A Troubling Trump Pardon and a Link to the
Kushners
A commutation for a drug smuggler named Jonathan Braun
had broader implications than previously known. It puts new focus on how Donald
Trump would use his clemency powers in a second term.
In April
2022, Jonathan Braun, left, and his wife, Miriam, visited a Trump resort in
Florida. Mr. Braun said they ran into the former president by coincidence.
Michael S.
SchmidtMaggie HabermanJonathan SwanAlan Feuer
By Michael
S. Schmidt, Maggie Haberman, Jonathan Swan and Alan Feuer
Nov. 26,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/26/us/politics/trump-pardon-braun.html
Even amid
the uproar over President Donald J. Trump’s freewheeling use of his pardon
powers at the end of his term, one commutation stood out.
Jonathan
Braun of New York had served just two and a half years of a decade-long
sentence for running a massive marijuana ring, when Mr. Trump, at 12:51 a.m. on
his last day in office, announced he would be freed.
Mr. Braun
was, to say the least, an unusual candidate for clemency.
A Staten
Islander with a history of violent threats, Mr. Braun had told a rabbi who owed
him money: “I am going to make you bleed.” Mr. Braun’s family had told
confidants they were willing to spend millions of dollars to get him out of
prison.
At the
time, Mr. Trump’s own Justice Department and federal regulators, as well as New
York state authorities, were still after him for his role in an entirely
separate matter: his work as a predatory lender, making what judges later found
were fraudulent and usurious loans to cash-strapped small businesses.
Nearly
three years later, the consequences of Mr. Braun’s commutation are becoming
clearer, raising new questions about how Mr. Trump intervened in criminal
justice decisions and what he could do in a second term, when he would have the
power to make good on his suggestions that he would free supporters convicted
of storming the Capitol and possibly even to pardon himself if convicted of the
federal charges he faces.
Just months
after Mr. Trump freed him, Mr. Braun returned to working as a predatory lender,
according to New York State’s attorney general. Two months ago, a New York
state judge barred him from working in the industry. Weeks later, a federal
judge, acting on a complaint from the Federal Trade Commission, imposed a
nationwide ban on him.
A New York
Times investigation, drawing on documents and interviews with current and
former officials, and others familiar with Mr. Braun’s case, found there were
even greater ramifications stemming from the commutation than previously known
and revealed new details about Mr. Braun’s history and how the commutation came
about.
The
commutation dealt a substantial blow to an ambitious criminal investigation
being led by the Justice Department’s U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan aimed
at punishing members of the predatory lending industry who hurt small
businesses. Mr. Braun and prosecutors were in negotiations over a cooperation
deal in which he would be let out of prison in exchange for flipping on
industry insiders and potentially even wearing a wire. But the commutation
instantly destroyed the government’s leverage on Mr. Braun.
The
investigation into the industry, and Mr. Braun’s conduct, remains open but
hampered by the lack of an insider.
At multiple
levels, up to the president, the justice system appeared to fail more than once
to take full account of Mr. Braun’s activities. After pleading guilty to drug
charges in 2011, Mr. Braun agreed to cooperate in a continuing investigation,
allowing him to stay out of prison but under supervision for nine years — a
period he used to establish himself as a predatory lender, making violent
threats to those who owed him money, court filings show.
Since
returning to predatory lending after being freed, Mr. Braun is still engaging
in deceptive business tactics, regulators and customers say.
In working
to secure his release, Mr. Braun’s family used a connection to Charles Kushner,
the father of Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law and senior White House
adviser, to try to get the matter before Mr. Trump. Jared Kushner’s White House
office drafted the language used in the news release to announce commutations
for Mr. Braun and others.
In a
telephone interview, Mr. Braun said he did not know how his commutation came
about.
“I believe
God made it happen for me because I’m a good person and I was treated
unfairly,” he said, adding that his supporters tried “multiple paths” to get
him out of prison but he had no idea which one succeeded.
He said the
10-year sentence he received for marijuana trafficking was excessive and made
him a victim of the criminal justice system. He denied any wrongdoing as a
lender, and insisted that he had never talked to prosecutors about cooperating
in the criminal predatory lending investigation.
