Fortune, May 17 - Donald Trump said in a recent interview with NBC’s Lester Holt, "I have had dealings over the years where I sold a house to a very wealthy Russian many years ago. I had the Miss Universe pageant — which I owned for quite a while — I had it in Moscow a long time ago. But other than that, I have nothing to do with Russia."
The reality, however, is that Trump couldn’t be more wrong. The President has deep Russian connections that far exceed what he admitted to Holt.
In a 2007 deposition that Trump gave as part of his unsuccessful defamation lawsuit against reporter Timothy O’Brien, he describes efforts to launch real estate ventures in Russia through Bayrock Associates, a shady Russian-connected outfit. Bayrock had partnered with Trump on at least four major but failed American projects: the Fort Lauderdale Trump Tower, the Trump Ocean Club in Fort Lauderdale, the SoHo condominium-hotel in New York, and a resort in Phoenix.
Bayrock had its office on the 24th floor of Trump Tower, and its 2007 glossy brochure featured a photo of Trump and Tevfik Arif, a principal Bayrock partner, who served for 17 years in the Soviet government before emigrating to the United States. It called the Trump Organization a “strategic partner,” and listed Trump as their primary reference.
Felix Sater, a Russian-born managing director at Bayrock, was convicted of assault in 1991. Then, in 1998, federal prosecutors convicted Sater of fraud, for running a $40 million penny stock fraud in collaboration with the New York and Russian Mafia. In return for a guilty plea, Sater reportedly agreed to work as a government informant.
New Republic -In “Trump’s Russian Laundromat,” veteran journalist Craig Unger
details how the Russian mafia has used the president’s
properties—including Trump Tower and the Trump Taj Majal—as a way to
launder money and hide assets. “Whether Trump knew it or not,” writes
Unger, “Russian mobsters and corrupt oligarchs used his properties not
only to launder vast sums of money from extortion, drugs, gambling, and
racketeering, but even as a base of operations for their criminal
activities. In the process, they propped up Trump’s business and enabled
him to reinvent his image. Without the Russian mafia, it is fair to
say, Donald Trump would not be president of the United States.”
Based
entirely on the extensive public record, the piece offers the most
comprehensive overview of the deep debt that the president owes the
Russian mafia. “The extent of Trump’s ties to the Russian mafia—and the
degree to which he relied on them for his entire business model—is
striking,” says Eric Bates, editor of the New Republic. “After
reading this story, it should come as no surprise to anyone that the
president continues to exhibit a deep loyalty to the world of shady
Russian operatives who have invested vast sums in his properties.”
USA Today, March 28 - To expand his real estate developments over the years, Donald Trump, his company and partners repeatedly turned to wealthy Russians and oligarchs from former Soviet republics — several allegedly connected to organized crime, according to a USA TODAY review of court cases, government and legal documents and an interview with a former federal prosecutor.
The president and his companies have been linked to at least 10 wealthy former Soviet businessmen with alleged ties to criminal organizations or money laundering.
Among them:
• A member of the firm that developed the Trump SoHo Hotel in New York is a twice-convicted felon who spent a year in prison for stabbing a man and later scouted for Trump investments in Russia.
• An investor in the SoHo project was accused by Belgian authorities in 2011 in a $55 million money-laundering scheme.
• Three owners of Trump condos in Florida and Manhattan were accused in federal indictments of belonging to a Russian-American organized crime group and working for a major international crime boss based in Russia.
• A former mayor from Kazakhstan was accused in a federal lawsuit filed in Los Angeles in 2014 of hiding millions of dollars looted from his city, some of which was spent on three Trump SoHo units.
• A Ukrainian owner of two Trump condos in Florida was indicted in a money-laundering scheme involving a former prime minister of Ukraine.
Trump's Russian connections are of heightened interest because of an FBI investigation into possible collusion between Trump's presidential campaign and Russian operatives to interfere in last fall's election. What’s more, Trump and his companies have had business dealings with Russians that go back decades, raising questions about whether his policies would be influenced by business considerations.
1 comment:
Its so obvious - to those not taken in by Jungle Book Kaa dances, that is, to non-banderlog - that the whole Trump thing, presidential run, presidency, family, everything, is just a distraction and news cycle air-sucking ploy to keep the focus off of the really important issues. And Russia, Clinton and trivia as back-ups.
For the benefit of those who don't want them discussed, much less fixed! Sure, we can be concerned about those things, but NOT to the EXCLUSION of all else, such as:
>> Medicare For All - the government acts as paymaster for all medical costs. This eliminates large, er, huge CEO salaries and other wasteful administrative costs. Water and health care should not be profit centers. Nestle out of Maine!
>> Free TUITION (not dorm rooms, books, meals, lab fees - just tuition) for PUBLIC K-16. The US is certainly able to afford that and we need to be competitive in the world.
>> Green energy boom and bust fracking and fossil fuels - no more government i.e. people's taxes funded oil and gas subsidies.
>> Free and fair elections. Open debates. Overturn Citizens United. No undisclosed big money to candidates or groups supporting candidates. Ranked choice voting.
>> FILL IN THE BLANKS!
Cheers, Tom
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