him this petition with more than 50,000 signatures calling for the Line 3 permit to be revoked! 

While President Biden could revoke the federal permits issued by the Trump administration that the pipeline depends on, he has yet to do so. We need our elected leaders to aggressively tackle climate change. The past several months alone of unprecedented drought, flooding, heatwaves, and devastating storms illustrate the need for immediate, meaningful action. 

If completed, Line 3 would be one of the largest crude oil pipelines in the world. Which means that 915,000 barrels of tar sands crude, some of the Earth’s dirtiest oil, would traverse delicate wetlands, rice beds, and lakes daily, in violation of First Nations treaties and at great peril to our environment.

Write President Biden and tell him not to choose oil over our planet and our First Nation communities. Demand he revoke federal construction permits for Line 3 now!

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition censuring McConnell for voting to acquit Trump and then admitting he was guilty, and be sure to follow OD Action on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.





Wednesday, July 14, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Bess Levin | The Shunning of Allen Weisselberg

 

 

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Allen Weisselberg. (photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Bess Levin | The Shunning of Allen Weisselberg
Bess Levin, Vanity Fair
Levin writes: "Allen Weisselberg has been removed as an officer from dozens of Trump Organization subsidiaries."

Allen Weisselberg has been removed as an officer from dozens of Trump Organization subsidiaries.


onald Trump has a long history of suddenly pretending not to know people once it’s clear they could get him in serious trouble, despite indisputable evidence that he knows them quite well. Campaign adviser George Papadopoulos, who Trump openly praised to The Washington Post? After Papadopoulos was convicted of lying to the FBI about interactions with Russians, Trump told Fox News, “I never even talked to the guy. I didn’t know who he was.” Matthew Whitaker, the guy the then president apparently wanted to do his bidding at the Justice Department (before Bill Barr came along)? Once it became clear that Trump seemingly wanted to use Whitaker to shut down Robert Mueller, Trump claimed, “I don’t know Matt Whitaker,” even though they’d reportedly met more than a dozen times. Campaign manager Paul Manafort? After he was convicted and sentenced to prison, Trump said he “didn’t know Manafort well.” Prince Andrew? “I don’t know him.” Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman? “Never even heard of [him].” Lev Parnas? “I don’t even know who this man is.” Anyway, you get the idea.

So really, it’s not at all surprising that Trump appears to be putting some distance between himself and Allen Weisselberg, the Trump Organization CFO charged alongside the company this month, given the possibility of Weisselberg suddenly flipping and informing on Trump, or simply making the company look bad with a guilty conviction. Shortly after being terminated as director of Trump’s Scottish golf club, Weisselberg has been removed from leadership roles at dozens of Trump Organization subsidiaries. Per The Washington Post:

The changes were made Thursday and Friday, a week after a grand jury in Manhattan indicted Weisselberg on 15 felony counts, including grand larceny and tax fraud. Weisselberg was accused by New York prosecutors of helping run a 15-year scheme to evade income taxes by concealing executives’ salaries—including more than $1.7 million of his own income—from tax authorities.… [The] subsidiaries included a holding company that owns many Trump businesses, a corporate entity that handles payroll for many Trump employees, and even a Trump project in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., that went bust more than a decade ago.

Previously, Weisselberg had shared the leadership of these companies with one of former president Donald Trump’s adult sons or, in the case of the Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla., with Trump himself. Now, records show, the Trump family members are left in charge.… The removal of Weisselberg’s name from these corporate filings could avoid questions from regulators, lenders, or vendors by leaving out the name of an indicted executive.

As former federal prosecutor Daniel Zelenko told The Wall Street Journal, it’s not generally realistic for a company to keep a CFO in place after a criminal indictment. “How are insurers and lenders going to rely on what the CFO tells them?” said Zelenko. “It creates a lot of challenges for a company continuing to do business.”

