Checks & Imbalances: Why Cornel West Is Broke

Today we take a close look at Cornel West, uncovering surprising allegations that help explain why the presidential candidate, who has earned millions of dollars over the years, has hardly anything left.


Why Cornel West Is Broke

C

ornel West has been a fixture of American society for more than three decades, publishing books, teaching at Ivy League institutions, commenting on cable news, collaborating on music with Prince—even popping up in sequels to the Matrix. Ubiquity provided liquidity, with West earning an estimated $15 million or so over the last 30 years. But oddly, as he mounts an independent run for president, his net worth resembles that of a first-year adjunct professor. “I live paycheck to paycheck,” says West.

A review of federal filings and property records confirms that West’s net worth is near zero. Other outlets have previously reported on his troubles paying taxes over the years. But no one so far has explained how someone so successful became so broke. With West in position to affect who becomes America’s next president, Forbes set out to answer that question, digging into heaps of legal and tax documents filed in various jurisdictions over six decades. Turns out much of the damage was self-inflicted.

West burst onto the national scene in the 1990s with Race Matters, a compilation of essays that sold more than 500,000 copies. He traveled the country to deliver speeches, hauling in more than $500,000 a year. Much of the money flowed to him with no taxes deducted. West blew it—on many things, especially women—leaving little left for Uncle Sam by the time tax season arrived. The liens piled up: $144,000 in 1998, $105,000 in 2000, $205,000 in 2001 and so on. “Almost like a reptile biting its tail,” he says now.

West lived in a Four Seasons condo in Boston, which he later admitted he could not afford, and rode around in a Mercedes or Cadillac. One of his four ex-wives accused West of maintaining a covert apartment in Boston for $5,000 a month to use as a love den. She also alleged that, despite not having any health conditions, he later took a medical leave from his job at Harvard to live a “secret life” with another woman in New Mexico.

MORE FROM FORBESWhy Cornel West Is Broke

From The News Desk

Charles Koch-Backed Super PAC Endorses Nikki Haley For President

Americans for Prosperity Action, the super PAC backed by billionaire Charles Koch, endorsed former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley for president Tuesday, adding to the growing list of influential anti-Trump Republicans rallying around her, reports Sara Dorn.

The group announced the endorsement Tuesday in a tweet that said Haley “represents a new generation of conservative leaders who will solve the tough problems and lead our country forward.”

In a memo to supporters, AFP Action said it believes Haley has the best chance at defeating former President Donald Trump in the GOP primary and President Joe Biden in the general election, while lamenting the “downward spiral” of American politics.

Related: “Haley Campaign Pours Money Into Ads Attacking DeSantis—But Still Won’t Bash Trump” by Sara Dorn

MORE FROM FORBESCharles Koch-Backed Super PAC Endorses Nikki Haley For President

Can David Boies Legalize Weed?

The man who says he will legalize cannabis in America is sitting in his Manhattan corner office on the 20th floor of 55 Hudson Yards, staring at the river below. A wine refrigerator hums in the background and a two-foot-tall bronze statue of a Boy Scout, hat in hand, peeks over his shoulder, reports Will Yakowicz.

“We represented a few gay Boy Scouts—the Boy Scouts is a private organization and they continued to exclude gays from leadership positions,” says David Boies, chairman and managing partner of Boies Schiller Flexner, and one of the country’s most fearsome litigators. “We challenged that under both federal and state law and forced them to change. A couple years afterwards, the Boy Scouts gave me the Franklin Roosevelt Award.”

MORE FROM FORBESCan David Boies Legalize Weed?

Self-Funded Candidate For Congress Blows Through Financial Disclosure Filing Deadline

A largely self-funded Republican running for Congress in California has missed a deadline to disclose exactly where her money is coming from. Margarita Wilkinson, the general manager of Univision San Diego, filed papers with the Federal Election Commission on Aug. 15 to run for the House.

MORE FROM FORBESSelf-Funded Candidate For Congress Blows Through Financial Disclosure Filing Deadline

By The Numbers

0

The number of times a government ethics official appeared to consider that the venue was a hotel owned by the president when OK’ing HUD Sec. Ben Carson’s request to accept an invite to Kuwait’s national day celebration at the Trump International Hotel Washington, D.C. in 2019, according to documents released pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act.

$5,895

The amount the campaign for Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) disgorged to the U.S. Treasury in September. “The committee disgorged funds for stale or uncleared checks, such as contribution refunds for donors who contributed over limits but never cashed their refund checks,” explained a campaign spokesperson.

$7 billion

The estimated net worth of Terry Gou, the billionaire Foxconn founder, who dropped out of Taiwan’s 2024 presidential race last week.


Road To 2024

Jennifer Franks, chair of The Draft Romney Manchin Committee, joins “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss her committee’s goal of forging a 2024 unity ticket with Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) and Mitt Romney (R-Utah).

Tracking Trump

Trump’s Social Media Firm Has Lost $31.6 Million Since Its Inception, Filing Shows

The parent company of former President Donald Trump’s social media site, Truth Social, has lost $31.6 million since its inception in 2021, according to a regulatory filing that raises concern about the platform’s financial condition and its ability to continue operations.

Correction: The article, which originally published on Nov. 14, has been corrected to show Truth Social lost $31.6 million since its inception, and had a net profit of $50.5 million in 2022.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump’s Social Media Firm Has Lost $31.6 Million Since Its Inception, Filing Shows

Trump Golf Course Keeps Current On Payments For $400,000 Fine After Customer’s Fatal Car Crash

One of Donald Trump’s New Jersey golf courses continues to adhere to its payment schedule for a $400,000 fine it incurred after not contesting charges in 2021 that it violated alcoholic-beverage control laws in connection with a fatal car crash.

After leaving Trump National Golf Club in Colts Neck on Aug. 30, 2015, a customer drove his Mini Cooper over a curb, causing it to flip and roll, the Asbury Park Press reported. The accident killed the car’s only other passenger. Police reported that the driver’s blood alcohol content at the time was over the legal limit of .08. In January 2018, the driver pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide and was sentenced to three years of probation, 100 hours of community service and ordered to undergo substance-abuse counseling.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump Golf Course Keeps Current On Payments For $400,000 Fine After Customer’s Fatal Car Crash

Quiz

How much did Cornel West pay in monthly rent in 1999 to maintain an apartment in Cambridge, Massachusetts to conduct extramarital affairs, according to a court filing from an ex-wife?

a. $250

b. $1,500

c. $2,500

d. $5,000

Check if you got it right here.

