• Time For Biden To Lock Trump Up, Let Him End His Days In Behind Bars

    From Yak@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 22 16:41:33 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: alt.survival, talk.politics.misc, soc.culture.russia

    Donald Trump’s Odds of Going to Prison Just Skyrocketed
    The Trump Organization and its CFO will reportedly be hit with criminal
    charges on Thursday, and additional indictments may be coming.

    By Bess Levin
    June 30, 2021


    Three years after it began its criminal investigation of Donald Trump’s Trump Organization and its executives, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office is reportedly expected to charge the ex-president’s company and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, with tax-related crimes on Thursday, according The Wall Street Journal. Obviously this marks a major escalation of the probe, and Trump will presumably respond to the news by lashing out like
    a man increasingly concerned that prison may be in his future.

    According to the Journal, Weisselberg and the company are expected to be hit with charges related to allegedly avoiding paying taxes on fringe benefits.
    For months Cyrus Vance Jr.’s office has been investigating whether the perks the CFO (and other employees) was awarded, including cars, corporate apartments, and private school tuition, were a way of evading money owed to
    the IRS. In addition to reportedly obtaining Weisselberg’s personal tax returns, the D.A.’s office scored a trove of financial documents from his ex- daughter-in-law, Jennifer Weisselberg, whose former husband, Barry
    Weisselberg, is also a longtime employee of the company. (In his divorce deposition Barry was unable to answer a number of questions about his taxes, and when asked if taxes had been paid on the Trump Organization–owned
    apartment where his family previously lived, he said he didn’t know. Pressed
    to explain discrepancies between what he said he earned and what he actually reported on tax forms, he responded: “I’m not an accountant. I know what I make. I’m not too sure of certain things.”)

    While Weisselberg has thus far refused to cooperate with the investigation, being personally charged, and contemplating the prospect of prison time,
    could obviously change his decision re: testifying against Trump—and if it
    were to, it would undoubtedly be a very, very bad turn of events for the 45th president. Weisselberg has described himself as the “eyes and ears“ of the company from a financial standpoint, and he could presumably connect any
    number of dots about potential crimes committed by Trump.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Yak@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 22 22:09:17 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: alt.survival, talk.politics.misc, soc.culture.russia

    Donald Trump’s Odds of Going to Prison Just Skyrocketed
    The Trump Organization and its CFO will reportedly be hit with criminal
    charges on Thursday, and additional indictments may be coming.

    By Bess Levin
    June 30, 2021


    Three years after it began its criminal investigation of Donald Trump’s Trump Organization and its executives, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office is reportedly expected to charge the ex-president’s company and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, with tax-related crimes on Thursday, according The Wall Street Journal. Obviously this marks a major escalation of the probe, and Trump will presumably respond to the news by lashing out like
    a man increasingly concerned that prison may be in his future.

    According to the Journal, Weisselberg and the company are expected to be hit with charges related to allegedly avoiding paying taxes on fringe benefits.
    For months Cyrus Vance Jr.’s office has been investigating whether the perks the CFO (and other employees) was awarded, including cars, corporate apartments, and private school tuition, were a way of evading money owed to
    the IRS. In addition to reportedly obtaining Weisselberg’s personal tax returns, the D.A.’s office scored a trove of financial documents from his ex- daughter-in-law, Jennifer Weisselberg, whose former husband, Barry
    Weisselberg, is also a longtime employee of the company. (In his divorce deposition Barry was unable to answer a number of questions about his taxes, and when asked if taxes had been paid on the Trump Organization–owned
    apartment where his family previously lived, he said he didn’t know. Pressed
    to explain discrepancies between what he said he earned and what he actually reported on tax forms, he responded: “I’m not an accountant. I know what I make. I’m not too sure of certain things.”)

    While Weisselberg has thus far refused to cooperate with the investigation, being personally charged, and contemplating the prospect of prison time,
    could obviously change his decision re: testifying against Trump—and if it
    were to, it would undoubtedly be a very, very bad turn of events for the 45th president. Weisselberg has described himself as the “eyes and ears“ of the company from a financial standpoint, and he could presumably connect any
    number of dots about potential crimes committed by Trump.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Yak@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 25 22:03:28 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: alt.survival, talk.politics.misc, soc.culture.russia

    Donald Trump’s Odds of Going to Prison Just Skyrocketed
    The Trump Organization and its CFO will reportedly be hit with criminal
    charges on Thursday, and additional indictments may be coming.