He said he
had never met Jared Kushner. And he said a picture from April 2022, showing him
and his wife on a golf course with the former president, had nothing to do with
the commutation but was a chance three-minute encounter during a visit to a
Trump property in Florida for a Passover event.
“I didn’t
meet him because of what happened, I just happened to be there the same time,”
Mr. Braun said.
Mr. Braun’s
commutation highlights what former administration officials say were major
problems at the Trump White House as it considered clemency applications: the
lack of rigorous vetting of applications and the sidelining of the Justice
Department, which has traditionally screened candidates.
Mr. Kushner
took a major role in the less structured vetting process that resulted in Mr.
Braun’s commutation. The Justice Department investigators from Manhattan
involved in the cooperation negotiations with Mr. Braun were never consulted.
As other
convicts seeking clemency did, Mr. Braun’s family retained Alan Dershowitz, the
prominent lawyer and Trump ally who worked with Jewish organizations pushing
for pardons, at least one of which had received financial support from the
Kushner family.
Mr.
Dershowitz, who represented Mr. Trump in his first impeachment, had a direct
line into Mr. Kushner’s office, and succeeded in helping win clemency from Mr.
Trump for a number of other people. Mr. Dershowitz said he did not remember
what steps he took to help Mr. Braun but said they were minimal.
Jared
Kushner declined to comment, and Charles Kushner hung up when called by a
reporter, as did Jacob Braun, Mr. Braun’s father. The U.S. attorney’s office in
Manhattan did not respond to messages seeking comment.
A spokesman
for Mr. Trump said all pardon applications “went through a vigorous vetting and
review process,” but he did not address specific questions about Mr. Braun’s
commutation.
William P.
Barr, a Trump attorney general who had left by the time of the Braun
commutation, said when he took over the Justice Department he discovered that
“there were pardons being given without any vetting by the department.”
Mr. Barr
added that he told Trump aides they should at least send over names of those
being considered so the department could thoroughly examine their records.
While the White House Counsel’s Office tried to do so, the effort fell apart
under the crush of pardon requests that poured in during the final weeks before
Mr. Trump left office, according to people with direct knowledge of the
process.
Marc Short,
the chief of staff to Mr. Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence, said when the
vice president’s office was approached by Mr. Trump’s aides about clemency
applications, it opted not to participate.
“The pardon
process at the end of the administration was so unseemly it would make the
Clintons blush,” Mr. Short said, referring to the final-days pardons issued by
President Bill Clinton — including one to the fugitive financier Marc Rich,
whose ex-wife donated $450,000 to Mr. Clinton’s presidential library.
Threats and
a 10-Year Sentence
Mr. Braun’s
path to receiving a last-minute commutation began in 2009, when the U.S.
attorney’s office in Brooklyn, working with the Drug Enforcement
Administration, raided what prosecutors said was a stash house for a marijuana
smuggling ring run by Mr. Braun.
When Mr.
Braun found out about the raid, he rented a car and drove 25 hours straight
from Florida to an Indian reservation in upstate New York where, dressed in all
black, he was smuggled into Canada, according to court filings. He then fled to
Israel.
The Justice
Department placed him on a special Interpol list that asked Israel to apprehend
him. By 2010, he was back in New York, the Justice Department had charged him
and he was behind bars.
In the days
after his arrest, prosecutors asked a federal judge to keep him in jail until
he went on trial. The prosecutors said Mr. Braun could not be deterred and was
violent or willing to use the specter of violence against those who owed him
money or might turn on him. Mr. Braun, the prosecutors said, had access to
millions of dollars in untraceable cash, and was willing to do anything to stay
out of prison.
The judge
ordered that Mr. Braun be held pending trial. After nearly a year and a half in
custody, Mr. Braun agreed to plead guilty. As part of the plea deal, he began
cooperating secretly with the government’s investigations into other drug
smugglers, particularly higher profile ones abroad, according to a former law
enforcement official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the
internal workings of an investigation.
In
exchange, the prosecutors agreed to release Mr. Braun from jail, putting him on
house arrest and delaying his sentencing on the drug charges while they pursued
new cases with his help. It is unclear what information Mr. Braun provided the
authorities or whether it led to convictions.