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#Checks #Imbalances #Cornel #West #Broke

Checks & Imbalances: How Ivanka Trump Lied

As Don Jr. and Eric Trump take the stand, we continue our coverage of Donald Trump’s ongoing trial in New York. Follow along now with live updates from inside the courtroom.


Ivanka Trump Helped Her Dad Lie About His Net Worth

Ivanka Trump is expected to testify soon in a $250 million fraud case that the New York attorney general is waging against her father and his associates, reports Dan Alexander. That’s bad news for Ivanka, who tried to get out of taking the stand. But it might be even worse news for her father, who employed Ivanka in his years-long con to convince the world that he had more money than he actually did.

The attorney general will have plenty of questions for Donald Trump’s eldest daughter. Ivanka helped lead the acquisition of two assets at the center of the lawsuit, the Trump hotel in Washington, D.C. and the Trump National Doral golf resort in Miami. She also lived in another property caught up in the proceedings, a condo building named Trump Park Avenue in New York City.

But to fully understand Ivanka’s involvement in her father’s deceit, it helps to get inside the room where the lying took place. That’s exactly where three Forbes journalists were in September 2015, when Donald Trump hosted them in Trump Tower as part of his quest to climb higher on The Forbes 400 list of America’s richest people. Trump spouted off all sorts of nonsense that day, claiming his properties were more profitable, spacious and valuable than they actually were. In the middle of his pitch, the Republican frontrunner received a phone call. “Ivanka,” said Trump, “my little Ivanka.”

Nine minutes later, she entered the room: “Hiiii!”

MORE FROM FORBESIvanka Trump Helped Her Dad Lie About His Net Worth

Tracking Trump

Trump-Linked SPAC Spent $10.8 Million On Legal Fees Amid Regulatory Probes

The company planning to merge with Trump Media & Technology Group, owner of Truth Social, spent $10.8 million on legal fees related to government investigations in 2021 and 2022, according to an amended financial statement Digital World Acquisition Corp. filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday. Those legal fees comprise about 46% of the company’s total expenses over that two-year period.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump-Linked SPAC Spent $10.8 Million On Legal Fees Amid Regulatory Probes

How Much Money Has Michael Cohen Made Hating On Trump?

Donald Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, testified last week in the New York fraud case. Trump’s legal team immediately set out to discredit Cohen, asking him how much money he has made from hosting podcast episodes and writing books relentlessly criticizing Trump.

“It’s irrelevant,” Cohen said, clearly reluctant to get into specifics on his personal finances. But when asked whether he had monetary incentives to criticize his boss, Cohen conceded the point. “Yes,” he responded in open court.

How much money has Cohen earned from his media ventures? It’s hard to say exactly, but it does look to be a solid revenue stream.

MORE FROM FORBESHow Much Money Has Michael Cohen Made Hating On Trump?

This Is What Trump Is Actually Like In The Courtroom When Cameras Aren’t Allowed In: Reporter

Forbes senior editor Dan Alexander, who was in a Manhattan courthouse covering the fraud case against former President Donald Trump, joins Brittany Lewis on “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss.

From The News Desk

Senate Democrats Plan To Subpoena GOP Megadonors—Including Harlan Crow—Over Reported Gifts To Supreme Court Justices

Senate Democrats announced plans to subpoena two GOP megadonors and a conservative judicial activist, seeking details about their reported role in paying for lavish gifts and luxury trips for conservative Supreme Court justices that triggered calls for an ethical code for the judges serving on the court, reports Siladitya Ray.

MORE FROM FORBESSenate Democrats Plan To Subpoena GOP Megadonors-Including Harlan Crow-Over Reported Gifts To Supreme Court Justices

Billionaire Says Glenn Youngkin Could Declare Presidential Run Next Week

Thomas Peterffy, the billionaire founder of Interactive Brokers, has made no secret of his desire for Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin to become president, reports John Hyatt. He has given $3 million to Youngkin’s political action committee since April and publicly urged Youngkin to enter the race.

Youngkin, a former private equity investor, has previously insisted he’s “wholly focused on the Commonwealth of Virginia.” But Peterffy, in an interview with Forbes, says Youngkin may reconsider if Republicans take control of Virginia’s senate in next week’s state election. “His hope is that…the Senate will flip Republican, and that would give him a platform on which we could say, “Look, I turned an all-blue state red, and I can do that nationwide. So please vote for me,’” says Peterffy.

MORE FROM FORBESBillionaire Says Glenn Youngkin Could Declare Presidential Run Next Week

By The Numbers

$1,371,800

The sum that Nirmal Mulye, the CEO of Nostrum Laboratories, has donated to candidates for federal office since 2003. On Monday, Nostrum and Mulye agreed to pay the government at least $3.8 million in fines “to resolve allegations that they violated the False Claims Act by knowingly underpaying Medicaid.”

$15,000

How much Donald Trump has been fined for violating gag orders.

$2.6 billion

Donald Trump’s net worth, according to Forbes’ estimates.


Road To 2024

On “Forbes Eye on Iowa,” former 2024 Republican presidential candidate Larry Elder spoke with Sarah Muller about his endorsement of former President Trump, his campaign, the future of the Republican Party and more.

Quiz

Which of the following is not a figure Ivanka Trump gave for the amount of meeting space at Trump National Doral?

  1. “75,000 square feet”
  2. “over 90,000 square feet”
  3. “a hundred thousand square feet”
  4. “150,000 square feet”

Check if you got it right here.

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#Checks #Imbalances #Ivanka #Trump #Lied

Checks & Imbalances: Trump’s Profit Numbers Don’t Add Up

Today we continue looking at the latest news from Donald Trump’s ongoing trial in New York.


Bad Accounting Or Fraud? Trump’s Profit Numbers Don’t Add Up

Donald Trump is on trial in New York for allegedly lying to financial institutions for years about how much money he has. The potential fraud may not end there, reports Dan Alexander. Piles of private documents are now becoming public as part of the lawsuit, including a Deutsche Bank credit report that raises the question of whether the Trump Organization might have deceived its lender about the profitability of its golf resort in Miami and its hotel in Washington, D.C.

Trump’s business filed financial information to multiple entities, including Deutsche Bank, local authorities and an accounting firm. Documents from tax authorities and Deutsche Bank that detail the performance of Trump National Doral in Miami show identical figures of $92 million in revenue and $14 million of net operating income in 2015. The next year, the numbers varied slightly, with Deutsche showing $86 million of revenue and the tax documents listing $88 million. The two sets of numbers listed net operating income at about $12 million.

