The FBI just raided Mar-A-Lago

easy_b

Easy_b is in the place to be.
BGOL Investor
Trump walking around eating burnt steaks with ketchup inciting snow gorillas to kill democrats . He’s what cacs thought Obama would be. But it’s patriotic when the orange cac ape does it. He should be on death row right now
If Obama would have did 10% of what Trump did, they would’ve tried to hang him in front of the White House.
 

T_Holmes

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
He isn’t going nowhere….When they raided his house he should have been long gone. Actually, I don’t think he can leave the country. Unless Trump pay off the rights Secret Service agents he’s not going nowhere.
The same Secret Service agents that deleted their phone messages?

We can't act like the guy probably doesn't have a few loyalists working his detail. He could definitely skip if he wanted to. The only thing holding him here is his ego. If he could frame a "permanent vacation" as the bravest, shrewdest move, he'd be gone already.
 

easy_b

Easy_b is in the place to be.
BGOL Investor
The same Secret Service agents that deleted their phone messages?

We can't act like the guy probably doesn't have a few loyalists working his detail. He could definitely skip if he wanted to. The only thing holding him here is his ego. If he could frame a "permanent vacation" as the bravest, shrewdest move, he'd be gone already.
These particular, Secret Service people are not the ones that work for him when he was in the White House. Trust me on that.
 

djpolo

Rising Star
Platinum Member


Former longtime Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg expected to be star witness in company's tax fraud trial


  • Former Trump Organization CFO will be a star witness in the company's tax fraud trial, Bloomberg reports.
  • Allen Weisselberg, 75, agreed to testify as part of a plea deal for a five-month prison sentence.
  • Jury selection for the trial will begin on Monday in Manhattan.
The veteran former chief financial officer of the Trump Organization is expected to be a star witness in the upcoming criminal tax fraud trial against the company, reports say.

Allen Weisselberg, 75, who worked for the company for decades, will be called to testify about former President Donald Trump's business, Bloomberg reported.

The complex jury selection for the trial will begin on Monday in Manhattan. Potential jurors will be grilled on their opinion of Trump and if it impedes their ability to fairly evaluate the evidence, per The Washington Post.

Prosecutors allege that the company engaged in a tax fraud scheme by compensating senior executives with perks like apartments and company cars under Weisselberg's supervision. Trump is not personally charged.
Weisselberg, who has long been one of Trump's most loyal deputies, pleaded guilty in August to 15 felony counts, including a scheme to defraud, conspiracy, grand larceny, and criminal tax fraud, in exchange for a maximum five-month jail sentence.

Under the plea's conditions, Weisselberg — a loyal, 40-year bookkeeper for Trump and his family —agreed to testify in the upcoming trial.

His attorney Nicholas Gravante told Bloomberg that he is required to testify truthfully or else the deal will be revoked, and he could face up to 15 years in prison.

"The world is about to see just how the Trump Organization ran its business," Barbara McQuade, a former federal prosecutor who teaches at the University of Michigan Law School, told Bloomberg.

"This is a significant case. The criminal charges are against Trump's corporation, a small private company, but Donald Trump is the Trump Organization."

A source familiar with Weisselberg's thinking previously told Insider's Laura Italiano that he has no intention of implicating anyone in the Trump family, either as part of his testimony or in cooperation with the Manhattan District Attorney's ongoing Trump Organization probe.
Weisselberg reportedly received various benefits during his time working for the Trump Organization, including an apartment, a Mercedes-Benz, and tuition payments to a private school for his grandchildren, Bloomberg said. Prosecutors say these should have been taxed like income.
 
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