For now Weisselberg, who has been accused of evading $900,000 in taxes on more than $1.7 million of income, largely through fringe benefits that were never reported to the IRS, like cars, an apartment, and private school tuition, remains employed by the parent company, and a person familiar with the matter told The Washington Post, “he‘s going to remain” there. Weisselberg, who, like the Trump Organization, pleaded not guilty to all the charges, has also indicated that he will not cooperate with prosecutors against the ex-president.

On the other hand, he’s facing more than a decade in prison if convicted. And as former federal prosecutor Cynthia Alksne told MSNBC last week, “The jury will hate [Weisselberg]. He’s not going to have a jury of people who go to MAGA rallies, he’s going to have a cross section of people who live in Manhattan, who do pay Manhattan taxes, who don’t get free Mercedes, who don’t have somebody else paying for their children’s education and not have tax ramifications for that. So I think he will be a very hated defendant, Mr. Weisselberg, and I’m sure his defense attorneys have told him so.” Meanwhile, as former U.S. attorney Preet Bharara opined, “I am optimistic he’ll be convicted. The law is fairly clear on what is income & what is taxable. He’s a sophisticated executive; mistake is implausible. The company booked much of it as income. And juries hate rich tax cheats.” So it’s not out of the realm of possibility that Weisselberg is at least considering a scenario in which he cuts a deal, and that Trump will one day, in the not too distant future, claim of a man who’s worked for his company for decades: “Never heard of him.”

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Wednesday, July 7, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Arwa Mahdawi | The Trump Kids Look Likely to Turn on Their Dad – and I Suspect Ivanka Will Go First

 


 

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07 July 21

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Melania Trump with Ivanka, Eric and Donald Jr. in 2016. (photo: Tasos Katopodis/AFP/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Arwa Mahdawi | The Trump Kids Look Likely to Turn on Their Dad – and I Suspect Ivanka Will Go First
Arwa Mahdawi, Guardian UK
Mahdawi writes: "The former president is not in immediate danger of jail, but his problems are piling up fast. Not least the fact that, in his family, loyalty means nothing."


othing in life is certain except death and rich people jumping through complicated hoops to avoid paying taxes. In case you needed any more convincing about the tax side of that, please see the latest travails of the Trumps.

On Thursday, the Trump Organization and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, were charged with a “sweeping and audacious illegal payment scheme” of tax-related crimes. While that may sound juicy, it is duller (but no less devious) when you dig into the 15-count indictment. There is no smoking gun, just mounds of details about company perks, such as payment of school fees and rents that weren’t reported properly. Lots of grubby ruses that add up to massive, and possibly illegal, tax savings.

Don’t mistake a lack of style for a lack of substance, however. The devil – and Donald Trump’s potential downfall – is in the detail. While it is unlikely that Trump (who is not facing criminal charges yet) is going to jail imminently, Thursday’s indictment may well mark the beginning of the end of his business empire. That end will come sooner rather than later if Weisselberg, who has worked for the Trump family for nearly 50 years, decides to turn against Trump and cooperate with the investigation. So far, Weisselberg seems loyal, but that could always change. Weisselberg’s family, it is worth noting, aren’t all as pro-Trump as he is. Jennifer Weisselberg, his former daughter-in-law, has handed over numerous financial documents regarding her ex-husband, who was also a Trump Organization employee.

You think the Weisselbergs sound dysfunctional? Wait until the Trumps start turning on each other. It could be any day. On Thursday, Mary Trump, Donald’s estranged niece, told the cable news host Rachel Maddow that she believes the former president’s adult children won’t think twice before sacrificing their father to save themselves. “His relationship with them, and their relationship with him, is entirely transactional and conditional,” she said. “They’re not going to risk anything for him, just as he wouldn’t risk anything for them.”