    By Bess Levin
    June 30, 2021


    Three years after it began its criminal investigation of Donald Trump’s Trump Organization and its executives, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office is reportedly expected to charge the ex-president’s company and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, with tax-related crimes on Thursday, according The Wall Street Journal. Obviously this marks a major escalation of the probe, and Trump will presumably respond to the news by lashing out like
    a man increasingly concerned that prison may be in his future.

    According to the Journal, Weisselberg and the company are expected to be hit with charges related to allegedly avoiding paying taxes on fringe benefits.
    For months Cyrus Vance Jr.’s office has been investigating whether the perks the CFO (and other employees) was awarded, including cars, corporate apartments, and private school tuition, were a way of evading money owed to
    the IRS. In addition to reportedly obtaining Weisselberg’s personal tax returns, the D.A.’s office scored a trove of financial documents from his ex- daughter-in-law, Jennifer Weisselberg, whose former husband, Barry
    Weisselberg, is also a longtime employee of the company. (In his divorce deposition Barry was unable to answer a number of questions about his taxes, and when asked if taxes had been paid on the Trump Organization–owned
    apartment where his family previously lived, he said he didn’t know. Pressed
    to explain discrepancies between what he said he earned and what he actually reported on tax forms, he responded: “I’m not an accountant. I know what I make. I’m not too sure of certain things.”)

    While Weisselberg has thus far refused to cooperate with the investigation, being personally charged, and contemplating the prospect of prison time,
    could obviously change his decision re: testifying against Trump—and if it
    were to, it would undoubtedly be a very, very bad turn of events for the 45th president. Weisselberg has described himself as the “eyes and ears“ of the company from a financial standpoint, and he could presumably connect any
    number of dots about potential crimes committed by Trump.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Yak@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 26 19:23:56 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: alt.survival, talk.politics.misc, soc.culture.russia

    Donald Trump’s Odds of Going to Prison Just Skyrocketed
    The Trump Organization and its CFO will reportedly be hit with criminal
    charges on Thursday, and additional indictments may be coming.

    By Bess Levin
    June 30, 2021


    Three years after it began its criminal investigation of Donald Trump’s Trump Organization and its executives, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office is reportedly expected to charge the ex-president’s company and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, with tax-related crimes on Thursday, according The Wall Street Journal. Obviously this marks a major escalation of the probe, and Trump will presumably respond to the news by lashing out like
    a man increasingly concerned that prison may be in his future.

    According to the Journal, Weisselberg and the company are expected to be hit with charges related to allegedly avoiding paying taxes on fringe benefits.
    For months Cyrus Vance Jr.’s office has been investigating whether the perks the CFO (and other employees) was awarded, including cars, corporate apartments, and private school tuition, were a way of evading money owed to
    the IRS. In addition to reportedly obtaining Weisselberg’s personal tax returns, the D.A.’s office scored a trove of financial documents from his ex- daughter-in-law, Jennifer Weisselberg, whose former husband, Barry
    Weisselberg, is also a longtime employee of the company. (In his divorce deposition Barry was unable to answer a number of questions about his taxes, and when asked if taxes had been paid on the Trump Organization–owned
    apartment where his family previously lived, he said he didn’t know. Pressed
    to explain discrepancies between what he said he earned and what he actually reported on tax forms, he responded: “I’m not an accountant. I know what I make. I’m not too sure of certain things.”)

    While Weisselberg has thus far refused to cooperate with the investigation, being personally charged, and contemplating the prospect of prison time,
    could obviously change his decision re: testifying against Trump—and if it
    were to, it would undoubtedly be a very, very bad turn of events for the 45th president. Weisselberg has described himself as the “eyes and ears“ of the company from a financial standpoint, and he could presumably connect any
    number of dots about potential crimes committed by Trump.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)