Then, in 2017, something interesting happened. Both the tax and bank documents showed a steep drop in revenue, to $75 million. The tax documents say that net operating income plunged as a result, to $4 million, a dive that makes some sense, given that it’s hard to slash costs at a resort that prides itself on high-class service. But the Deutsche Bank credit report says the Trump Organization somehow increased its net operating income to $13 million. It’s not easy to untangle all this, in part because of the Trump Organization’s strange bookkeeping practices.

MORE FROM FORBESBad Accounting Or Fraud? Trump’s Profit Numbers Don’t Add Up

Tracking Trump

Trump Thought His D.C. Hotel Would Bring In Twice As Much Money As It Did

After Donald Trump secured a lease to Washington D.C.’s historic post office in 2013 and spent more than $200 million over the next few years turning it into the ultra-luxury Trump International Hotel, the Trump Organization expected big things: Annual revenues above $100 million, profits exceeding $30 million and average room rates over $700. Trump’s lender, Deutsche Bank, found those projections realistic enough that it included them in credit reports released last week in a fraud trial that the New York attorney general is waging against Trump and his associates.

But the hotel proved to be a massive disappointment, reports Dan Alexander.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump Thought His D.C. Hotel Would Bring In Twice As Much Money As It Did

What Role Did Trump Play In Alleged Fraud Scheme? Here’s What Trial Has Revealed So Far.

Former President Donald Trump’s onetime “fixer” Michael Cohen made explosive claims on the stand this week as he implicated his former boss in an alleged fraud scheme to change valuations on financial documents for personal gain, reports Alison Durkee. Several witnesses in the ongoing civil trial against Trump and his business empire have tied the ex-president to alleged fraud.

MORE FROM FORBESWhat Role Did Trump Play In Alleged Fraud Scheme? Here’s What Trial Has Revealed So Far.

Can Trump Legally Run For President After Jan. 6 Riot? Trial Moves Forward After Colorado Judge Refuses To Dismiss Case

Former President Donald Trump will go on trial next week over whether he can be disqualified from Colorado’s presidential ballot under the 14th Amendment, after his last motion to dismiss the case failed Wednesday, reports Alison Durkee. It will mark the first trial in what’s expected to be a protracted legal battle across the country over whether Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election bar him from the presidency.

MORE FROM FORBESCan Trump Legally Run For President After Jan. 6 Riot? Trial Moves Forward After Colorado Judge Refuses To Dismiss Case

From The News Desk

Clarence Thomas: Here Are All The Ethics Scandals Involving The Supreme Court Justice Amid Unpaid RV Loan Revelations

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas never repaid a “substantial portion” of a $267,230 loan he received from a wealthy friend to pay off a luxury RV, the Senate Finance Committee announced Wednesday, reports Alison Durkee. It’s the latest revelation in a series of recent controversies involving Thomas, leading to calls for him to recuse himself from cases or be removed from office and for the court to impose a binding code of ethics.

MORE FROM FORBESJustice Clarence Thomas Did Not Repay Much Of $267,230 Loan From Friend To Buy RV

Who Is Mike Johnson? What To Know About The Newly Elected GOP House Speaker.

Newly elected House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) reported earning $30,000 last year from teaching online classes at Liberty University, according to his financial disclosure form, reports Sara Dorn. He also listed debts between $280,000 and $600,000 from a mortgage, personal loan and home equity line of credit. Most members of Congress earn a $174,000 salary. The speaker is paid $223,500, according to the Congressional Research Service.

MORE FROM FORBESWho Is Mike Johnson? What To Know About The Newly Elected GOP House Speaker-And Trump Ally.

By The Numbers

2

The number of investigations the nonpartisan Office of Congressional Ethics has referred for review to the House Committee on Ethics in 2023, according to a report the office released last week.

$0.00

The amount of cash on hand the campaign for former Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) reported having in its termination report, which was filed on Saturday. Hunter resigned from Congress in 2020 after pleading guilty on to illegally using campaign funds for personal expenses.

$83,916.91

How much former Sen. Richard Shelby’s (R-Ala.)’s campaign spent on legal fees on Sept. 29.


Road To 2024

On “Forbes Eye on Iowa,” one-time 2024 Republican presidential candidate Perry Johnson talked about the presidential race, endorsed former President Trump and promoted his policy agenda.

Quiz

A Deutsche Bank credit report said the net operating income at the Trump hotel in Washington, D.C. measured $7.6 million in 2017. How much profit did statements covering the years ending August 31 of 2017 and 2018 appear to show?

a. $7.6 million

b. Close to $0

c. $6 million

d. $9 million

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#Checks #Imbalances #Trumps #Profit #Numbers #Dont #Add

Checks & Imbalances: New York AG ‘Identified Likely Omissions’ In Trump Organization’s Response To Subpoenas

Today we look at the latest news from Donald Trump’s ongoing trial in New York.


This Is The Evidence Forbes Has That Trump’s Former CFO Lied Under Oath

Donald Trump’s former chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, testified last week in a fraud case that the New York attorney general is waging against the former president and his associates, including Weisselberg, reports Dan Alexander. During that testimony, Weisselberg lied about Trump’s penthouse apartment at Trump Tower, saying “That was never a concern of mine. I never even thought about the apartment.”

Forbes published a story last week laying out the truth. “A review of old emails and notes, some of which the attorney general’s office does not possess, show that Weisselberg absolutely thought about Trump’s apartment—and played a key role in trying to convince Forbes over the course of several years that it was worth more than it really was,” the story said.

Weisselberg’s testimony abruptly stopped after the article came out. Citing the story, the attorney general’s office explained to a judge in a letter dated October 18th that it identified “likely omissions from production around inquiries from Forbes in 2016.” The attorney general’s office went on to suggest that a monitor should conduct a forensic examination of Trump Organization data to make sure that the real estate firm produced all required documents.

Forbes does not know whether the Trump Organization produced all of its documents. The evidence that Forbes has that Weisselberg lied, which the attorney general’s office certainly does not have, is a collection of notes taken by Forbes reporters who were in touch with the Trump Organization over the years while estimating the size of Trump’s fortune. It is those notes that show Weisselberg thought about his boss’ penthouse a lot—contrary to his testimony—and that he consistently pushed Forbes to overvalue it.

MORE FROM FORBESThis Is The Evidence Forbes Has That Trump’s Former CFO Lied Under Oath

Tracking Trump

How Trump Fooled Deutsche Bank

The New York attorney general is suing Donald Trump and his associates for allegedly lying about his net worth to financial institutions, something he also did for years when speaking with reporters. Why would someone so rich care so much about what people thought he was worth? “It was good for financing,” Trump said in a 2015 interview with Forbes.