Trump’s children, to be clear, haven’t been charged with anything yet. However, they have a lot to be worried about. As Donald Trump’s biographer said recently, one reason Weisselberg is in trouble is that he was allegedly paid as an employee and a nonemployee contractor – allowing various tax write-offs. A New York Times investigation reported that Ivanka Trump was similarly paid more than $700,000 (£500,000) in consulting fees while also collecting a salary as a full-time employee of the Trump Organization. It is likely Eric and Don Jr had similar arrangements in place – we only know for sure about Ivanka because she had to disclose the payments when she gave herself a job at the White House.

If any of the Trump kids are going to turn on their dad, my money is squarely on Ivanka. Indeed, she already seems to be distancing herself strategically from her no-longer-particularly-useful father. A couple of weeks ago, for example, there were reports that Trump’s complaints about the “stolen” 2020 election were driving Ivanka and Jared Kushner away. These reported leaks about Javanka are not new phenomena – they happened frequently throughout Trump’s presidency, leading some to suspect it was a PR tactic by a couple keen to remain in the good graces of liberals as well as the Maga crowd.

While Ivanka appears to be coolly attempting to control her own narrative behind the scenes, Donald Jr and Eric reacted to the Trump Organization criminal charges by having histrionics on camera. Eric Trump told Newsmax last week that “Don, Ivanka and I live really nice, clean lives”. Meanwhile, Don Jr posted a 13-minute video on Facebook calling the charges against his dad “banana-republic stuff”. He also (rather unhelpfully) acknowledged that the allegations Trump paid for Weisselberg’s grandchildren’s school fees were true. “My dad did that,” he said, because he is a “good guy”. A “good guy” who probably wishes he raised smarter kids. With children like these, who needs enemies?

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Monday, July 5, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Juan Cole | Top 6 Things Trump Should Be Indicted for Aside From Cheating on Taxes

 


 

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05 July 21

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President Trump. (photo: Jim Watson/Getty)
FOCUS: Juan Cole | Top 6 Things Trump Should Be Indicted for Aside From Cheating on Taxes
Juan Cole, Informed Comment
Cole writes: "There are important charges that I wish had been brought against Trump himself."

he Trump organization was indicted by a New York grand jury on Wednesday and the indictment is unsealed today, according to Shayna Jacobs, Josh Dawsey, David A. Fahrenthold and Jonathan O’Connell at WaPo. The Trump Org.’s CFO, Allen Weisselberg, was also indicted. Trump himself is not named, but the trial could lead Weisselberg to turn state’s evidence or could throw up new information that could land Trump in legal hot water.

The basis for the charges, as with Al Capone, is apparently cheating on taxes. The Trump organization appears to have routinely remunerated employees with perquisites like free rent, which they did not report to the IRS as income and on which no taxes were paid. This was a way for the organization to save money by paying lower salaries, since lodging was implicitly included, and for employees and for the organization to reduce their tax exposure.

There are some other more important charges that I wish had been brought, and against Trump himself rather than only his company.

1. Culpability for some 500,000 U.S. deaths from the deadly SARS-CoV-2 virus. Some people would have died in the pandemic no matter what the federal government did. But high Trump health officials like Deborah Birx have admitted that the deaths after the first 100,000 fatalities could have been avoided. Those deaths could have been avoided if the government had “‘mitigated earlier … paused earlier and actually done’ greater social distancing and shutdown measures” according to Matthew Brown at USA Today.

The big reason for government failure in this regard, though not the only one, was Donald Trump. He decided that closing down businesses was a horrible strategy for his reelection campaign and would hurt the stock market, on which his wealthy constituency depended. He therefore ended most federal mitigation measures way too early, and sent a signal to governors like those in Florida and Texas to do the same. Trump stigmatized mask-wearing, which was almost as good as a vaccine. He implied that the virus was a hoax, and personally hosted several super-spreader events, setting an example for the nation. At one point he actually urged people to try drinking bleach, which will kill you dead.