Often, a
cooperator can remain free for a few months by providing investigators with
useful information. Sometimes, a court will hold off sentencing for a year or
two as the cooperation continues. Throughout the process, federal authorities
are supposed to monitor cooperators to ensure they do not break the law.
For reasons
that remain unexplained, Mr. Braun was permitted by the U.S. attorney’s office
in Brooklyn to live relatively freely for nearly the next decade, and he was
able to turn his focus to an enterprise rife with cash and threats: providing
loans to struggling small businesses that often had nowhere else to turn.
Former
prosecutors and defense lawyers said they had never heard of a defendant being
allowed to delay sentencing for such a long period or using his freedom to
engage in the conduct he did. A spokesman for the Brooklyn federal prosecutor’s
office declined to comment on Mr. Braun’s case.
The
business Mr. Braun entered is known by many names: the merchant cash advance
industry, predatory lending or, in the view of some law enforcement officials,
loan sharking.
Small
businesses — like restaurants and contractors — have long faced a problem: They
need cash on a daily basis to buy ingredients and supplies, and pay employees
so they can operate while awaiting customer payments.
Banks often
won’t lend to them, especially small firms with troubled credit histories,
providing an opening for the merchant cash advance business to offer them
financing on strict, sometimes usurious, terms that include high-interest rates
and exorbitant fees. (Technically, they provide cash in exchange for a
percentage of future revenues, an arrangement that typically gives them access
to the borrower’s books and sometimes the borrower’s bank accounts.)
An
examination of court records by The Times found that between when the U.S.
attorney’s office in Brooklyn first let him out of prison in 2011 and when he
reported to prison in 2020, Mr. Braun was accused of violently threatening
eight people who owed him money. Another man accused Mr. Braun in a lawsuit of
shoving him from the deck of a house in Staten Island in 2018.
Mr. Braun
eventually reported to the federal prison in Otisville, N.Y., in
2020.Credit...Mike Segar/Reuters
Among those
threatened was a real estate developer, who said Mr. Braun told him: “I will
take your daughters from you,” according to court documents.
Another
borrower said in an affidavit Mr. Braun told him, “Be thankful you’re not in
New York, because your family would find you floating in the Hudson.”
Over that
time, companies connected to Mr. Braun made 1,900 fraudulent and illegal loans,
some with interest rates greater than 1,000 percent, according to the New York
State attorney general.
Even as Mr.
Braun was starting to become a threatening presence, the U.S. attorney’s office
in Brooklyn actually gave him more freedom. In May 2017, prosecutors and
probation officers approved Mr. Braun being removed from house arrest.
Five months
later, Mr. Braun threatened the rabbi of a synagogue that had borrowed money
from him, according to New York’s attorney general. Mr. Braun told the rabbi he
would beat and “publicly embarrass him,” adding: “I am going to make you bleed”
and “I will make you suffer for every penny.”
Nearly a
decade after he was first charged in the drug case, prosecutors scheduled his
sentencing. Anonymous letters accusing him of violent threats were then filed
on the docket of the judge overseeing his case.
Despite his
cooperation with the ongoing drug investigations, the judge sentenced him to 10
years in prison. Mr. Braun tried to appeal, but weeks before the pandemic hit
in early 2020, he reported to the federal penitentiary in Otisville, N.Y.
In prison,
Mr. Braun’s legal troubles actually worsened. In June 2020, New York’s attorney
general and the Federal Trade Commission, which was run by a Trump appointee at
the time, sued him for his role as a predatory lender. The New York attorney
general credited reporting by Bloomberg News — which in 2018 first documented
Mr. Braun’s business practices and revealed last year that he had returned to
predatory lending — as the impetus for the suit.
At the same
time, a dogged New York Police Department detective named Joseph Nicolosi, who
was assigned to work as an investigator for the U.S. attorney’s office in
Manhattan, was trying to build a wide-ranging criminal case focused on
predatory lenders.
The inquiry
faced a big challenge. Unlike many financial fraud cases, where the government
relies on documents to prove charges, federal prosecutors concluded they needed
something more in this case: a turncoat to flip on higher-ups, explain the
intricacies of lending agreements, say they knew what they were doing was wrong
and serve as a narrator on the witness stand.
Finding
that witness was proving difficult, but investigators believed they had a
strong candidate sitting behind bars.