But despite Trump’s bluster, it long remained unclear whether his lies actually were good for financing. After all, banks conduct due diligence on borrowers. But documents submitted into evidence during the trial last week show that Trump’s longtime go-to lender, Deutsche Bank, fell for many of his lies, giving the bank a distorted view of its most famous client, reports Dan Alexander.

MORE FROM FORBESHow Trump Fooled Deutsche Bank

Trump Told CFO He Wanted Net Worth To ‘Go Up’ On Financial Statements, Exec Testifies At Trial

Former President Donald Trump told his ex-CFO Allen Weisselberg he wanted his net worth to “go up” on financial statements, a Trump Organization executive testified in court Monday, reports Alison Durkee. New York Attorney General Letitia James is arguing that the ex-president and his company committed fraud by intentionally inflating the value of their assets.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump Told CFO He Wanted Net Worth To ‘Go Up’ On Financial Statements, Exec Testifies At Trial

Trump’s SPAC Now Says Its 2021 Financial Statements ‘Should No Longer Be Relied Upon’

The company planning to merge with Trump Media & Technology Group, owner of the Truth Social platform, has now walked away from two years of financial statements after informing the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday that its audited financials for 2021 “should no longer be relied upon.”

In May, Digital World Acquisition Corp issued a similar notice to the SEC regarding its financial statements for the year ending Dec. 31, 2022.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump’s SPAC Now Says Its 2021 Financial Statements ‘Should No Longer Be Relied Upon’

By The Numbers

$526.08

The amount the campaign of Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) spent at the Amarillo Club in July and August, according to filings made last week. In December 2021, the Office of Congressional Ethics found “substantial reason to believe” that Jackson violated the law by previously spending campaign funds at the club. The investigation moved on to the House Ethics Committee. In May 2022, that panel disclosed that it’s still investigating the matter. It has not provided another update.

Hundreds

The number of NDAs that were scrapped after a federal judge formalized a settlement agreement last week between Trump’s 2016 campaign and staffers.

1

The number of accounts the Biden campaign is following on Truth Social—just Donald Trump’s.


House Democratic Lawmaker Floats George W. Bush For Next Speaker Of The House

On “Forbes Newsroom,” Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) floated the idea of electing former President George W. Bush the next Speaker of the House.


From The News Desk

Here’s How Much Chris Christie Is Worth

Plenty of politicians make big money after leaving office: Just ask Nikki Haley, Mike Pence or Joe Biden, who all tapped into tried-and-true moneymaking methods for political figures—writing books, giving speeches, doing consulting or sitting on boards. But of all the people running for president today, nobody has played the game better than Chris Christie, reports Kyle Mullins.

The former New Jersey governor and his wife, Mary Pat, reported $1 million to $2 million in assets when Christie left office in 2018, plus a $1.3 million house in Morris County, New Jersey. Today, the couple is worth $15 million, according to Forbes’ estimates, meaning their net worth has roughly quadrupled. The Christies now have two homes in the Garden State, worth roughly $6 million total, plus a sizable portfolio of investments, a large pension from Christie’s law firm and two smaller ones from his time in government.

How’d they build such a big fortune in such a short period of time? By doing what Haley, Pence and Biden did, but on a bigger scale. Christie, a lifelong public servant who was among the poorest 2015 presidential hopefuls, is now one of the richest people vying for the Oval Office in 2024.

MORE FROM FORBESHere’s How Much Chris Christie Is Worth

Here’s How Much House Majority Leader Steve Scalise Is Worth

House majority leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) came up short in his battle to secure the 217 votes needed to replace ousted House speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.). But with the GOP still unable to coalesce behind a colleague, who knows what’s next? The New Orleans native has never run from a fight, rapidly returning to Congress after he was shot by a left-wing extremist in 2017—and again in September, after announcing he was diagnosed with cancer in August.

If Scalise does come back to claim the speakership, he will earn his second pay raise in less than a year, a $30,100 bump from his current $193,400 Congressional salary, reports Matt Durot. That would be substantial for the 58-year-old Scalise, whose nearly 30-year government career has yielded him a net worth of about $350,000, according to Forbes’ estimates.

MORE FROM FORBESHere’s How Much GOP House Speaker Nominee Steve Scalise Is Worth

Quiz

Digital World Acquisition Corp. announced plans to merge with Trump Media & Technology Group in October 2021. In the two years since the intended deal was made public, what has not happened?

a. The SEC charged a former Digital World board member and two others with insider trading of the stock.

b. Digital World settled fraud charges with the commission for “making material misrepresentations” in its pre-IPO filings.

c. Investors backed out of $467 million in commitments.

d. The merger was finalized.

Check if you got it right here.

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#Checks #Imbalances #York #Identified #Omissions #Trump #Organizations #Response #Subpoenas

Checks & Imbalances: Vivek Ramaswamy’s Driving Obsession

Today we take a close look at Vivek Ramaswamy’s business career – and what it tells us about his political ambitions.


This Surprising Obsession Drives Vivek Ramaswamy And His Presidential Campaign

On what feels like the hottest morning amid the hottest August in recorded history, Vivek Ramaswamy sits coolly on a plush leather couch in his campaign bus, chomping on an apple and brimming with self-belief, reports John Hyatt. Thirty-six hours earlier, the 38-year-old political neophyte was the breakout star in the first Republican presidential debate of the 2024 primary season. “My gut instinct is that I’m going to be the nominee, that I’m going to win the general election in a landslide,” he says, before positing why that could be: “I think I am closer to Trump in 2015 than Trump today is to Trump in 2015. You only get to be the outsider once.”

That’s among the more truthful things he’s in the habit of saying. Eight years ago, Donald Trump turned every American political assumption upside down. He ran for president as a businessman without any political experience, any realistic platform or any repercussions from scandals that would have blown out pretty much every politician, ever. Instead, he was grievance personified, which, combined with uncanny messaging instincts, enabled him to pull an inside straight and punch his ticket to the White House.

MORE FROM FORBESThis Surprising Obsession Drives Vivek Ramaswamy And His Presidential Campaign

Tracking Trump

How Trump, Master Of Avoiding Paper Trails, Finally Got Caught With One

Donald Trump has all kinds of tricks to avoid paper trails. He refuses to use email. He ditches cell phones. He’s famous for tearing documents to shreds, reports Dan Alexander. And when asked about something nefarious, like the inflated net worth statements he sent to lenders over the years, he feigns ignorance, even to authorities: “I didn’t get involved in it very much.”