2. Aiding and abetting the expansion of the white supremacist movement and mainstreaming it inside the Republican Party. Trump refused to condemn the white supremacists who marched in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017. They were marching against the city’s plan to remove statues of slaver Confederate generals. One of the “very fine people” he praised there murdered anti-racism activist Heather Heyer with his car. The Republican Party in Florida recently made this murder retroactively legal. Aiding and abetting Nazis is a vague crime, but I’m sure a good prosecutor could find instances where Trump gave material support to domestic terrorist organizations.

3. Deliberately provoking the January 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection. Trump called a huge mob of 15,000 white supremacists to Washington and openly sicced them on the Capitol, where, he told them, VP Mike Pence and Congress were about to steal the election from Trump and hand the victory to Joe Biden. This was a criminal conspiracy and not a mere matter of freedom of speech. Trump created a clear and present danger by crying “fire” in a crowded theater, and if things had turned out just slightly differently, Mike Pence would be dead and maybe some Congressional representatives would have been kidnapped or killed.

4. Trump’s murder of Gen. Qasem Soleimani and Gen. Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis at Baghdad International Airport on January 3, 2020, caused reprisals that left over 100 U.S. troops with dangerous concussions and left two dead. There was no justification in international law for Trump to simply kill these figures. The Trump cover story that Soleimani was coming to Iraq to kill Americans was simply another Big Lie. He had been invited by the Iraqi prime minister as part of a mediation attempt between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Assassination is illegal in U.S. law. Matthew Spurlock at Just Security noted that “Executive Order 12333, states: ‘No person employed by or acting on behalf of the United States Government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in, assassination.'” But that is what Trump did.

5. Trump paid off sex worker Stormy Daniels to keep her quiet in the run-up to the 2016 election because he was afraid she would tell the world that he paid her for sex. This is a gross violation of campaign finance law. Michael Cohen, Trump’s fixer, went to jail in part for his role in this crime, but Trump was allowed to skate. Yet, Trump was the one who set the whole fraud up to blind American voters.

6. Trump’s breach of the Paris Climate Accord and his crusade against green energy was a crime against humanity and the earth. He put over a hundred billion metric tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere during his years as president, encouraging coal and Big Oil, and only wished it had been more. Trump’s actions are a time bomb that will kill millions when their full effect is felt.

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RSN: FOCUS: The Trump Organization Is in Big Trouble

 

 

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03 July 21

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Donald Trump. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)
FOCUS: The Trump Organization Is in Big Trouble
Daniel Hemel, The Atlantic
Hemel writes: "If the facts alleged in yesterday's indictment are true, the Trump Organization and its longtime chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, have engaged in blatant tax evasion for more than a decade."

The indictments of the business and its CFO allege not some minor technical mistakes, but blatant violations of the law.

f the facts alleged in yesterday’s indictment are true, the Trump Organization and its longtime chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, have engaged in blatant tax evasion for more than a decade.

Early reports characterized the crime in question as involving “fringe benefits.” This gives entirely the wrong impression. The Trump Organization and Weisselberg aren’t being charged with tripping over some hyper-technical provision on the margins of the tax system. They are being charged with blatantly violating basic tax-law requirements—and bilking New York State and New York City out of hundreds of thousands of dollars along the way.

Probably the strongest allegation relates to an apartment on Riverside Boulevard in Manhattan where Weisselberg lives with his wife. According to the indictment, the Trump Corporation—one of the Trump Organization’s many business entities—paid roughly $100,000 a year in rent, utility bills, and garage expenses for this apartment starting in 2005. The Trump Corporation allegedly didn’t report those payments as compensation on Weisselberg’s W-2 forms, and Weisselberg allegedly didn’t include those amounts in income on his own tax returns.

But the Trump Organization did, according to the indictment, maintain a separate set of books that accounted for the payments as part of Weisselberg’s compensation. Notably, when the Trump Corporation paid Weisselberg’s rent, according to the indictment, the Trump Organization reduced Weisselberg’s salary by a corresponding amount. (Both Weisselberg and the Trump Organization pleaded not guilty yesterday.)

