The Trump Organization has reacted to reports that its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, has surrendered to a Manhattan prosecutor and may face a grand jury indictment.
In a statement on July 1, the company described the criminal probe against Weisselberg and the company as a political witch hunt.
“This is not justice; this is politics.”
Weisselberg’s attorneys confirmed to news outlets that he surrendered on July 1.
The Trump Organization didn’t respond to a request for comment by press time.
The charges come in the midst of a nearly three-year investigation by Democrat Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance’s office into the Trump Organization, a real estate firm owned by former President Donald Trump and operated by his family members. The former commander-in-chief has described Vance’s probe as a partisan affair designed to politically wound him.
A lawyer for Trump earlier this week told Politico that Vance’s office informed him that Trump won’t face charges in the case.
“We asked, ‘Is there anything else?’” Trump lawyer Ronald Fischetti told the political news website on June 28, referring to the conversation he had with Vance’s office. “They said, ‘No.’
“It’s crazy that that’s all they had. They just said, ‘When this indictment comes down, [Trump] won’t be charged. Our investigation is ongoing.’”
Last week, Fischetti said that a company shouldn’t be indicted for allegedly not paying taxes on benefits.
“It’s outrageous. It’s unprecedented. It’s never happened before,” Fischetti said, according to CNN.
In a separate case, New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat, informed the Trump Organization that they’re pursuing criminal charges against the company. Initially, James’s probe was a civil case.
“We have informed the Trump Organization that our investigation into the organization is no longer purely civil in nature,” James spokesman Fabien Levy said in a statement last month.
That case also involves the firm’s tax dealings.
Weissberg was given immunity by federal prosecutors in 2018 regarding a case involving former Trump attorney Michael Cohen. Cohen was ultimately convicted and sentenced on tax evasion and other charges—before becoming a critic of the former president on Twitter and in mainstream media appearances.