Lawsuits and Money Troubles Threaten Trump; Claims of Election Fraud May Have Made Everything Worse

Published in Aftenposten
(Norway) on 24 January 2021
by Tor Arne Andreassen (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Danielle Skjelver. Edited by Elizabeth Cosgriff.
Donald Trump not only has political difficulties. He and his company are wading into economic and legal problems.

Donald Trump did not conclude his chaotic time as president very successfully:
• He lost the battle for reelection;
• The courts and state election authorities shot down a campaign to change the election results;
• Trump’s reputation received a serious blow when his followers attacked Congress; and
• He has been impeached for a second time; the only American president to have this happen to him.

Trump’s impeachment trial will probably start in a few weeks. If he is convicted, he could be barred from seeking reelection as president.

But Trump has more than political problems to worry about. Both state and federal authorities have begun criminal investigations into his actions, and he must simultaneously defend himself against allegations of defamation and money laundering in civil suits.

He also faces numerous economic challenges. He and his company owe millions of dollars in loans that are coming due in the next few years. This comes at the same time that businesses which were most profitable for him are now struggling, and his brand is diminished.

Great Need for Lawyers

For the impeachment trial, Trump hired attorney Butch Bowers on the recommendation of South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham.* Nonetheless, Trump may need a great deal more legal help in the coming days. The Washington Post summed up his problems in an article this week.

• He is being investigated in a civil case brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James.
• New York County District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. has begun a criminal investigation into Trump’s actions. Trump has now lost the immunity that came with being president. Among other things, Vance is examining, whether Trump has committed criminal evasion of taxes.
• A federal inquiry led by Michael Sherwin, interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, may include Trump’s role in the deadly storming of Congress.
• According to experts cited in another Washington Post article, Trump faces possible legal liability for his December call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, the man responsible for certifying elections in his state, during which he told Raffensperger to “Go find me some votes.”

On top of all this, The Washington Post reports that Trump will be dogged by Roberta Kaplan, lawyer for three separate clients who have filed lawsuits against the former president, including author E. Jean Carroll, who sued Trump for defamation after he maintained she “was totally lying.” Carroll alleges that Trump raped her a quarter of a century ago in the dressing room of one of Manhattan’s most fashionable stores.

Kaplan also represents the real estate magnate’s niece, Mary L. Trump, who claims that Trump and two of his siblings robbed her of an inheritance worth millions of dollars.

Nevertheless, being sued is nothing new for Trump. His biographer has described how, early on, he adopted the strategy of meeting an attack with an even stronger counterattack. Before Trump became president, he and his company had been involved in over 3,500 legal cases over the course of three decades, USA Today reported in 2016.

Trump Must Pay Back Enormous Loans Soon

The New York Times got a big scoop last year when they got hold of some of Trump’s tax returns. Unlike other presidents, Trump has refused to make his tax returns public, and he fought back when the New York County district attorney tried to secure the information.

The tax records show that many of Trump’s companies have hemorrhaged money for some time. Over the course of the next three years, his company, the Trump Organization, must make loan payments totaling approximately $388 million, money Trump has personally guaranteed.

This could be a problem. Companies that have been losing money for quite some time have been hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. Papers that Trump turned over when he left the presidency show that his hotels, golf courses and other properties ran at a loss of more than $117 million last year, as reported by The Washington Post.

Banks, law firms, patrons and partners such as the American Golf Association, have abandoned him.

On top of this, tax authorities maintain he has claimed illegal tax deductions. If he loses that case, he risks having to pay back approximately $99.9 million.

Trump collected approximately $246.8 million in his campaign to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Federal law prohibits Trump from using this money to rescue himself from his personal finance trouble.

Everything May Now Have Become So Much Worse

Trump has been on the brink of collapse before, but he was saved either by his father’s money or by his income from the TV show “The Apprentice.” Both of these sources of income are now gone.

The conflict-filled conclusion to his presidency may have aggravated his problems, The New York Times reported this week. In the past, Trump has made considerable money by licensing the Trump brand, but his brand has been considerably diminished, by both baseless claims of election fraud and a violent assault on American democracy.

Deutsche Bank, which has been important in financing Trump projects, made it clear earlier this month that it will not loan him any more money. Eric Trump, Trump’s son, told The Times they expect considerable interest in the brand name from abroad. They are also considering starting a media company.

By 2016, people already speculated that Trump would start a TV station. At that time, everyone thought Trump would lose the presidential election. But don’t bet the house on Trump starting a TV station now, writes Politico. Politico believes Trump doesn’t have the money, and that existing media companies, including the conservative Fox News, will go for his throat if he tries.

*Editor’s note: Butch Bowers withdrew as Donald Trump’s counsel on Jan. 30.




Tagline & Pull Quote: Donald Trump har ikke bare politiske vanskeligheter. Han og selskapet hans vasser i økonomiske og juridiske problemer.

Donald Trump avsluttet sin kaotiske presidentperiode på en lite suksessrik måte:
• Han tapte kampen om gjenvalg.
• En kampanje for å få omgjort valgresultatet ble sablet ned av domstolene og delstatenes valgorganer.
• Omdømmet hans fikk en alvorlig knekk da tilhengerne hans gikk løs på Kongressen.
• Som eneste amerikanske president noensinne er han stilt for riksrett for andre gang. Saken vil trolig starte om et par uker. Blir han dømt, kan han miste muligheten til å bli gjenvalgt som president.