One can describe this as a “fringe benefit”—a tax-law term for any payment for services that is not part of stated compensation—but it’s also plain old tax fraud. Under federal and New York State tax law, lodging provided by an employer to an employee is part of the employee’s gross income. There are limited exceptions to this rule—for example, if the employee is required to live on the employer’s business premises as part of the job, or if the employer is a religious institution and the employee is a clergy member. But Weisselberg wasn’t living on Trump Organization premises because of some business need (and Trumpism is only metaphorically a religion). And if the Trump Organization was keeping a separate set of books recording compensation that it didn’t report to tax authorities, then this was no unintentional oversight.

The allegations related to Weisselberg’s apartment are quantitatively the most significant—amounting to nearly $1.2 million in untaxed income from 2005 to 2017—but yesterday’s indictment includes several other examples of brazen tax evasion. For example, it’s black-letter law that when an employer pays educational expenses for an employee’s family, those amounts are income to the employee and subject to tax (absent a specific statutory exception, such as for employees of educational institutions). Nonetheless, Donald Trump allegedly paid private-school tuition for two of Weisselberg’s grandchildren—signing his own name on checks that amounted to nearly $360,000 from 2012 to 2017. The Trump Organization and Weisselberg should have reported those payments as part of Weisselberg’s wages but, according to the indictment, didn’t.

Likewise, it’s crystal clear that an employee’s personal use of a company-provided vehicle is taxable income. But according to the indictment, the Trump Corporation made nearly $200,000 in lease payments on two Mercedes-Benz automobiles driven by Weisselberg and his wife. Again, per the indictment, the Trump Organization and Weisselberg hid those payments from tax authorities. All the while, the Trump Organization tracked the tuition expenses and the Mercedes-Benz leases as compensation to Weisselberg in its separate set of books.

This is the type of conduct that puts other people behind bars. The investment banker Richard Josephberg was sentenced to four years in prison in 2007 for—among other tax-law violations—having a business pay for his homes in Westchester County, New York, and Greenwich, Connecticut, and then failing to report those payments as income. Leona Helmsley, the late real-estate billionaire and Trump friend-turned-enemy, was sentenced to four years in prison for essentially the same thing: having her company pay to renovate her Greenwich mansion and then failing to report those payments as income. (The U.S. attorney who brought the federal case against Helmsley was, incidentally, Trump’s future personal lawyer Rudolph Giuliani.)

Usually, these types of tax crimes are prosecuted at the federal level. But state tax-fraud prosecutions are not unheard of. Helmsley was indicted on state tax-fraud charges before she was prosecuted federally. According to yesterday’s indictment, New York City and New York State lost out on nearly $345,000 in taxes owed by Weisselberg. And when New York Attorney General Letitia James opened her probe of the Trump Organization more than a year ago, both the IRS and the Justice Department were answerable to Trump himself. New York prosecutors took up this case at a time when their federal counterparts very likely wouldn’t.

James, to be sure, has a powerful political incentive to pursue criminal charges against individuals and entities in the Trump orbit. During her 2018 campaign for state attorney general, she said that the then-president should be charged criminally. And if James can nail an ex-president who is deeply unpopular in his former home state, she will be the odds-on favorite for governor in 2022. (James hasn’t announced her candidacy for governor, but as recently as last week, she declined to rule out a run.)

Yesterday’s indictment may be part of a strategy to flip Weisselberg and use him as a witness against his former boss. But if the allegations in the indictment are true, Weisselberg is no innocent bystander in a battle between James and Trump. The indictment paints him as a financially sophisticated and well-compensated CFO of a sprawling commercial enterprise who went to great lengths to cheat on his taxes and now faces the consequences.

So yes, this is a politically tinged prosecution. But if the allegations in the indictment are true, it’s also out-and-out tax fraud—conduct that is criminal beyond question. Being connected to a controversial political figure shouldn’t send you to jail. It shouldn’t get you off the hook either.

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Sunday, July 4, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: How Much Jail Time Is Allen Weisselberg Facing if He Doesn't Flip on Trump?

