Why an Indictment of the Trump Organization
Really Is an Indictment of Trump
The indictments against the former president’s
eponymous business do not name him. But Trump has never drawn a distinction
between himself and the entity that made him famous.
Donald Trump greets supporters, tourists and the
curious after taping an interview with Anderson Cooper at a Trump-owned
building in mid-town Manhattan on July 22, 2015 in New York City.
Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York City, July
2015. |
By MICHAEL
KRUSE
07/01/2021
05:55 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/07/01/trump-organization-indictment-donald-trump-497717
Michael
Kruse is a senior staff writer at POLITICO and POLITICO Magazine.
Informed
earlier this week that he would not be personally charged on Thursday by
prosecutors in New York, Donald Trump reportedly was thrilled. And when
indictments were unsealed in an afternoon session in court in Manhattan, they
indeed did not name him. The former president’s attorney invoked the title of a
Shakespeare play—“Much Ado About Nothing.”
But
Thursday’s arraignment of the Trump Organization and chief financial officer
Allen Weisselberg for fraud, grand larceny and tax crimes in an alleged
15-year-long scheme was not nothing.
The
development isn’t simply an escalation in the three-year probe by investigators
into the business practices of Trump’s company. It’s also not only an
especially fraught next chapter in Trump’s decades-long catch-me-if-you-can
relationship with legal peril. And it’s not even just that it poses potential
new threats of financial and political fallout.
It is most
elementally a direct and personal hit.
For just
shy of half a century the Trump Organization has been eponymous to the point of
synonymous. The man is the brand is the business. The business is the brand is
the man. Anyone who’s ever worked with him knows this. Anyone who’s ever even
watched him or thought about him in a rigorous way knows this. The Trump
Organization, always, right from the get-go, was nothing if not an extension
and reflection of Trump himself.
“There is
no separation between Trump and the Trump Organization,” former Trump attorney
and fixer Michael Cohen said when we talked this week. “For all intents and
purposes, he is the Trump Organization.”
“It’s his
avatar,” Trump biographer Tim O’Brien told me.
“Nothing,”
Cohen added, echoing what he said in his congressional testimony in 2019, “gets
done there without his knowledge and consent. Period. End of story.”
The person,
though, who has said the most about this indivisibility is … Trump himself. “I
am the chairman and president of the Trump Organization,” he wrote in the first
sentence of the first section of his 2004 book Trump: How to Get Rich.
“Remember that your organization is your organization,” he stressed. “At the
Trump Organization,” he reiterated in his (other) 2004 book Trump: Think Like a
Billionaire, “I listen to people, but my vision is my vision.” It’s hard not to
hear echoes of the French monarch Louis XIV. L’etat, c’est moi. I am the state.
It’s always
been this way.
In the
mid-1970s as he attempted to spin his father’s success into something he could
claim as his own, Trump came up with the name. Fred Trump had made himself
chairman of the board of the family business and his chosen heir its
whippersnapper of a president. “One of his first acts,” biographer Gwenda Blair
wrote of the younger Trump, “was to bypass all the pedestrian corporate names
used by his father and instead adopt one classy-sounding label, the Trump
Organization, as a sort of umbrella identity.”
In the
beginning, when he started to piece together the deal that let him renovate a
midtown hotel that led to Trump Tower that led eventually to … everything else,
it was just him. The Trump Organization was a single person: Trump. “Somehow
the word ‘organization’ made it sound much bigger,” Trump wrote in Trump: The
Art of the Deal. “I acted,” Trump said in his 2007 book Trump: Think Big, “as
if I had an organization.”
Later, when
he actually did have one, when he bought a casino in Atlantic City and then
another and then another, when his role on “The Apprentice” as the omnipotent
boss of a company with his name on it in a building with his name on it proved
to be a runway to the White House, what never changed within his organization
was his own primacy and centrality. The brand was big—the core of the company
was not. Trump, as Blair once explained, “has always preferred what
anthropologists call ‘a circular hierarchy’—or, in plain English, a wheel. A
work-flow diagram at the Trump Organization would have put Donald Trump at the
hub and connected him by spokes to his small number of top staff. They numbered
about a dozen …”
And nobody
questioned who was ultimately in charge. Trump did what he wanted, even when it
was imprudent—ill-considered moves ranging from his debt-larded spending sprees
of the 1980s to his bankruptcies of the ‘90s to the scammy “sham” of Trump
University decades after that.