But it’s hard to both convince lenders that you stand by documents and to persuade prosecutors that you had little to do with those same documents. That explains how Trump landed in his current predicament, accused by New York State of engaging in a years-long fraud by telling banks and insurers he had more money than he actually did. Judge Arthur Engoron sided with prosecutors Tuesday, ruling before the trial had even started that Trump was personally liable for fraud.

MORE FROM FORBESHow Trump, Master Of Avoiding Paper Trails, Finally Got Caught With One

Did Judge Kill The Trump Organization? What Fraud Ruling Means For Ex-President’s Business

A New York judge ordered the dissolution of businesses owned by former President Donald Trump and his associates in a ruling Tuesday that found the ex-president and his company committed fraud—a decision that could have a devastating impact on Trump’s company and its operations in New York, though the full scope of the order still remains to be seen, reports Alison Durkee.

MORE FROM FORBESDid Judge Kill The Trump Organization? What Fraud Ruling Means For Ex-President’s Business

By The Numbers

$17.5 billion

The estimated value of Rupert Murdoch and family’s fortune.

$5,000

The amount of campaign donations Sen. John Fetterman (D-Penn.) plans to return to Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), “in envelopes stuffed with $100 bills,” after the latter was indicted.

At least eight

The number of investigations, criminal cases and lawsuits involving Rudy Guiliani.


From The News Desk

How TikTok Has Exposed Celebrities And Politicians’ Closest Personal Contacts

Beyonce. Ed Sheeran. Charli D’Amelio. The Bidens. Members of Congress. Abortion activists.

They’re just a handful of the high-profile celebrities and public figures whose closest contacts could be searched and scrutinized by nearly any TikTok or ByteDance employee around the world this year with few restrictions, according to people familiar with one of the company’s social graph tools and a trove of internal images, videos, audio and communications related to it that were obtained by Forbes, reports Alexandra S. Levine.

MORE FROM FORBESHow TikTok Has Exposed Celebrities And Politicians’ Closest Personal Contacts

Sen. Robert Menendez Pleads Not Guilty To Bribery Charges

Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) pleaded not guilty to three felony counts Wednesday after being indicted for allegedly taking bribes from several New Jersey businessmen, marking Menendez’s second set of criminal charges—as the senator maintains his innocence in the case and refuses to leave Congress, reports Alison Durkee.

MORE FROM FORBESSen. Robert Menendez Pleads Not Guilty To Bribery Charges

Here’s How Much 2024 Presidential Candidate Larry Elder Is Worth

Larry Elder pitches his presidential campaign as an act of personal sacrifice, reports Monica Hunter-Hart. “I’m not flush like some of the other candidates, so this is a big financial hit for me,” says the California media icon, who Forbes estimates is worth $4 million. “I gave up my nationally syndicated column. I gave up my radio show. I gave up my TV show.”

MORE FROM FORBESHere’s How Much 2024 Presidential Candidate Larry Elder Is Worth

Bernie Sanders Has Hauled In $2.5 Million In Book Payments Since 2011

Sen. Bernie Sanders earned $2.5 million from book advances and royalties from 2011 through 2022, according to his annual financial disclosures. During that period, political committees for the Vermont independent bought $843,000 worth of books from his publishers.

MORE FROM FORBESBernie Sanders Has Hauled In $2.5 Million In Book Payments Since 2011

Quiz

Vivek Ramaswamy named his biotech company Roivant Sciences. What does “Roi” stand for?

a. Radiating overconfidence internally

b. Return on investment

c. Riding on Iowa

d. Rupture of integrity

Check if you got it right here.

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#Checks #Imbalances #Vivek #Ramaswamys #Driving #Obsession

Checks & Imbalances: Mar-A-Lago Sought 380 Foreign Workers, Jim Jordan’s Got $100,000

Today we look at Mar-a-Lago’s staffing whilst Donald Trump had access to America’s secrets.


Mar-A-Lago Sought 380 Foreign Workers During Time Trump Had Access To Classified Documents

Mar-a-Lago looked to employ 380 short-term foreign workers from 2017 to 2022, when Trump had access to classified documents, initially as president and ultimately as a former official living at the club.

Trump pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to 37 charges stemming from his retention of government documents, including 102 the FBI allegedly found when they raided Mar-a-Lago in August 2022. According to the indictment, Trump stored classified documents in the ballroom, a bathroom, his bedroom, a storage room and his office. It’s unclear who exactly could get inside those areas, but it would stand to reason that some Mar-a-Lago staff could access them.

Mar-a-Lago relies on foreign nationals to work as servers, cooks and housekeepers. In 2016, the club sought 65 foreign workers. The figure has increased every year since, with the exception of 2020, when the club shut down in the early days of the pandemic and furloughed more than 150 employees. Last winter, Mar-a-Lago sought out 91 foreign workers, according to records filed with the Department of Labor.

The requirements listed on the job orders do not seem particularly strict. For example, the qualifications to be a housekeeper during the 2021 to 2022 season included three months of verifiable housekeeping experience and a drug and background check. The position also required the ability to communicate in English, maintain flexible hours and move 25 pounds. It paid $11.70 an hour.

U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services’ guidelines allow U.S. employers to hire short-term, non-permanent foreign workers if “there are not enough U.S. workers who are able, willing, qualified and available to do the temporary work.” Foreign nationals from 87 countries are eligible to apply for these jobs via the federal government’s H-2B visa program. Businesses must petition the Department of Labor for permission to hire these workers, listing the number of vacancies they are looking to fill.

If Mar-a-Lago’s reliance on foreign workers seems at odds with Trump’s immigration policy, it’s not. While his White House tried to prevent employers from relying on foreign workers, it targeted permanent employees—not the temporary ones Mar-a-Lago and other Trump properties hire.

Representatives of the Trump Organization did not respond to requests for comment.


Tip Me

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Any tips or suggestions? Email me at [email protected], call/SMS/Signal 202.804.2744, use Forbes’ SecureDrop or send us a letter. Follow me on Mastodon at @[email protected]. Thanks!


Loose Change

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) earned more than $100,000 in 2022 for his memoir, “Do What You Said You Would Do,” according to a disclosure he filed Wednesday with the House clerk’s office. The payment was first reported by Cleveland.com.

The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) offers signed copies of Jordan’s book in exchange for a donation of $35 or more. The NRCC reported paying $30,000 in 2022 to Jordan’s publisher, Post Hill Press, a conservative outlet.

“Jordan for Congress did not buy copies of ‘Do What You Said You Would Do,’ but certainly understands why other entities might want to use it as a fundraising tool,” said Kevin Eichinger, a spokesperson for the campaign.