 

 

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04 July 21

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IMGCAPONE
FOCUS: How Much Jail Time Is Allen Weisselberg Facing if He Doesn't Flip on Trump?
Martin J. Sheil, Slate
Sheil writes: "Trump's 'eyes and ears' took a pounding in court on Thursday with a 15-count indictment that spanned tax fraud, grand larceny, conspiracy, and more."

rump’s “eyes and ears” took a pounding in court on Thursday with a 15-count indictment that spanned tax fraud, grand larceny, conspiracy, and more. The 73-year-old accountant who, it has been said, knows essentially where every penny goes regarding the Trump Organization, took a beating and will now have some big decisions to make that will impact how he chooses to live the rest of his life and how other members of his family may live theirs. And then there is the matter of Allen Weisselberg’s loyalty to the head of the Trump Organization, the entity that was also indicted yesterday, and the potential impact the chief financial officer’s full cooperation may have on the public life of former President Donald Trump.

Undoubtedly, after seeing the indictment filed by the Manhattan district attorney and New York state attorney general, Weisselberg’s first question to his legal defense team was: How much jail time am I looking at? It is that question that may shape the future of all of the associated individuals and organizations. It requires peering not only into the current charges and the language of the indictment, however. It also requires knowing what the indictment may signal about prosecutors’ next steps in ratcheting up their pressure.

While the number of counts in the indictment (15) sounds menacing, the only real numbers that count are those that drive the sentencing guidelines calculations. And that is why there are a surplus of numbers referenced in the indictment. The amounts of income that Weisselberg received and evaded reporting to the taxing authorities and included in the indictment charges are one thing. The cumulative totals of income received and unreported plus the total taxes evaded on the federal, state, and New York City level will be counted and then referenced in the sentencing guidelines to arrive at a baseline sentencing exposure level, usually calculated in months to serve in prison for discussion at the sentencing hearing.

Whatever the baseline figure is will then be adjusted upward and downward and therein lies the rub and why Weisselberg has a difficult hand. He has three options:

(1) fight the charges and risk conviction after trial (most likely two to six years or higher in state prison),

(2) plead guilty but do not cooperate with the prosecutors (likely as much as a year in state prison),

(3) plead guilty and cooperate (likely probation and payment of civil fines).

Under option 2, Weisselberg can obtain a pretty significant reduction if he falls on his sword and makes a full admission—acceptance of responsibility. But that still likely leaves him with some jail time to serve, which is why the prosecutors charged him with what they did.

The only other substantive reduction to sentence left Weisselberg would then be through door No. 3: full cooperation with the ongoing investigation and prosecution of all crimes associated with the Trump Organization and by those officials associated with it. Should the erstwhile CFO choose this option and in fact fully and truthfully testify as to where all the bodies are located, then the accountant might skate in terms of jail time. He would still likely be on probation and would also be looking at significant back taxes and penalties, but he and his family would have avoided any risk of Rikers—something that other Trump executives may well have to endure.

A leading expert and former federal and New York state prosecutor, Daniel R. Alonso, told us:

These are the kinds of dollar amounts that ordinarily carry jail time in Manhattan courts. If he pleads guilty and cooperates, he has an excellent chance of a probationary sentence. If he goes to trial and is convicted, it is very likely that he would be sentenced to state prison time—at least a term of 1–3 but more likely 2–6 years or higher. And if he pleads guilty without cooperating, it will depend on the judge, but I would think any judge would be hard-pressed not to mete out at least some incarceration on a case involving $900,000 in fraud. If he’s able to persuade the judge that the amount really shouldn’t be that high, then perhaps he has a better chance. The DA’s decision to charge fraud against the IRS was brilliant in that it made the case about much higher dollar figures, and therefore, much higher likelihood of incarceration.

What are other factors that Weisselberg must now consider?

