FIFA To Consider Changes To Policy That Blocks League Matches From Being Played in Other Countries Trump's Hush Money Criminal Trial
FIFA To Consider Changes To Policy That Blocks League Matches From Being Played in Other Countries Trump's Hush Money Criminal Trial
FIFA To Consider Changes To Policy That Blocks League Matches From Being Played in Other Countries Trump's Hush Money Criminal Trial
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Weisselberg’s plea agreement also does not require him to testify at Trump’s hush money
criminal trial, which is scheduled to start with jury selection Monday.
“Allen Weisselberg accepted responsibility for his conduct and now looks forward to the end of
this life-altering experience and to returning to his family and his retirement,” his attorney, Seth
Rosenberg, said in a statement after the court hearing.
Prosecutors with Bragg’s office declined to address the court during the brief sentencing hearing.
As part of his guilty plea, Weisselberg admitted lying when he testified he had little knowledge
of how Trump’s Manhattan penthouse came to be valued on his financial statements at nearly
three times its actual size.
The two cases highlighted Weisselberg’s unflinching loyalty to Trump, the presumptive
Republican presidential nominee.
Trump’s family employed Weisselberg for nearly 50 years, then gave him a $2 million severance
deal when the tax charges prompted him to retire. The company continues to pay his legal bills.
Weisselberg testified twice in trials that went badly for Trump, but each time he took pains to
suggest that his boss hadn’t committed any serious wrongdoing.
Weisselberg’s sentence mirrors his previous case, in which he was ordered to serve five months
in jail but was eligible for release after little more than three months with good behavior. Prior to
that, he had no criminal record.
Trump’s lawyers took issue with Weisselberg’s perjury prosecution, accusing the Manhattan
district attorney’s office of deploying “unethical, strong-armed tactics against an innocent man in
his late 70s” while turning “a blind eye” to perjury allegations against Michael Cohen, the former
Trump lawyer who is now a key prosecution witness in the hush money case.
Weisselberg pleaded guilty March 4. He admitted lying under oath on three occasions while
testifying in New York Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit against Trump: in depositions in
July 2020 and May 2023 and on the witness stand at the trial last October. To avoid violating his
tax case probation, however, he agreed to plead guilty only to charges related to his 2020
deposition testimony.
The size of Trump’s penthouse was a key issue in the civil fraud case.
Trump valued the apartment on his financial statements from at least 2012 to 2016 as though it
measured 30,000 square feet (2,800 square meters). A former Trump real estate executive
testified that Weisselberg provided the figure. The former executive said that when he asked for
the apartment’s size in 2012, Weisselberg replied: “It’s quite large. I think it’s around 30,000
square feet.”
However, state lawyers noted, Weisselberg got an email early in that year with a 1994 document
attached that pegged Trump’s apartment at 10,996 square feet (1,022 square meters).
Weisselberg testified that he remembered the email but not the attachment and that he didn’t
“walk around knowing the size” of the apartment.
After Forbes magazine published an article in 2017 disputing the size of Trump’s penthouse, its
estimated value on his financial statement was cut from $327 million to about $117 million.
As Weisselberg was testifying last October, Forbes published an article with the headline
“Trump’s Longtime CFO Lied, Under Oath, About Trump Tower Penthouse.”
The civil fraud trial ended with Judge Arthur Engoron ruling that Trump and some of his
executives had schemed to deceive banks, insurers and others by lying about his wealth on
financial statements used to make deals and secure loans. The judge penalized Trump $455
million and ordered Weisselberg to pay $1 million. They are both appealing.
In his decision, Engoron said he found Weisselberg’s testimony “intentionally evasive” and
“highly unreliable.”
Weisselberg is likely to factor into Trump’s hush money trial — even if he’s in jail and not on
the witness stand while it’s happening.
Trump is accused of falsifying his company’s records to cover up payments during his 2016
campaign to bury stories of marital infidelity. It is the first of Trump’s four criminal cases
scheduled to go to trial. Trump has pleaded not guilty and denies wrongdoing.
Cohen has said Weisselberg had a role in orchestrating the payments. Weisselberg, who lives in
Boynton Beach, Florida, has not been charged in that case, and neither prosecutors nor Trump’s
lawyers have indicated they will call him as a witness.