Representatives of the NRCC did not respond to inquiries.

*****

The Michigan Republican Party failed to report $2 million in expenditures and $160,000 in receipts in its original March 2023 report, according to a letter the Federal Election Committee (FEC) sent the state party earlier in June. The Michigan GOP has until July 6 to explain its original oversight. A spokesperson for the committee did not respond to a request for comment.

In response to previous inquiries from the FEC about discrepancies between other original and amended filings, the committee said “any change in activity is a result of an audit conducted by the previous compliance staff” and that the committee is using a new compliance firm.


Did TikTok’s CEO Commit Perjury?

Alexandra Levine, a senior writer at Forbes, joins “Forbes Newsroom” to give updates on the rift between the U.S. government and TikTok.


Continuing Irresolutions

Updates on Checks & Imbalances’ previous reporting

Former Vice President Mike Pence announced Thursday that his second book will be published in November.

Pence’s political action committee bought $91,000 worth of his literary debut last year. It peaked at No. 2 on the New York Times’ best-seller list and remained ranked for six weeks.

*****

Kari Lake’s debut single, “81 Million Votes, My Ass,” held the top spot on the iTunes Music chart for two days this week. That list measures paid downloads, as opposed to streams, the more popular method to listen to music.


Tracking Trump

Forbes continues to update “Tracking Trump: All The Criminal Cases, Lawsuits And Investigations Involving The Former President.”

*****

“Hours after becoming the first former U.S. president to be charged with a federal crime Tuesday, Donald Trump laid out his defense against the 37-count indictment accusing him of mishandling sensitive government information and obstructing the investigation into his conduct—but his speech included legally fraught arguments and misleading comparisons of his political adversaries’ own legal woes,” reports Sara Dorn.

*****

Trump’s campaign said it raised $6.6 million after news broke of his federal indictment. At least one fundraiser that contributed to that total was held at his Bedminster, N.J. golf course this week, meaning he may have raised some funds for his private business.


Across Forbes


Quiz

Which of the following is not a false or misleading remark Donald Trump made after his latest indictment?

A. President Joe Biden had him arrested on “fake and fabricated charges”

B. The Bill Clinton “sock drawer” case exonerates Trump

C. The only person with the power to arrest him in the case is the Palm Beach County sheriff

D. The Espionage Act doesn’t apply

Check if you got it right here.



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Checks & Imbalances: Feds Investigate ByteDance, AOC Is Hiring

Today we look at an investigation into ByteDance, a job opening with the Ocasio-Cortez campaign and tech leaders’ efforts to get a bailout for Silicon Valley Bank.


The FBI And DOJ Are Investigating ByteDance’s Use Of TikTok To Spy On Journalists

“The FBI and the Department of Justice are investigating the events that led TikTok’s Chinese parent company, ByteDance, to use the app to surveil American journalists, including this reporter, according to sources familiar with the departments’ actions,” reports Emily Baker-White:

According to a source in position to know, the DOJ Criminal Division, Fraud Section, working alongside the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, has subpoenaed information from ByteDance regarding efforts by its employees to access U.S. journalists’ location information or other private user data using the TikTok app. According to two sources, the FBI has been conducting interviews related to the surveillance. ByteDance’s use of the app to surveil U.S. citizens was first reported by Forbes in October, and confirmed by an internal company investigation in December.

“We have strongly condemned the actions of the individuals found to have been involved, and they are no longer employed at ByteDance. Our internal investigation is still ongoing, and we will cooperate with any official investigations when brought to us,” said ByteDance spokesperson Jennifer Banks. TikTok did not respond to a request for comment.


Tip Me

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Sens. Blackburn and Blumenthal Join Forbes To Discuss Bill To Keep Kids Safe Online

Sens. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) join Brittany Lewis in “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss their bipartisan legislation, the Kids Online Safety Act.


50 Tech Leaders Circulated A Private Memo In Washington Calling For Action On SVB

“As SVB careened towards catastrophe, some 50 founders, VCs, economists and comms experts gathered in a WhatsApp group to draft a memo calling for urgent preservation of its deposits for the sake of the broader economy. Then they sent it to Washington,” reports Alex Konrad.

Just after 5:30 pm Pacific on Saturday, a memo started making the rounds among policymaker staff. Called “United States Cascade Bank Failure Scenario,” the private document laid out the case for why the U.S. government needed to take “decisive action” to avoid a continued bank run in the wake of the abrupt closure of Silicon Valley Bank.

“Today, most Americans assume the SVB failure is contained to the tech economy, but this is not true,” the document said, before laying out a primer on how SVB collapsed and the dire consequences for inaction — insolvency for regional banks, massive job cuts and the loss of banking services for wide swaths of the country, far from Silicon Valley. “The risks to the U.S. economy could be sudden, severe, and extensive,” it warned.

Whereas some prominent voices in tech took to Twitter for all-caps concern tweets, the memo was unsigned, but it was authored by a coterie of almost 50 leaders within and beyond the tech ecosystem. From Thursday through the weekend, they crowd-sourced information and coordinated ad hoc outreach to staffers in the California governor’s office, the White House, and to lawmakers like Ro Khanna, Katie Porter, Elizabeth Warren and JD Vance.


‘We Are Up Against A Fiscal Cliff’: Rep. Josh Brecheen Talks Budget And Economic Plans With Forbes

Rep. Josh Brecheen (R-Okla.) joins “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss his first term in Congress, the budget and debt ceiling negotiations and his top policy areas.


AOC Searching For New Campaign Manager After Previous One Blamed For Met Gala Fiasco

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is looking for a new campaign manager after her previous one was blamed for dropping the ball on payments related to her Met Gala appearance. That lapse led the House ethics office to find “substantial reason to believe” the congresswoman violated ethics laws by “accept[ing] impermissible gifts.”

In September 2021, the New York Democrat attended the Met Gala, famously wearing a white dress with “Tax the Rich” scrawled across the backside. That appearance led the nonpartisan Office of Congressional Ethics to launch an investigation. Its inquiry discovered that Ocasio-Cortez did not pay for her dress, hair styling, makeup and other services until after the investigation was launched, five months after the gala.

Ocasio-Cortez told investigators she planned to personally pay for those services and had authorized her campaign manager to coordinate payments with the vendors, according to a transcript of her interview. “I continued to follow up on this thing because it was stressing me out, and I genuinely do not know what had happened,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “I had continued to get this kind of holding pattern response [from her campaign manager].”