Strength of Case Going to Trial

Count if you will the number of times the indictment uses the word “conceal” up unto the final sentence. Concealment is the embodiment of intent when it comes to tax fraud. The prosecution must be able to provide evidence of intent—that Weisselberg willfully acted in a manner to evade the tax laws. Evidence of intent is found in overt acts taken by the tax evader to conceal or secrete, and are defined in a seminal federal criminal tax case called Spies v. United States (pronounced “Speez”). The Supreme Court found in that case that overt acts of intent such as maintaining a double set of books and records, submitting false invoices, falsifying records, disguising payments off the books, and the like make up what has become known as “Spies type” evasions of intent.

The New York indictment appears to cover many of these examples of intent. What is particularly damaging in my opinion is the reference to an internal set of spreadsheets or records that document the actual total receipt of compensation not captured by the wage statements (W-2 forms) prepared and issued to the employee and the tax agencies. This recording of off-the-books compensation that is then omitted from the W-2 occurs time and time again: the use of Mercedes-Benz vehicles by both Mr. and Mrs. Weisselberg, the rent-free apartment in Manhattan, the payment of utilities and garage space for parking, the purchase of big-screen television sets, carpeting and furniture for the Weisselbergs’ personal residences, and the payment of private school tuition in the hundreds of thousands of dollars from the coffers of the Trump Organization as well as from Donald Trump’s personal account for the Weisselbergs’ grandchildren.

Allen Weisselberg not only received off-the-books compensation in the hundreds of thousands of dollars as part of his annual salary of $940,000, but he was also the person responsible for the preparation of the Trump Organization books, records, and payroll accounting to track all compensation. The free apartment, for example, was not booked in the Trump Organization’s general ledger as employee compensation but was instead labeled and deducted as “rent expense” in the general ledger. The indictment pinpoints one occasion where Weisselberg directed a staff member in the accounting department to remove the notation “Per Allen Weisselberg” from the entries in Donald J. Trump’s Detail General Ledger relating to tuition payments paid on Weisselberg’s behalf for tuition to a private school.

In short, this kind of evidence suggests a very strong case for the prosecution.

Potential Criminal Cases Against Other Weisselberg Family Members

Prosecutors conspicuously made references throughout the indictment to other Weisselberg family members who received what appears to be untaxed benefits. This includes Weisselberg’s wife who was provided her own Mercedes-Benz as well as furniture and carpeting for private residences. Did she know that these benefits were untaxed? Did she willfully and knowingly sign a false joint tax return? Does Allen want to take a chance that his wife will not be prosecuted?

What about Weisselberg’s son Barry who ran the Trump Wollman skating rink and whose son was the beneficiary of the private school tuition payments? Did Barry report the benefits on his tax return? What about his rent-free apartment? Does he have some criminal exposure? Does Allen want to take a chance on that too? He would be well advised to avoid those risks especially after the prosecutors have now issued these public signals.

Potential Additional Charges That Could Be Brought in Superseding Indictment(s)

What if the initial indictment is just the tip of the iceberg? Prosecutors obviously have witnesses that can bring the internal records of true compensation to life in the courtroom. Are witnesses also available to testify about the rumored doctoring of Trump Organization financial statements wherein assets were inflated or minimized depending on the circumstances, such as application of a business loan, where it would be helpful to maximize the value of the asset, or the reporting of property taxes, where the lower the property value, the lower the taxes?

A strong indication that prosecutors may have that kind of weapon is the indictment’s reference to “Unindicted Co-Conspirator #1,” who CNN reports is Jeff McConney, the Trump Organization’s longtime controller. McConney reportedly testified before the special grand jury, for which he was granted immunity under New York state law.

What’s the potential risk to Weisselberg from any such additional charges? Submission of false financial statements to a financial institution for the purposes of obtaining a business loan could provide the basis for bank fraud charges, which contain significant sentencing exposure. Submission of false property values to artificially lower property taxes could bring mail or wire fraud charges, which also contain significant sentencing exposure.

