Trump’s business empire could collapse ‘like
falling dominoes’ after ruling
Trump is effectively ‘out of business’ in New York,
Michael Cohen says, after judge rules business fortune built on rampant fraud
Richard
Luscombe
@richlusc
Wed 27 Sep
2023 16.14 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/sep/27/trump-new-york-real-estate-reaction-fraud
Donald
Trump’s real estate empire could collapse “like falling dominoes”, experts
believe, following a New York judge’s ruling that the former president’s
business fortune was built on rampant fraud and blatant lies.
According
to Michael Cohen, his former attorney and fixer, Trump is already effectively
“out of business” in New York after Judge Arthur Engoron on Tuesday rescinded
the licenses of the Trump Organization and other companies owned by Trump and
his adult sons, Eric and Don Jr.
“Those
companies will end up being liquidated … the judge has already determined that
the fraud existed,” Cohen told CNN, hailing Engoron’s pretrial ruling in a
civil case brought by Letitia James, the New York attorney general.
On
Wednesday morning, in a confrontational post on his Truth Social website that
branded the judge a “political hack”, Trump said Engoron “must be stopped”.
At a
hearing on Wednesday afternoon, Trump’s legal team asked Engoron if his ruling
meant Trump’s assets and businesses must be sold, or if they could continue to
operate under receivership.
Engoron
said he would address the issue at the non-jury trial beginning on 2 October,
and extended to 30 days his original 10-day deadline for both parties to
suggest names to act as receivers for the various companies.
The lawyers
have said they will appeal the rescinding of the licenses, the appointment of
receivers, and Engoron’s assertion that Trump and executives lived in a
“fantasy world” of routinely, repeatedly and illegally overvaluing property
values and his personal net worth to gain favorable loan terms and reduced
insurance premiums.
But if the
appeals are unsuccessful, the collapse of the Trump empire, upon which the
former reality TV host staked his reputation as a successful business tycoon,
could be imminent.
It would
probably start with the sale of Trump’s most prestigious real estate assets,
experts say, including Trump Tower in New York, golf courses and resorts around
the US, and possibly his prized Mar-a-Lago club in Florida, if it is determined
to be a business operation instead of his primary residential home.
In his post
on Wednesday, Trump decried the judge’s $18m valuation of Mar-a-Lago, claiming
it was worth “100 times more than he values it”.
William
Black, a white-collar criminologist, corporate fraud investigator and
distinguished scholar in residence for financial regulation at the University
of Minnesota law school, said: “In finance, once the dominoes start falling, it
becomes basically impossible to save it.
“These
properties are even more damaged goods today because of the success in
demonstrating they are massively overvalued. The most likely thing, if you get
an honest agent or receiver, they’re going to sell the properties at a loss.
And when you’ve got a whole bunch of properties, with the first one you just
desperately need to get some action and that gets discounted the most.”
Black, who
helped expose congressional wrongdoing in the Lincoln Savings and Loans scandal
of the 1980s, in which the financier Charles Keating inflated his company’s
worth to bilk taxpayers for billions, called Engoron’s ruling “devastating”. He
believes Trump insiders and employees would have incentive to come forward with
more information if he loses his wealth and influence.
“What we
experienced in the Savings and Loan debacle, we would put in an honest manager
and employees would start coming to that person over time and say, ‘You know,
you really ought to look at this,’” Black said.
“Trump is
monumentally, stupidly greedy in that he isn’t actually paying for a number of
key lieutenants in terms of their legal needs, and they’re facing financial
collapse of their own, [such as] the Rudy Giulianis of this world. But a lot of
folks can sink Trump.
“Having
this ability to control all these assets, even if they’re massively overvalued,
meant hope springs eternal among the Trump folks that he can use that money and
influence to help them, but if Trump instead ends up bereft of control over the
overwhelming bulk of his assets, and has lots of liabilities, sugar daddy goes
away.”
Engoron’s
independent court-appointed monitor for the Trump Organization, the retired
federal judge Barbara Jones, reported last month she had identified
inconsistency and incompleteness in financial disclosures.
Others also
see the writing on the wall.
“Donald
Trump is no longer in business,” David Cay Johnston, author of the Trump-themed
book The Big Cheat, wrote in DC Report.
“Barring a
highly unlikely reversal by an appeals court, Trump’s business assets
eventually will be liquidated since he cannot operate them without a business
license. The various properties are likely to be sold at fire sale prices and
certainly not for top dollar when liquidation begins, probably after all
appeals are exhausted.
“I give
Trump’s chances of prevailing on appeal at somewhere between zero and nothing
except perhaps on some minor procedural point, which you can be sure Trump will
describe as complete vindication.”
Joyce
Vance, a retired US attorney and University of Alabama law school professor,
called Engoron’s ruling “justice”.
“This is
New York’s corporate death penalty, applied to Trump because of years of
misconduct,” she wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
Black said
Trump’s downfall would be self-inflicted.
“The key to
these frauds is not genius, it’s audacity, but Trump never wanted to do it
himself, he’s too lazy, right?” he said.
“And now he
doesn’t control the people who have to actually do the deals. So they’re now
forced into thousands of discussions, first with this judge, now this receiver,
and that can’t work.
“You won’t
be able to do the scams, and you won’t be able to do things quickly, either.
That means a domino effect in credit failings and bankruptcies. As people start
taking action against your properties, the liquidity you’re boasting isn’t
going to be there and you’re going to get a bankruptcy.”
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