“I just never, ever, ever would have allowed that to happen knowing what I have learned, but that I wasn’t privy to the invoices,” the congresswoman said.

The campaign manager, who was still employed by Ocasio-Cortez at the time of her interview in May 2022, provided investigators with a similar account. The campaign manager said she didn’t pay for the dress as she didn’t think the invoice was final. She didn’t pay for the hairstylist until after it threatened to file a complaint with New York City’s Office of Labor Policy and Standards for Workers because the bill “fell off my radar,” and she didn’t have access to the congresswoman’s personal credit card. Overall, the campaign manager said, “other things kind of took precedence.”

The campaign manager’s name is not included in the transcripts, but other exhibits included in the investigation’s report identify her as Rebecca Rodriguez.

“The staffer is no longer with the campaign,” said Communications Director Lauren Hitt in a statement, declining to explain if the ethics investigation led to the split. Forbes was unable to reach Rodriguez for comment.

Ocasio-Cortez began looking for a new campaign manager on or before Feb. 7, according to the first date Google indexed the posting. Responsibilities for the position, which pays $120,000 to $165,000 a year, include “partnering with the candidate to design and oversee the campaign strategy, set and execute priorities, and manage a skilled team of staff, advisors, consultants, and volunteers in a community-focused, unconventional year-round campaign operation.”

Overseeing compliance is another responsibility. The ad does not mention that duty may include ensuring Ocasio-Cortez’s hairstylist receives prompt payments.


Tracking Trump

A musical collaboration between Donald Trump and a choir of individuals incarcerated for their alleged involvement in the Jan. 6 riot sold 22,500 digital downloads in the 11 days after its release, according to a music analytics firm.

“Justice for All” by Trump and the J6 Prison Choir debuted on March 3. The track interpolates the former president reciting the Pledge of Allegiance into “The Star-Spangled Banner,” sung by inmates housed at the Washington, D.C. jail. Trump is personally involved in the project.

By the following Friday, the track reached the top spot on the iTunes Store, which measures how many times a song was purchased. Through that day, the song had sold 4,800 digital downloads across iTunes and other retailers, according to the tracking service Luminate (formerly known as Nielsen). The track has remained on the top spot with digital downloads totaling 22,500 through Monday. “That strikes me as a substantial amount of downloads,” said an executive in the music-technology business not associated with the release, who asked not to be named given the contentious nature of the song.

The music executive noted that consumers have moved away from downloading songs, opting instead to stream them. “Justice for All” was streamed on-demand 600,000 times across audio and video between March 3 and March 13, according to Luminate. “That’s not a ton,” said the music executive. “You often see a song that really takes off get millions and millions of streams in the first few days. That’s less impressive than the downloads.” That play count was not enough for “Justice for All” to land on Apple Music or Spotify’s streaming charts.

The song also has not reached Billboard’s charts. But Erica Knight, a spokesperson for Kash Patel, a former Trump administration staffer who is involved with the recording, said she expects to see the song on multiple charts when they are released next week.

Sales of a $100 vinyl version are “significant,” Knight claimed, declining to provide actual sales figure.

“Justice for All” costs $1.29 on the iTunes Store. Profits are slated to benefit the families of people imprisoned for their alleged roles in the Capitol riot.

Watch: Your correspondent joined Brittany Lewis on “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss Trump and the prisoner’s track.

*****

Gilson Machado Guimarães Neto, Brazil’s former Minister of Tourism under Jair Bolsonaro, met with Trump at Mar-a-Lago.

*****

Rep. Mark Alford (R-Mo.) “had the opportunity of a lifetime” on Tuesday when an unnamed group ostensibly rented out Mar-a-Lago to raise money for Republicans running for Congress.


Across Forbes


In Closing

Private eyes

They’re watching you

They see your every move

— Daryl Hall & John Oates, “Private Eyes”



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Checks & Imbalances: TikTok’s CEO Hits Capitol Hill

Today we reveal TikTok making the rounds on Capitol Hill and offer a look inside your correspondent’s notebook.


TikTok CEO Is Quietly Meeting With Lawmakers Ahead Of First-Ever Testimony

“TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew is meeting with lawmakers on Capitol Hill ahead of his first-ever testimony before Congress, including several representatives who will be grilling him under oath on March 23,” reports Alexandra S. Levine.

Chew has sought closed-door meetings with at least half a dozen members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee ahead of its hearing on TikTok’s child safety issues, handling of user data and apparent ties to China, according to two senior Democratic staffers. He has met with several, including Reps. Lori Trahan of Massachusetts, Jan Schakowsky of Illinois and Scott Peters of California.

“He’s operating from a place where no one has trust in them, and he fully recognizes that,” Trahan said in an interview with Forbes after her Wednesday meeting with Chew in Washington.

“TikTok is in a really unique position right now to take some positive steps on issues that a lot of top American companies have fallen behind, and frankly even regressed, on—and I made clear to Mr. Chew that I hope to see him move to fulfill that potential,” she added.


Tip Me

This is the web edition of the free Checks & Imbalances newsletter, sent to inboxes on Fridays. You can subscribe here. Please support this work, if you can, by subscribing to Forbes.

Any tips or suggestions? Email me at [email protected], call/SMS/Signal 202.804.2744, use Forbes’ SecureDrop or send us a letter. Follow me on Mastodon at @[email protected]. Thanks!


Wes Moore On Being Maryland’s First Black Governor, The Economy & Who He Supports In 2024

Gov. Wes Moore of Maryland (D) sat down with reporter Cat Oriel on “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss his road to becoming Maryland’s first Black governor, the state’s economic growth, his policies around policing and his political future.


Continuing Irresolutions

Updates on Checks & Imbalances’ previous reporting

The campaign of Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) is offering signed copies of his latest book in exchange for donations of $30 or more. It’s a fundraising/book selling tactic that’s common among politicians, but Cotton has added a seemingly new touch of transparency. The ad includes a disclaimer that reads, “Copies of ‘Only The Strong’ are non-royalty copies that do not personally benefit Sen. Tom Cotton, per guidance from counsel and the Senate Ethics Committee.”

*****

In an earnings call on Wednesday, Salem Media Group CEO David Santrella said “Justice Corrupted” by Ted Cruz was the publishing division’s top book of the last three months of 2022. Cruz’s title debuted at No. 9 on the New York Times best-seller list, but the ranking indicated that some book sellers had reported receiving bulk orders. Cruz has a history of using campaign funds to boost his book sales.

*****

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s memoir remains on the New York Times best-seller list, coming in at No. 13 this week. Pompeo’s PAC spent $42,000 on books the day his hit shelves.