What if prosecutors determine the entire Trump Organization operated as a criminal enterprise and brought racketeering charges against those responsible, which could come with that category of charges? Such counts, under New York’s “little RICO” law, contain a maximum statutory exposure of 25 years and have weakened the knees of many a Mafia capo!

Superseding indictments will seriously raise the sentencing guidelines baseline, and the enticing plea deal available to Allen Weisselberg now will vanish. Little RICO charges, for example, come with a mandatory minimum of one to three years. The longer Weisselberg delays on copping a plea, the greater the cost to him in terms of potential jail time. He’d be well advised to plea and cooperate now, rather than after any such indictment is entered.

Prosecutors may also extract a price for Weisselberg to pay for his procrastination, since, among other things, there is a cost to them in terms of trial preparation. Of course, the closer the trial becomes, the greater the anxiety level, as Weisselberg nears an iron bars destiny.

Potential Federal and IRS Penalties

The indictment contains multiple references to the amounts of federal taxes evaded by Weisselberg and to the false W-2 statements submitted to the IRS by Weisselberg and the Trump Organization where substantive fringe benefits were omitted despite the existence of internal documentation that contained the true compensation figures. Could Weisselberg be looking down the barrel of federal tax fraud charges?

Never say never.

There could be residual issues left over from the Southern District of New York immunity granted Weisselberg from the Michael Cohen caper involving hush money reimbursements paid to Cohen by Trump Organization executives. But the real issue is that the resource-strained IRS will not likely spend valuable manpower on a tax case that has already been successfully prosecuted at the state level. It would be ordinary practice for the IRS to let the state prosecution stand for the individual’s criminal liability. The fact that established practices would be for the IRS to exercise restraint does not mean the IRS won’t pile on with another criminal indictment, but the IRS chief counsel will not likely authorize prosecution, and the Criminal Investigation chief won’t likely expend valuable resources on Weisselberg that could be better invested elsewhere. The IRS does not want to be perceived as persecuting in lieu of prosecuting tax thieves. That goes against its mission, which is to encourage voluntary compliance with the tax law.

But the IRS has another weapon at its disposal, and it is very likely to wield it in Weisselberg’s case. There is no statute of limitations in the IRS tax code with regard to pursuit of “civil fraud” penalties, which can climb to as much as 75 percent of the tax evaded. That figure could easily total six figures and may very well climb into seven figures for the Trump Organization’s chief accountant. Something to think about.

In short, Weisselberg had a terrible day and will have more of those in the foreseeable future. The DA’s case against him appears strong. His family may come under further attack. While his loyalty to his longtime boss is clearly being severely tested with the initial indictment filed, the CFO must know that he could be looking at spending the rest of his life in jail, should he spurn cooperation and provoke the prosecutors into filing superseding indictments containing very steep jail time.

Donald Trump exclaimed to the media prior to the unveiling of the indictment that his company’s actions were “standard practice throughout the U.S. business community, and in no way a crime.” Should this case actually go to trial, it will be fascinating to see not only if Weisselberg will testify, but just how many corporate chieftains Mr. Trump can bring to court to testify in support of his statement that the tax frauds delineated in the New York indictment are standard practice. How many real estate moguls and hotel honchos will want to take the stand and acknowledge that their companies do not tax fringe benefits of their executives and falsify their corporate records to conceal such fraud? The question answers itself.

The very fact that Trump can make such statements highlights the need for federal, state, and local prosecutors to vigorously enforce the tax law in order to induce voluntary compliance. Business leaders need to be deterred from thinking they are entitled or above the law or that they can negotiate some sort of deal that precludes jail time for executives guilty of tax fraud.

Trump and other corporate executives of the Trump Organization should be concerned about incurring their own legal trouble as the machines of the Manhattan DA’s office and the New York state attorney general’s office have now fired what appears to be just an initial salvo. Knowing how such tax crime investigations and prosecutions work in stages, I anticipate there is more to come. So should Mr. Weisselberg, if he listens to his attorneys.

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