Top Trump Org executive surrenders to prosecutors ahead of expected criminal indictment
By Erica Orden and Kara Scannell, CNN
Updated 7:00 AM ET, Thu July 1, 2021
Trump Organization CFO surrenders after grand jury indictments
New York (CNN) Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg surrendered to the Manhattan district attorney's office Thursday morning ahead of expected criminal charges against him and the company in connection with alleged tax crimes, his attorney told CNN. Weisselberg is set to be arraigned later Thursday at a lower Manhattan courthouse. A Manhattan grand jury filed the indictments Wednesday, and they are set to be unsealed Thursday around 2 p.m. ET, according to two sources familiar with the matter.
The precise type or number of charges they are expected to face was not immediately clear. Though former President Donald Trump faced multiple federal and state prosecutorial inquiries during his administration, the district attorney's indictment would be the first to charge his namesake company, the Trump Organization, for conduct that occurred when he led it. Trump himself is not expected to be charged, his attorney has said.
The indictment of the Trump Organization is the product of more than two years of investigation by the district attorney, Cyrus Vance Jr., a probe that began with questions about accounting practices tied to hush-money payments made by former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen and eventually led to a Supreme Court fight over a subpoena for Trump's tax documents. t is rare, according to lawyers who specialize in tax evasion cases, for prosecutors to bring charges solely related to fringe benefits provided by a company, and in recent weeks, lawyers for the Trump Organization met with prosecutors in Vance's office, hoping to persuade them not to bring the case.
"It's outrageous. It's unprecedented. It's never happened before," Trump attorney Ron Fischetti said last week regarding a company being indicted in connection with failing to pay taxes on benefits. ver the course of the probe, prosecutors have examined a wide array of possible violations, including whether the real-estate company misled lenders and insurers or committed tax fraud, even adding a special prosecutor, Mark Pomerantz, to aid in the expansive inquiry. But in recent months, the focus has narrowed to taxes on benefits.
https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/01/politics/trump-organization-allen-weisselberg/index.html