N.Y. AG raises pressure on Trump, 2 children to testify in intensifying business probe – National | Globalnews.ca
New York’s attorney general said Tuesday she has taken legal action to compel former U.S. president Donald Trump and two of his adult children to testify in an investigation into the family’s business practices.
Attorney General Letitia James’ office said she has filed motions to compel Trump, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump to appear for sworn testimony, and for Trump to produce documents sought in the yearslong civil probe involving matters including “the valuation of properties owned or controlled” by Trump and his company.
“We have uncovered significant evidence indicating that the Trump Organization used fraudulent and misleading asset valuations on multiple properties to obtain economic benefits, including loans, insurance coverage, and tax deductions for years,” James said in a statement.
“Donald Trump, Donald Trump, Jr., and Ivanka Trump have all been closely involved in the transactions in question, so we won’t tolerate their attempts to evade testifying in this investigation.”
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James’ office said that “significant additional evidence” has been uncovered in the years since Trump’s son Eric — who along with Donald Trump Jr. have helped run the Trump Organization during their father’s political career — was subpoenaed in 2020.
The motion to compel was filed in opposition to the Trumps’ own motion to dismiss James’ subpoenas of Trump, Donald Jr. and Ivanka, which were issued early this month.
Lawyers for the Trumps called the subpoenas “an unprecedented and unconstitutional maneuver” and accused James of attempting to obtain testimony that could then be used against the Trumps in a parallel criminal investigation being overseen by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
James “seeks to circumvent the entire grand jury process” and nullify the Trumps’ rights by forcing them to testify without the immunity that’s guaranteed under state law if they were subpoenaed to testify in front of the grand jury in the criminal probe, the Trumps’ lawyers wrote in their motion to dismiss.
Last month, Trump sued James in federal court, seeking to put an end to her investigation. Trump, in the lawsuit, claimed that the attorney general had violated the Republican’s constitutional rights in a “thinly-veiled effort to publicly malign Trump and his associates.”
The Republican ex-president has decried both James’ investigation and the Manhattan probe as part of a political “witch hunt.”
James, a Democrat, has spent more than two years looking at whether the Trump Organization misled banks or tax officials about the value of assets — inflating them to gain favorable loan terms or minimizing them to reap tax savings.
“No one in this country can pick and choose if and how the law applies to them,” James said Tuesday.
Last year, then-District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. gained access to the longtime real estate mogul’s tax records after a multiyear fight that twice went to the U.S. Supreme Court. He also brought tax fraud charges in July against the Trump Organization and its longtime CFO Allen Weisselberg.
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Before he left office last month, Vance convened a new grand jury to hear evidence in the investigation, but left the decision on additional charges to his successor, Bragg. The new district attorney has said he’ll be directly involved in the Trump matter while also retaining the two veteran prosecutors who led the case under Vance.
Weisselberg pleaded not guilty to charges alleging he and the company evaded taxes on lucrative fringe benefits paid to executives.
Both investigations are at least partly related to allegations made in news reports and by Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, that Trump had a history of misrepresenting the value of assets.
James’ office issued subpoenas to local governments as part of the civil probe for records pertaining to the estate, Seven Springs, and a tax benefit Trump received for placing land into a conservation trust. Vance later issued subpoenas seeking many of the same records.
James’ office has also been looking at similar issues relating to a Trump office building in New York City, a hotel in Chicago and a golf course near Los Angeles.
—With files from the Associated Press
© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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