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Trump, 2 of his businesses found guilty of tax fraud

Trump, 2 of his businesses found guilty of tax fraud

Former US President Donald Trump's legal woes seem to be mounting by the day with the latest blow coming from a jury in New York in lower Manhattan that has found two of his organizations guilty on all charges of tax fraud and other crimes.

The jury's verdict relates to 17 counts of criminality as announced in the court recently. The jury began deliberations on Monday around noon, after testimony and closing arguments wrapped up in the six-week trial, media reports said.

The two Trump Organization companies, called the Trump Corporation and Trump Payroll Corporation, were indicted in July 2021, along with the company's longtime chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, and accused of using a variety of methods to reduce payroll liability from executive salaries through untaxed bonuses and luxury perks worth millions, the reports said.

Weisselberg , CFO of Trump's businesses pleaded guilty in August this year and agreed to testify against the company as part of a deal with prosecutors. He is expected to face a five-month jail sentence. But he did not implicate Trump in any of the offenses.

The Former President was not charged in the case, but Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said Trump remained under investigation. The AGs office began its probe as early as 2018 under Bragg's predecessor, Cyrus Vance Jr. The investigation focused on hush-money payments reportedly made by former Trump lawyer and "fixer Michael Cohen" during the 2016 presidential campaign to adult film star Stormy Daniels, but later widened to include the corporate tax fraud charges.

Cohen's name did not find itself during the trial, but Trump's name was called frequently by both sides, reports said.

Weisselberg spent several days testifying about the tax schemes. He and two witnesses who received immunity during prior grand jury proceedings -- current company controller Jeffrey McConney and outside accountant Donald Bender -- described a series of methods used by Trump Organization executives to avoid taxes, and payroll liability, on large bonuses and luxury benefits, reports added.

The Jurors were informed about an internal "clean up" conducted in 2017 at the Trump Organization after Trump became president. An outside lawyer was hired to examine its tax practices and the review led the company to cease many of the practices that led to these criminal charges, multiple witnesses testified.

The Trump Organization's lawyers however claimed that Trump and his company were betrayed by Weisselberg, and they accused Bender of failing to protect the company from Weisselberg. "Weisselberg did it for Weisselberg," the lawyers said repeatedly, a phrase a prosecutor later called their "mantra."

Prosecutors said Weisselberg was one of several executives who received large annual bonus checks, signed by Trump and logged as if they were payments to independent contractors, and luxury perks such as high-end apartments, private school tuition and cars that were not reported as salary, the reports said.

Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Joshua Steinglass alleged that Trump was in the know all the time. "The fact is this was sanctioned, and that the practice was known to Trump," Steinglass said.

Defense attorneys said Trump was unaware of the schemes playing out beneath him, while prosecutors said he signed off on them. The Trump Organization faces up to $1.6 million in fines. Sentencing is expected to take place in January 13, 2023.

Alan Futerfas, an attorney for the Trump Organization, said the company will "certainly" file an appeal. In a statement, the Trump Organization pointed to Weisselberg's testimony that he'd "betrayed" the company's trust and "acted 'solely' for his 'own personal gain'," and said: "The notion that a company could be held responsible for an employee's actions, to benefit themselves, on their own personal tax returns is simply preposterous."

Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg praised the jury and called the verdict "a very just result."

"The former president's companies now stand convicted of crimes. That is consequential. It underscores that in Manhattan, we have one standard of justice for all," Bragg told reporters outside the courtroom.

New York Attorney General Letitia James has indicated the jury's findings could have bearing on a civil case being pursued by her office.

She conducted a parallel civil investigation and assigned two prosecutors to work on the Manhattan District Attorney's probe. While the criminal case is tightly focused on executive compensation, the civil case -- filed in September -- accuses the company, Trump and three of his children of a widespread, years-long effort to commit fraud and manipulate property valuations, the reports said.

The company and the Trumps deny all allegations in that case, which is scheduled to go to trial in October 2023.

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