LEGAL
‘Garden-variety corruption’: The long,
underwhelming arm of the law comes down on the Trump Organization
Legal experts differ on whether the charges are
relatively minor, and whether the Manhattan DA has more coming.
Many lawyers said the suit doesn’t reflect all the
evidence prosecutors have against the Trump Organization or former President
Donald Trump. |
By JOSH
GERSTEIN and BETSY WOODRUFF SWAN
07/01/2021
10:22 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/01/trump-organization-corruption-law-497770
The
long-awaited indictment of the Trump Organization and one of its top executives
on Thursday generated an immense range of responses — from predictions of
former President Donald Trump’s imminent legal doom to, well, shrugs.
“If you had
told me a year ago when this stuff was at the Supreme Court that this is what
it would ultimately be about, I would have said, ‘Oh,” said Benjamin Wittes,
who helms Lawfare, a legal website with ties to the Brookings Institution.
“It’s
underwhelming in substance and scope and range… It reads like very
garden-variety corruption,” Wittes added of the charges revealed on Thursday.
Prosecutors
accused Trump’s company and Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg of hiding
about $1.7 million in off-the-books perks and cash bonuses to Weisselberg, his
family members and other Trump employees. Weisselberg and the Trump
Organization have pleaded not guilty.
Wittes said
the conduct described was egregious and clearly deserved prosecution, but
expressed surprise that prosecutors hadn’t yet surfaced with charges related to
the Trump firm’s dealings with banks, insurance companies or the company’s own
property and income tax bills.
Other legal
experts counseled patience, saying that the indictment was part of a methodical
process to build a broader case that could very well involve charges against
Trump directly.
“Prediction:
the charges brought today in Manhattan are the tip of the iceberg,” Andrew
Weissmann, a former deputy to special counsel Robert Mueller, wrote on Twitter.
“Note DA request for a protective order to keep discovery close to the vest
while investigation continues.”
Asked about
expectations for a broader case charging the company with tax, insurance and
bank fraud in connection with its business deals, Weissmann said he thinks
charges of that sort are still coming.
“This is
not a sign that they didn’t find anything there and that part of the case is
done,” he told POLITICO. “To me, it reads like: Why delay when they have this
part of the case ready? They’re also sending a message to others involved that
they’re not afraid to bring charges.”
Many
lawyers said the suit doesn’t reflect all the evidence prosecutors have against
the Trump Organization or Trump, but rather all the things they think they can
prove against the 73-year-old Weisselberg.
"It is
safe to say that prosecutors did not start their investigation into Donald
Trump to dismantle a fringe benefit conspiracy amounting to significant dollars
on its face, but a relatively small amount of money in the context of the Trump
Organization," said Jeremy Saland, a former prosecutor in the Manhattan
DA's office.
The 15
charges, which theoretically carry up to 80 years in prison if stacked
end-to-end, could convince Weisselberg to tell prosecutors what he knows about
Trump’s involvement in the other tax, insurance and bank fraud matters the
district attorney’s office has been pursuing for two years. Weisselberg’s
lawyers maintained that he intends to vigorously contest the charges, which
they called politically motivated.
Efforts to
flip witnesses to incriminate higher ups are common in criminal probes,
although some attorneys said aspects of this week’s indictment are unusual.
Lawyers for
the Trump Organization argued that state criminal charges are unheard of
against a company over the sums at issue in the indictment — about $1.7 million
in allegedly unreported income to Weisselberg over 15 years. As a result,
prosecutors allege, the Trump Organization CFO underpaid his federal income tax
by about $556,000, state tax by about $107,000, and New York City taxes by
about $238,000.
“Never
before has this District Attorney’s office, or even the IRS, criminally charged
a company over employee benefits,” the Trump Organization said in a statement
Thursday. “Everyday New Yorkers and Americans know exactly what this is: an
inappropriate use of a local prosecutor’s vast and unchecked power to target a
political opponent.”
However,
some experts said the array of unreported tax-free benefits including
private-school tuition, apartment rental and Mercedes lease payments described
in the indictment made the allegations against the Trump Organization more
damning than a garden-variety case. They also noted the allegations that
Weisselberg and others took deliberate steps to cover up the perks and
benefits.
“I’d say
it’s a reasonable, righteous prosecution in the sense that they were doing
bald-faced, problematic transactions that you cannot allow to be happening
within any tax regime, or your tax regime falls apart,” said Philip Hackney, a
University of Pittsburgh law school professor who formerly worked in the Office
of the Chief Counsel at the IRS. “If you find these types of things, I think
you’ve got to do something about them. And a prosecution of some sort makes
sense to me.”
One of the
prosecutors on the case said in court Thursday that the Trump Organization’s
public claims about the charges are misleading.
Assistant
District Attorney Carey Dunne described the alleged “off-the-books” payment
scheme as “a type of crime that’s charged against companies and executives all
the time.”
Referring
to Trump without mentioning his name, Dunne added, “Contrary to today’s
assertion by the company’s former CEO, this is not a ‘standard practice in the
business community,’ nor was it the act of a rogue or isolated employee.”
While the
sums involved in the case seem minor compared to bonuses paid to individual
Wall Street bankers in a given year, Hackney said the flagrant nature of the
Trump Organization’s alleged scheme called for action.
“That’s
pretty egregious stuff,” Hackney said. “With Weisselberg, it’s a fairly
substantial amount of money that was avoided.”
Some
experts also noted another unusual feature of the DA’s case: The IRS is painted
as a victim. In fact, the most serious charge against Weisselberg — carrying a
potential 15-year prison term — is that he stole more than half a million
dollars from the federal government by not properly paying his taxes.
Yet, so
far, there’s been no public sign that the IRS has sued him for that money, much
less filed a federal criminal case over it.
Hackney
said the alleged unreported income might simply have slipped under the feds’
radar.
“The IRS
doesn’t audit that many people, so it’s possible the IRS has just missed all of
this,” he said.
FILED
UNDER: TAXES, IRS, INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DONALD TRUMP,
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