Men Donald Trump har mer enn politiske problemer å uroe seg over. Både lokale og føderale myndigheter har satt i gang etterforskning mot ham. Samtidig må han forsvare seg mot påstander om injurier og pengefusk i sivile søksmål.

Han står også overfor store økonomiske utfordringer. Han og selskapet hans skal de neste årene betale flere milliarder kroner i gjeld. Det kommer samtidig med at hans tidligere mest lønnsomme virksomheter sliter tungt, og merkenavnet hans er svekket.

Stort behov for advokater

For riksrettssaken har Trump hyret advokaten Butch Bowers etter anbefaling fra Sør-Carolina-senator Lindsey Graham. Trump kan imidlertid få bruk for langt mer juridisk bistand i tiden som kommer. Washington Post oppsummerte problemene hans i en artikkel denne uken:
• Han etterforskes i en sivilsak av «justisministeren» i delstaten New York, Letitia James.
• Statsadvokat i New York, Cyrus Vance jr., har startet etterforskning av Trump i en kriminalsak. Trump har nå mistet immuniteten som fulgte med presidentvervet. Vance undersøker blant annet om Trump har begått straffbare skatteunndragelser.
• En føderal etterforskning ledet av statsadvokat Michael R. Sherwin inkluderer muligens Trumps rolle i den dødelige stormingen av Kongressen.
• Trump ringte i desember til Brad Raffensperger, valgansvarlig i Georgia, og sa han «trengte å finne noen stemmer». Denne samtalen kan også innebære lovbrudd, sier eksperter i en annen Washington Post-artikkel.

På toppen av alt dette kommer Trump til å bli plaget av advokaten Roberta Kaplan, skriver avisen. Hun representerer tre ulike klienter som har reist sivile søksmål mot ekspresidenten.

Klientene hennes inkluderer forfatteren E. Jean Carroll, som saksøkte Trump for injurier fordi han påsto at hun «bare drev med løgn». Hun hadde nemlig påstått at han hadde voldtatt henne for et kvart århundre siden i et omkledningsrom i en av Manhattans mest fasjonable kjøpesentre.

Kaplan representerer også eiendomsmagnatens niese, Mary L. Trump, som hevder at Trump og to av hans søsken frarøvet henne en arv verdt millioner av dollar.

Å være involvert i søksmål er imidlertid ikke noe nytt for Trump. Biografene hans har beskrevet hvordan han tidlig la seg til en strategi med å møte angrep med enda kraftigere motangrep. Før Trump ble president, hadde han og selskapene hans i løpet av tre tiår vært involvert i over 3500 rettslige saker, meldte USA Today i 2016.

Må snart innfri enorme lån

Storavisen The New York Times sto for et stort skup da de i fjor fikk tak i noen av Donald Trumps selvangivelser. Trump har i motsetning til andre presidenter nektet å offentliggjøre selvangivelsene og har kjempet imot når den tidligere nevnte statsadvokaten Cyrus Vance har forsøkt å få tak i dem.
Skattepapirene viser at mange av Trumps selskaper har blødd penger gjennom lengre tid. I løpet av de neste tre årene må selskapet hans, Trump Organization, betale tilbake avdrag på 3,3 milliarder kroner. Dette er gjeld Trump personlig har garantert for.

Det kan bli problematisk. For selskapene som i lengre tid har tapt penger, er blitt hardt rammet av koronapandemien. Hoteller, golfbaner og andre eiendommer gikk med et tap på over 1 milliard kroner i fjor, viser papirer Trump leverte inn da han forlot presidentembetet. Det melder Washington Post.

Både banker, advokatselskaper, kunder og samarbeidspartnere, slik som den amerikanske golforganisasjonen, forlater ham.

På toppen av det hele hevder amerikanske skattemyndigheter at han har krevd urettmessige skattefradrag. Hvis han taper den saken, risikerer han å måtte betale tilbake cirka 850 millioner kroner.

Trump samlet inn 2,1 milliarder kroner til kampanjen han førte for å få omgjort valget. Amerikansk lov tilsier i utgangspunktet at Trump ikke kan bruke disse pengene på å redde privatøkonomien.

Nå kan alt ha blitt så mye verre

Trump har også tidligere vært på kanten av kollaps, men er da blitt reddet av enten farens penger eller av inntektene fra TV-showet The Apprentice.

Begge disse inntektskildene er nå borte.

Den konfliktfylte avslutningen av presidentperioden kan ha forverret problemene, skriver The New York Times i en artikkel denne uken. Merkenavnet Trump, som han tidligere har tjent stort på å leie ut, er blitt betydelig svekket. Både av bevisfrie påstander om valgfusk og en voldelig storming av det amerikanske demokratiet.

Deutsche Bank, som har vært viktig for å finansiere Trumps prosjekter, gjorde det tidligere i måneden klart at de ikke vil låne ham mer penger.
Trumps sønn Eric sier til avisen at de regner med betydelig interesse for merkenavnet fra utlandet. De vurderer også å starte et medieselskap.

Allerede i 2016 ble spekulert på om Trump ville starte en TV-stasjon, da alle trodde Trump skulle tape. Men ikke sett alle sparepengene på at Trump kommer til å starte en TV-stasjon nå, skriver Politico. De mener Trump mangler ressursene, og at de eksisterende medieselskapene, inkludert konservative Fox, vil gå i strupen på ham dersom han forsøker seg.


This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

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