So in the
fall of 2020, Mr. Nicolosi drove to Otisville to meet with Mr. Braun. Mr.
Nicolosi had previously tried to flip Mr. Braun when he was free, but now Mr.
Nicolosi — armed with a possible get-out-of-jail card in exchange for
cooperation — had leverage over him as he sat marinating in the misery of
federal prison.
At the
meeting, which Mr. Braun’s lawyer attended, both sides discussed what a deal
could look like.
Mr. Braun
made clear he would do anything the government asked of him — including wearing
a wire to record calls with his former business partners — if the government
would agree not to prosecute him for his role in the lending business,
according to a person familiar with the matter.
Ties to the
Kushners
Negotiations
between Mr. Braun and prosecutors stretched into the final days of Mr. Trump’s
presidency. But what the prosecutors did not know was that Mr. Braun, his
family and allies were pursuing an entirely different effort to help him regain
his freedom through the White House’s clemency process. And among the channels
they were exploiting was a tie to the Kushner family.
Mr. Braun,
The Times found, was in the inaugural class of the Kushner Yeshiva High School
in Livingston, N.J., which was heavily funded by Jared Kushner’s family. Mr.
Braun enrolled in its first freshman class, alongside Jared Kushner’s youngest
sister, Nicole.
In an
interview, a merchant cash advance dealer recounted how a cousin of Mr. Braun —
whom Mr. Braun put in charge of his business when he went to prison and who
took on a major role in trying to get him out — had told him in the wake of the
commutation that Mr. Braun’s father, Jacob Braun, had sought help from Jared
Kushner’s father, Charles Kushner, about getting their pleas for a commutation
before Mr. Trump.
The cousin,
Isaac Wolf, was said to have recounted that Charles Kushner and Jacob Braun had
known each other for many years. Mr. Wolf credited the Kushner family with
coming through for Mr. Braun, the merchant cash advance dealer said, speaking
on the condition of anonymity because he did not want to be publicly associated
with Mr. Braun.
Others who
dealt with Mr. Braun also later relayed to investigators that they had been
told that the Braun family helped secure the commutation by relying on their
connections to the Kushner family.
The Brauns
also retained Mr. Dershowitz, a Trump ally who developed such a strong
relationship with Jared Kushner that he nominated Mr. Kushner for the Nobel
Peace Prize for his work on Middle East peace 10 days after Mr. Trump left
office.
Mr.
Dershowitz said Jacob Braun would call him regularly.
“Every
single Friday by 3 o’clock in the afternoon: ‘Hi this is Jacob Braun, I’m so
upset my son is still in prison, what can you do? It’s unfair, he’s a good
boy,’” Mr. Dershowitz recounted.
Mr.
Dershowitz said he handled so many clemency requests that he could not recall
what he did for Mr. Braun, whom he might have talked to at the White House
about his case or how much he was paid. But he said his involvement was
minimal, perhaps just a phone call.
In the
chaotic final weeks of the Trump presidency, the volume of clemency requests
overwhelmed the White House Counsel’s Office. Requests were being fielded by
numerous White House officials — and many came in through Mr. Kushner’s office.
It is
unclear what type of due diligence, if any, the White House did on Mr. Braun.
The New York attorney general and the F.T.C. had put out news releases about
their civil actions against him in June 2020, and the suits they filed were a
matter of public record. An inquiry to the Justice Department could have
revealed the plea deal discussions.
Jacob
Braun, Mr. Braun’s father, made contact with and retained Alan Dershowitz, seen
in a 2015 photo, the prominent lawyer and Trump ally who was active in seeking
clemency for convicts.Credit...Todd Heisler/The New York Times
Just hours
before Mr. Trump left office on Jan. 20, 2021, the White House sent out the
news release, written by Mr. Kushner’s office, announcing Mr. Braun’s
commutation, along with similar summaries for the 143 convicts who received
pardons and commutations in the final batch, according to a person familiar
with the matter. Mr. Kushner thought it was important to honor each person
granted clemency with a personalized write-up, the person said.
The release
misspelled Mr. Braun’s first name. And it overstated the time he had served in
prison.
“Upon his
release, Mr. Braun will seek employment to support his wife and children,” the
release said.
