As its stock collapsed, Trump’s firm gave him huge bonuses and paid for his jet
As its stock collapsed, Trumps firm gave him huge bonuses and paid for his jet
By Drew Harwell
@drewharwell
June 12
It was promoted as the chance of a lifetime: Mom-and-pop investors could buy shares in celebrity businessman Donald Trumps first public company, Trump Hotels and Casino Resorts. ... Their investments were quickly depleted. The company known by Trumps initials, DJT, crumbled into a penny stock and filed for bankruptcy after less than a decade, costing shareholders millions of dollars, even as other casino companies soared.
In its short life, Trump the company greatly enriched Trump the businessman, paying to have his personal jet piloted and buying heaps of Trump-brand merchandise. Despite losing money every year under Trumps leadership, the company paid Trump handsomely, including a $5 million bonus in the year the companys stock plummeted 70 percent.
Many of those who lost money were Main Street shareholders who believed in the Trump brand, such as Sebastian Pignatello, a retired private investor in Queens. By the time of the 2004 bankruptcy, Pignatellos 150,000 shares were worth pennies on the dollar. ... He had been pillaging the company all along, said Pignatello, who joined shareholders in a lawsuit against Trump that has since been settled. Even his business allies, they were all fair game. He has no qualms about screwing anybody. Thats what he does.
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In 2004, the year Trump took home a $1.5 million salary, stock-exchange officials froze trading in the company and, later, delisted it entirely as word spread that it was filing for bankruptcy because of about $1.8 billion in debt. ... Under the companys Chapter 11 reorganization plan, shareholders stake in the company shrunk from roughly 40 percent to about 5 percent. Trump, meanwhile, would remain chairman and receive a $2 million annual salary, a $7.5 million beachfront tract in Atlantic City and a personal stake in the companys Miss Universe pageant.