Real Estate

Trump opposes watchdog for financial statements sought by New York Attorney General James in sweeping fraud lawsuit

Products You May Like

Former U.S. President Donald Trump throws caps as he attends a rally in Warren, Michigan, U.S., October 1, 2022.
Dieu-nalio Chery | Reutersm

Former President Donald Trump and related defendants are opposing New York Attorney General Letitia James’ call for an independent monitor to oversee the Trump Organization’s submission of financial statements to third parties as part of a bombshell fraud lawsuit, according to a new court filing.

James has asked a judge to name a watchdog who would review financial information that the company and defendants give lenders, insurers and accountants pending the outcome of the lawsuit.

The attorney general’s office requested the watchdog as part of a sweeping September lawsuit accusing Trump, three of his adult children, their company and others of a decadelong fraud related to financial statements.

In their court filing Wednesday, Trump’s lawyers said James’ request for an outside monitor for the company is “a politically motivated attempt to nationalize a highly successful private enterprise.” The lawyers argued that it “is precluded under our Constitution and must and should therefore be rejected.”

CNBC Politics

Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

  • Co-defendant in SEC civil fraud complaint against fake billionaire Justin Costello agrees to settle case
  • Intruder at Pelosi home shouted ‘where is Nancy?’ before assaulting husband with hammer, source says
  • SEC Chair Gary Gensler defends controversial clawback rule, saying it won’t stop companies from going public
  • Trump loses latest court bid to block Congress from getting his income tax returns
  • Sen. Elizabeth Warren says big banks fail to prevent ‘rampant’ fraud on payment platform Zelle, urges CFPB to tighten regulations
  • White House chief of staff Ron Klain warned after Hatch Act violation flagged by former Trump official Stephen Miller
  • GOP Rep. Liz Cheney backs Rep. Elissa Slotkin in tight Michigan House race in her first endorsement of a Democrat
  • ‘We’re going to hang you’: DOJ cracks down on threats to election workers ahead of high-stakes midterms
  • Trump opposes watchdog for financial statements sought by New York Attorney General in sweeping fraud lawsuit
  • New woman claims Herschel Walker got her pregnant, drove her to abortion clinic
  • White House hammers economic issues with attack on ‘junk fees’ two weeks out from Election Day
  • Former Trump aide Mark Meadows ordered to testify in Georgia election meddling probe
  • U.S. issues fresh sanctions against Iranian officials for ‘brutal’ crackdown on peaceful protestors following Mahsa Amini’s death continue
  • Fetterman campaign says it raised $1 million in 3 hours of rough Pennsylvania Senate debate with Oz

James’ suit in Manhattan Supreme Court accuses the former president and the Trump Organization of repeatedly misstating the value of various real estate assets and his net worth on financial statements that were used to obtain loans, insurance policies and tax benefits.

She claims Trump overstated his net worth by billions of dollars, and has asked federal prosecutors in Manhattan and the IRS to investigate him for possible federal crimes. James said evidence obtained during her three-year civil probe of Trump indicated possible crimes of bank fraud and making false statements to financial institutions.

James’ suit seeks about $250 million in penalties.

The Trump defense filing Wednesday flatly rejects her allegations of fraud.

“Even the excerpted and selected transcripts and documents fail to show the Trump Parties have ever even been late on so much as one loan payment over the past decade much less engaged in any actual fraud,” the filing said.

Trump’s lawyers accuse the attorney general of manufacturing “a bill of grievances based on nothing more than a misapplication of standard accounting principles and gross exaggeration of routine valuation differences between counter parties to complex commercial lending transactions,” according to the filing.

The filing said the monitor she requests would possess “staggeringly overbroad” powers because the person would have access to “all of the Trump Parties’ financial records, compelling the Trump Parties to make onerous informational disclosures to the monitor, and grant the monitor operational oversight over the financial affairs of private businesses.”

James’ request “would effectively allow the NYAG to nationalize the Trump business empire,” the lawyers claimed.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Investors should stay with their long-term financial plans no matter who is in the White House, advisors say
‘Two-stocks’ are better than one? Repacking ‘pair trades’
Even U.S. presidents make mistakes with their money, author says. Here’s how some struggled
GM’s newest EV is a Cadillac ‘baby Escalade’ called Vistiq
The 2 things that will drive the stock market after last week’s Trump-Fed rally