The Combustible World of Donald Trump
By
Four-alarm fire at Trump Tower killed one, injured nine,
in 2018. Twitter.
Last Sept. 11, former President Donald Trump skipped the commemorative 9/11 events and instead posed for photo-ops in Manhattan with first responders.
Many didn’t know he had a lot for which to personally thank firefighters because just hours earlier seven local firehouses in upstate New York had battled a blaze at one of Trump’s properties.
Trump, who
became known as a faux reality television star by regularly throwing out the
phrase “you’re fired,” seems to have had a serial loser’s bad luck where fires are
concerned.
Trump properties
sustained at least seven fires since he became president in 2017. There were
other fires that date to before he assumed office. And his string of loser luck
includes a 1989 helicopter crash—the only one of its kind—that killed three
Trump casino executives whose lives Trump had insured for, he said at the time,
$35 million.
Fire Chief John Fogarty said one
1982 blaze was “definitely, absolutely, positively arson.” But seven hours
later Deputy Fire Commissioner John Mulligan declared it accidental.
Here is a
catalog of the various fires that have occurred at Trump properties over the
last few years:
Hudson Valley, 2021
Investigations
are ongoing after a three-alarm fire
broke out on Sept. 10 at a barn on Trump’s private 300-acre,
18-hole Trump National Golf Course Hudson Valley in Dutchess County, New York,
about 130 miles north of Manhattan.Christina Burke/Mid-Hudson News Network
On Sept. 14, the
local East Fishkill Fire District chief, Frank Lacalamita, said:
“All I know is it’s definitely
not suspicious… It’s not like, ‘Hey, listen someone did it.’ It’s not like that
at all. The place has tons of cameras, there was nobody around – there was nothing
suspicious at all.”
It took about two hours for 70 firefighters from at least seven local firehouses to extinguish the blaze. Firefighters found the 50-foot-by-100-foot barn structure that houses golf carts and their charging system engulfed in flames. The first responders finally cleared from the scene just before 1 a.m. on Sept. 11.
Later
that same day, Trump made a surprise visit to a New York City firehouse to make
brief remarks and pose for pictures with 9/11 responders on the 20th
anniversary of the Twin Towers terrorist attacks. There did not appear to be
any mention of his own fire hours earlier.
New York City, January
2018
In January
2018, a fire broke out on the Trump Tower roof in Manhattan. A New
York Fire Department spokesman referred to it as a “quick, easy and routine” electrical
fire.
New York City, April 2018
Three
months later, on April 7, one resident was killed and three people were injured
after an explosion on the 50th floor of Trump Tower. Sole fatality Todd Brassner. Facebook via ArtNet
Six firefighters were
injured battling the four-alarm fire. Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro
noted that the Trump Tower “upper floors, the resident floors,
are not sprinklered.”
The resident who
died, Todd Brassner, 67, had tried to sell his $2.5 million condo unit, but
after Trump became president there were no buyers. Rents
plummeted in the 58-story concrete tower. The price
fall began when Trump declared his candidacy in June 2015.
Commissioner
Nigro said the blaze was
a “very difficult fire,” even though most of the damage was contained to
Brassner’s apartment 50C. Six firefighters sustained minor injuries but the
lack of other injuries or damage seems incredibly lucky as reportedly the smoke
alarms didn’t function the night of the fire. Some residents complained
that “the building did not announce there was a fire and they
failed to say to evacuate.”
One resident,
Dennis Shields, a boyfriend
of Bethenny Frankel of the Real Housewives faux-reality
television shows, reported that he learned about the fire only because of a
text from a childhood friend, Michael Cohen, who had been Trump’s longtime
attorney.
Shields
said that “Michael Cohen, Trump’s lawyer, texted me and he
said, ‘Are you in the building?’ and I texted him back, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘You
better get out, there’s a fire’,” Shields told CBS News.
Sprinklers were not required when Trump Tower was built in the early 1980s. However, in 1999, then-mayor Rudy Giuliani’s administration pushed for legislation to require older buildings to retrofit with sprinklers.
Trump was among the real estate
developers who successfully lobbied against
adding fire sprinklers in existing New York high-rises,
including Trump Tower. As enacted in 1999, the legislation required
retrofitting high-rises with sprinklers only when renovations totaled 50
percent or more of the building’s value, effectively eliminating the
requirement except when a high rise is gutted and rebuilt.
According to public
records, there were only two other four-alarm fires in Manhattan in
2018. Nine days after the fire, the FDNY declared the
fatal four-alarm Trump Tower fire accidental, caused by multiple overloaded
power strips. Brassner’s apartment lacked a smoke detector.
Brassner had
amassed artwork and other collectibles at more than $3 million. That included a
1975 Warhol portrait of Brassner valued at $850,000. The condition of
Brassner’s 100 vintage electric guitars and works of art is unknown.
Despite the
extensive art collection and expensive condo, Brassner regularly failed to pay
common charges for his property on the 50th floor and
the Trump condominium board regularly placed liens on his apartment until the
fees were paid. Public records show that between 2003 until 2013 the Trump
Condominium put a lien on the Brassner’s property for unpaid common charges
almost every year. The unpaid amounts varied from $4,387.92 to $21,668.03 per
year.
After the fatal
fire, the Trump Condominium board placed a new lien on Brassner’s apartment,
for $52,213.38 and sued his estate for $90,000. (Residential Board of
Trump Tower Condominium v. Aaron Brassner, as executor of the estate of Todd R.
