He was always a con artist
New York Justice Arthur F. Engoron found Trump liable for conspiring to manipulate his net worth and ordered him to pay a penalty of $355 million — which could wipe out his whole stockpile of cash.
Trump’s lawyers had argued — and will surely argue on appeal — that there was no fraud because there was no victim and no one had been harmed.
In a statement on Friday, a Trump Organization spokeswoman noted
that the company had “never missed any loan payment or been in default on any
loan” and that the lenders “performed extensive due diligence prior to entering
into these transactions.”
At trial, Trump’s lawyers called as witnesses the
president’s former bankers, who testified that they had been delighted to have
Trump as a client.
Trump’s lenders thought they were making
safer loans than they were because Trump inflated the value of his assets to
make it seem like he had more collateral than he actually did, and therefore he
was a more reliable borrower than he actually was.
Nearly half of the $355 million penalty imposed on Trump represented the interest that Trump saved by exaggerating his assets so
that he could get loans at lower interest rates (the rest represented Trump’s
profit on the recent sale of two properties, which the judge has now clawed
back).
Last September, Justice Arthur F. Engoron found that Trump overvalued his assets by as much as $2.2 billion, creating a “fantasy world” of indefensible valuations. The Trump Organization treated rent-regulated apartments as being worth as much as noncontrolled apartments. Trump’s claim that he had a 30,000-square-foot residence in New York, when the true number was only 11,000. And so on.
That the banks that lent Trump money were lucky enough to
get repaid in full is irrelevant. Their risk of not getting repaid in full was
in fact much higher than they assumed it was, due to the over-valuations.
Getting lucky is no excuse for fraud.
Trump declared on social media that he borrowed money from “sophisticated Wall Street banks” that wouldn’t have been easily deceived by fraud.
This claim is belied by the fact
that for many years only one major Wall Street bank, Deutsche Bank, was willing
to deal with him at all — and eventually Deutsche Bank also pulled the plug,
citing concerns about his financial claims.
In 2016, Trump told the American people they should vote
for him because he was a brilliantly successful businessman. Some still believe
this.
He wasn’t a successful businessman. He was a con artist. Not only did he get loans he wouldn’t have got if he’d been honest about the value of his assets, but he also left behind him a long line of people who were conned out of their money.
He conned hundreds of young people and their parents
into paying to attend his near worthless Trump University. He conned
contractors to work for them and then stiffed them.
By his own account, in 1976, when Trump was starting his
career, he was worth about $200 million, much of it from his father. In 2016 he
said said he was worth some $8 billion. If he’d just put the original $200
million into an index fund and reinvested the dividends, he’d be worth $12
billion.
We now know that the old joke was, in
Trump’s case, the real truth: He wasn’t a real business genius; he just played
one on TV.
Robert Reich is a professor at Berkeley and was secretary
of labor under Bill Clinton. You can find his writing at https://robertreich.substack.com/.