The more
discerning “Apprentice” contestants couldn’t help but notice the Trump
Organization was something of a Potemkin enterprise—but one nonetheless
assembled and operated in Trump’s image. Pamela Day, an investment banker with
a Harvard Business degree who was on the second season of the show, recalled in
an interview with the biographer O’Brien a telling back-and-forth in a meeting
with chief operating officer Matt Calamari.
“He said:
‘I used to be a security guard and now I’m the COO,” Day said. “I thought,
‘What does a real estate company do with a COO?’
“So I said,
‘Matt, what do you do here? Is there an org chart?’”
“What’s an
org chart?” he said.
“Who works
here?” she said.
He returned
with a phone list.
The Trump
Organization, O’Brien told me this week, is “not really ‘organized’ at all.
It’s a hodgepodge of his own passions and interests, untethered from
sophisticated strategic thinking.” Emphasis on his—“a reflection and
extension,” O’Brien added, “of himself.”
Any notion
that his ascension to the Oval Office would alter that bedrock reality and that
Trump would adhere to convention and disentangle from his business interests in
any hard-and-fast manner evaporated a little more than a week before his inauguration
in a press conference in Trump Tower. “I could actually,” Trump said, “run my
business and run government at the same time.”
“He’s
incapable of seeing himself as anything other than the CEO of his company,”
Wayne Barrett, the late Trump biographer, told me at the time. “It’s his
identification—it’s his self-identification.”
His oldest
sons, Don Jr. and Eric, were supposed to handle day-to-day operations while
Trump focused on his day job. But that arrangement never made sense to people
who had watched Trump up close.
“I do not
believe for one minute that Trump ever left anyone to make decisions about his
company,” Barbara Res, a former Trump Organization executive, told me this
week.
“You cannot
separate the two,” former Trump publicist Alan Marcus said. “Everything is
interrelated with Donald.”
“The Trump
Organization,” Trump said in his unwittingly revealing 1990 book Trump:
Surviving at the Top, “is in some ways like the Disney Company. Images mean a
great deal to me. If people don’t associate my name with quality and success,
I’ve got serious problems.”
“The
strategy is up to you, and so are the results,” he said in How to Get Rich.
“Remember Harry Truman’s famous words, which he kept on his desk in the Oval
Office? THE BUCK STOPS HERE.”
“As the
Trump Organization has moved forward, I have very much seen it as a living
organism that needs to be fed and replenished. It needs to be whole, which
requires many sections fitting together and working together tightly. It is a
daily requirement on my part to make sure all the ingredients are there and
working together to make the best product possible. I can’t have any missing
pieces. I can’t have any ingredients that aren’t the best. Those are my
standards, and it’s my responsibility to make sure they are kept,” he wrote in
his 2009 book Trump: Think Like a Champion.
“See
yourself,” he counseled, “as an organization.”
Now this.
The
organization, the indictment charged, committed criminal tax fraud, falsified
business records and allowed executives to shirk tax obligations. The
organization’s CFO, prosecutors alleged, dodged taxes on $1.7 million in perks
he didn’t report as income, resulting in charges that include grand larceny and
tax fraud. “A sweeping and audacious illegal payments scheme,” the general
counsel for the Manhattan district attorney told reporters.
Trump,
meanwhile, in a statement called it a “political Witch Hunt by the Radical Left
Democrats” who are, he said, “dividing our Country like never before!”
“This is
the beginning of the end,” Louise Sunshine told me when I called her to talk
about the indictments. And Sunshine’s worth listening to. She, after all, was
there at the beginning of the beginning. She started working for Trump in 1973.
She was an executive vice president for the Trump Organization until 1985.
“He’s spent his whole life franchising his name,” she said, “and now his name
is going to be worthless.”
“And what,”
I said, “does the end of the end look like?”
“Like a
conviction,” Sunshine said.
“And the
end of the Trump name.”
FILED UNDER: TRUMPOLOGY
POLITICO
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