Brassner, 159812/2018.)
Baku, Azerbaijan, April 2018
On
April 28, 2018, a fire broke out at
the Trump Tower in Baku. The blaze started at the top floor of the building and burned
through about 20 stories before firefighters extinguished the
flames by midafternoon. Ivanka posing at the Baku site
Hours later firefighters were called back to battle a
second fire.
A Russian news
portal posted a video showing
that the fire rekindled in the evening, this time burning through much of the
building.
After 10 years
of construction with Ivanka Trump in charge for her father, the corruptly
financed Baku Trump Tower was still not finished when it caught fire.
The New Yorker magazine reported in March 2017 that the tower appeared “to be a corrupt operation engineered by oligarchs tied to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.”
The Trump Organization had
extensive involvement and oversight on the project with Trump staff visiting
monthly.
When the Trump Organization got involved in the project, they knowingly signed on even though any form of due diligence would have revealed that the project had been financially entangled with an Iranian family tied to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.
In his reporting in The New Yorker, Adam Davidson wrote that he
spoke with more than a dozen contractors who described behavior on the project
as “nakedly corrupt.”
One contractor
confirmed his firm was always paid in cash, and that he witnessed other
contractors being paid in the same way. He said, “They would give us a giant
pile of cash,” adding, “I got $180,000 one time, which I fit into my laptop
bag, and $200,000 another time.” Once, a colleague of his picked up a payment
of $2 million. “He needed to bring a big duffel bag,” McDonald recalled.
New York City, March 2017
Just six weeks
after Trump became president, a fire
broke out on the 47th floor of the Trump International Hotel
overlooking Central Park and Columbus Circle. The high rise had been a
corporate office before being retrofitted as a hotel with Trump’s name on it.
The fire was deemed
not suspicious.
Las Vegas, April 2017
In April 2017, a
28-year old man was arrested at
the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas after officials found four separate
devices used to ignite different fires—one in the pool restroom area and on the
17th floor of the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas.
The pool deck
fire was confined to two toasters and “various combustible materials,” the Fire
Department said.
The 17th-floor fire was, similarly, confined to two toasters and “various
combustible materials,” the Fire Department said.
Fire officials
said toasters, towels and other materials set aflame on the 17th floor were
quickly extinguished by hotel security personnel. Firefighters extinguished the
restroom fire.
Clark County
(Las Vegas) Fire Department spokesman
John Steinbeck said the multiple devices were placed
intentionally to set off fires, but the fires don’t appear to be politically
motivated.
Las Vegas, May 2017
Two months
later, in May 2017, a tourist from Colorado was arrested for
deliberately setting a fire near the lobby of the same Trump Las Vegas hotel.
He dropped a burning paper towel into a restroom trash can. The judge ordered the
28-year-old man to be released from jail after five days behind bars and
sentenced him to 50 hours of community service.
Other Fires in Trump’s Orbit
Prior to his Presidency
In addition to
the fires at Trump’s properties, some other fires have occurred in the wake of
some of the more controversial time periods in Trump’s life. These incidents
seem to sit on the periphery of Trump’s orbit.
Roy Cohn’s Testimony
Burned
In case you want
to peruse Trump’s testimony in the disbarment case of the infamous Roy Cohn,
you are out of luck.
In January 2015,
a CitiStorage
facility in Brooklyn went up in flames. Among the records lost
were Cohn’s disbarment proceedings including the transcript of Trump’s
testimony where he attested to the good character of the ruthlessly villainous
lawyer whom Trump has called his second father.
That fire in
a 1.1 million cubic feet facility housed records from many government agencies,
including the New York State court system, municipal Children’s Services and
the Health and Hospitals Corp., as well as medical records from several local
hospitals and documents from law and financial services firms.
Arson or Accident?
A four-alarm
fire erupted at Trump Tower in 1982 when it was under
construction. The fire burned the top three floors, which were to become
Trump’s triplex residence.
Fire Chief John
Fogarty said the blaze was “definitely, absolutely, positively arson.” But
seven hours later Deputy Fire Commissioner John Mulligan declared it
accidental, caused by fires used to keep concrete warm. Trump Tower is made of
concrete, not steel girders.
The Stormy Daniels Explosions
Back in 2009
Stormy Daniels, the stripper with whom Trump had what she characterized as a
very quick sexual encounter in 2006, explored a run for the U.S. Senate in
Louisiana. Two explosions persuaded her to back off. Daniels’ real name is
Stephanie Clifford.
An Audi
belonging to Brian
Welsh, a Democratic adviser to the Stormy Daniels Senate Exploratory
Committee LLC., exploded just after a surveillance camera recorded a man
opening the drivers’ side door and throwing an object into the car. Welsh said
he was uncertain if the explosion was connected to his work with Daniels.
Andrea Dube, who
also worked on the Stormy Daniels political operation, tweeted that the same
evening as the car bomb, the natural
gas line feeding her home mysteriously exploded. The resulting fire
nearly burning her house.
No matter how
you look at it, that’s a lot of fires afflicting Trump business interests.
Alison
Greene is a political investigative journalist with a focus on
election integrity and national intelligence issues. Follow her on Twitter
@GrassrootsSpeak. Send tips to alisoniazoe@yahoo.com.