The federal
investigators in Manhattan learned of the commutation early that morning,
immediately calling Mr. Braun’s lawyer to express their fury over how the
president had undercut his own department’s investigation by removing all the
leverage prosecutors had over Mr. Braun.
In the
weeks that followed, investigators made another attempt to reach a cooperation
deal with Mr. Braun, meeting with him in person. But no longer needing help
getting out of prison, Mr. Braun essentially called their bluff, signaling that
if they thought they had a case against him they should indict him. Since then,
the prosecutors have brought no charges against Mr. Braun or anyone else with
ties to him in the industry.
Back in
Business
Just a few
months after his release, Mr. Braun returned to working in the merchant cash
advance business.
Amid the
ongoing suits against him by state and federal regulators, he remained in a
relatively behind-the-scenes role. While he would make major decisions, he
would use an email account that did not include his name, his name was left off
business documents and his interactions with customers were limited, according
to court documents and a former merchant cash advance dealer.
But in the
experience of at least one borrower who dealt with him, his business practices
remained unchanged.
Dr. Robert
Clinton is a North Carolina physician who during the pandemic turned his urgent
care facility into a Covid testing center. He turned to merchant cash advance
dealers because it took months for insurance companies and the federal
government to reimburse him.
Relying on
similar tactics to what he was accused of employing before he went to prison,
the companies affiliated with Mr. Braun withheld some of the financing they had
agreed to provide Dr. Clinton but charged him interest on the full amount,
imposed heavy fees with little or no warning and unilaterally withdrew money
from Dr. Clinton’s bank accounts, according to court documents.
At one
point, another merchant cash advance dealer who had lent money to Dr. Clinton
called him in a panic to warn about Mr. Braun.
“You gotta
get away from him and pay him off — we are all afraid of him — anytime Jon
Braun is involved he could seize your assets, block your bank accounts,” the
other merchant cash advance dealer told Dr. Clinton, in the doctor’s recounting
of the conversation.
As Dr.
Clinton’s finances deteriorated, he got a call from a man who claimed his name
was Mike Wilson and that he was working for one of the Braun-affiliated
lenders. The man told Dr. Clinton that he would send a private jet down to pick
him up so he could bring expensive watches he had to New York to use as
collateral for the money he owed, Dr. Clinton said.
In an
apparent slip-up during conversations with Dr. Clinton at the time, the man
said: Refer to me as Jon.
Dr. Clinton
rejected the idea and, with help from a lawyer, Shane Heskin, sued the
Braun-affiliated companies, saying they had fleeced him for over a million
dollars.
A major
portion of the suit was dismissed because North Carolina usury laws provided no
protection for Dr. Clinton. Now, Dr. Clinton — who still owes other merchant
cash advance dealers several million dollars — spends his days doing some
telemedicine and the rest of his time trying to get money back from insurance
companies and the federal government.
In a filing
this summer, the New York attorney general said Mr. Braun, through his
companies, “continues to commit usury.”
Mr. Braun
continues to portray himself as a victim of an unfair criminal justice system.
“What is so
bad about me?” he said in the interview with The Times. “I never hurt anybody,
never did anything wrong to anybody.”
Mr. Braun
and his companies put liens on Dr. Clinton’s business, leading to cascading
financial problems that Dr. Clinton said cost him $1.6 million.Credit...Kate
Medley for The New York Times
Matthew
Cullen, Kirsten Noyes, Kitty Bennett, Alain Delaquérière and Sheelagh McNeill
contributed research.
Michael S.
Schmidt is an investigative reporter for The Times covering Washington. His
work focuses on tracking and explaining high-profile federal investigations.
More about Michael S. Schmidt
Maggie
Haberman is a senior political correspondent and the author of “Confidence Man:
The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.” She was part of a team
that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for reporting on President Trump’s advisers
and their connections to Russia. More about Maggie Haberman
Jonathan
Swan is a political reporter who focuses on campaigns and Congress. As a
reporter for Axios, he won an Emmy Award for his 2020 interview of
then-President Donald J. Trump, and the White House Correspondents’
Association’s Aldo Beckman Award for “overall excellence in White House
coverage” in 2022. More about Jonathan Swan
Alan Feuer
covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the criminal
cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former President
Donald J. Trump. More about Alan
Feuer
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