*****

In September 2021, Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.) did not comply with a federal law when he failed to properly disclose more than $6 million of stock trades dating back to January 2017. Now, out of politics after retiring from Congress and running unsuccessfully for governor, Suozzi “has taken a part-time job at Actum LLC, a lobbying, consulting and public relations firm,” Newsday reported last week. (George Santos now holds Suozzi’s seat.)

*****

Serial entrepreneur Richard Kofoed and his wife Stacy donated just $2,000 to candidates for federal office in 2021 and 2022, according to records with the Federal Election Commission. During the 2020 campaign, the couple contributed more than $800,000 to Republicans, money a former business associate claimed Kofoed had embezzled. That lawsuit is still dragging on. A trial was supposed to begin in May, but it was postponed after the business associate amended his complaint in February to add Stacy Kofoed as a defendant.

*****

John Eastman has raised $313,000 for his legal defense on the Christian crowdfunding site GiveSendGo. The California bar is seeking to strip Eastman of his law license over 11 charges stemming from his efforts to overturn the results of the 2022 presidential election.

*****

Disarm the Deep State, a PAC launched by QAnon figure Jim Watkins, missed another FEC filing deadline, as it submitted its February report 10 days after the due date. That marked the third time in recent months that the PAC filed a report after its deadline. Disarm the Deep State disclosed no contributions or disbursements during the reporting period.


‘The Sky’s The Limit’: Ben Cline Discusses Bipartisan Legislation To Help Veterans

Rep. Ben Cline (R-Va.) joined “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss the Veterans Entrepreneurship Act of 2023, bipartisan legislation that aims to help veterans achieve their small business or entrepreneurial goals.


Loose Change

The Congressional Black Caucus PAC’s legal expenses shot up beginning in July 2022, according to filings with the FEC. Since that month, the PAC has spent at least $274,000 on legal services. That’s more than double what it reported spending on legal fees in the previous 13 years.

******

The FEC fined the campaign of Senate Minority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) $30,000 for failing to properly report $292,000 worth of contributions in the 2022 election, according to a disclosure released in February. The campaign paid the penalty with donor funds in November.

*****

In January, the FEC rejected three complaints against Bloomberg News that alleged its coverage of Michael Bloomberg were prohibited in-kind contributions to his 2020 presidential campaign. The decisions became public this week.

*****

The campaign for Kim Klacik, a Maryland Republican who lost two races for Congress in 2020, agreed to pay a $19,000 fine after the FEC found her committee violated an assortment of campaign-finance laws. Most notably, it knowingly accepted $94,000 in excessive contributions, which it has since refunded.

*****

Ammon Bundy’s gubernatorial campaign in Idaho spent $79,000 advertising on Facebook, making the social-media company the largest recipient of political funds from the right-wing militant, according to state filings.

*****

Freedomworks for America, a conservative super PAC, reported making independent expenditures in the 2022 general election to support two people who did not actually compete in it. The PAC owes the FEC an explanation by Monday.

*****

The PAC for Deloitte, an accounting firm, failed to report $64,000 in contributions, according to a letter the FEC sent the group last week.

*****

On Feb. 28, the House Committee on Ethics held what is likely its only open meeting in this term. The public portion lasted about 2 minutes and 15 seconds. In that time, the panel emerged from executive session, where it deliberates behind closed doors. It then unanimously passed its rules package, which was the same as in the previous Congress, and proceeded to unanimously vote to go back into executive session.

*****

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem’s (R) PAC accidentally terminated itself.


Tracking Trump

“Former President Donald Trump denied having an affair with adult film star Stormy Daniels and attacked her appearance in a lengthy statement issued through his campaign, hours after reports emerged that he is likely to be criminally charged in connection to a hush money payment made to her during his 2016 presidential campaign,” reports Sara Dorn.

*****

In 2021, the state of New Jersey fined one of Trump’s golf courses $400,000 after it was accused of violating alcoholic-beverage control laws in connection with a fatal car crash, the Asbury Park Press reported at the time.

Trump National Golf Club Colts Neck is up to date with its payments, a spokesperson for New Jersey’s attorney general told Forbes this week. “Per the terms of the consent order, the $400,000 penalty is scheduled to be paid in annual installments of $100,000,” said Lisa Coryell in a statement. “The first two payments were due on October 15 of 2021 and 2022. Trump National Golf Club Colts Neck has complied with the terms of the settlement and made all payments thus far.”

*****

Last Friday, a song by Donald Trump and a group of individuals incarcerated for their alleged involvement in the Jan. 6 riot went live on streaming services. A copy posted to YouTube has been played 320,000 times already.

The music video was released this Friday. It features footage of Trump, flags and the riot at the Capitol, including Ashli Babbit being shot.

Also, this week, “Justice for All” came out on vinyl, according to a new website for the track. The record (“45 on a 45!”), which is on sale for only one week, costs $100 and includes an unspecified bonus recording from Trump on side B. Plans to sell T-shirts around the song also are in the works.

*****

Trump is considering defeated Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake as a potential running mate in 2024, Axios reported on Tuesday. Lake’s campaign spent $111,000 at Trump properties, and she continues to be a featured guest at events at Mar-a-Lago.

*****

“Attorney Jenna Ellis was publicly censured Wednesday for violating lawyers’ code of conduct by making false ‘misrepresentations’ about the 2020 election when she helped former President Donald Trump try to overturn the vote count,” reports Alison Durkee. Ellis is one of at least eight former Trump attorneys facing consequences for their work on his behalf.

*****

Former Nigerian Vice President Atiku Abubakar finished second in that country’s presidential election, with 29% of the vote. In 2019, when he also ran unsuccessfully for the job, Abubakar made a high-profile visit to Trump’s D.C. hotel just a month before election day. Abubakar, who reportedly had been banned from the United States as a result of his role in a Congressional ethics scandal a decade earlier, acknowledged that he stayed at the hotel to demonstrate that he could get close to the U.S. president.

****

Roger Stone, who received a pardon from Trump after witness tampering and lying to Congress, spent some time recently with the former president at Mar-a-Lago.

*****

Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) was one of the latest visitors to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago office.

*****

Big Dog Ranch Rescue returned to Mar-a-Lago last weekend for its annual Wine, Women and Shoes fundraiser. Trump spoke to attendees. In 2021, the event raised $670,000 with expenses of $580,000, according to the nonprofit’s tax filing, which did not break down how much Mar-a-Lago received.


Across Forbes


In Closing

“Pulling your strings, justice is done

Seeking no truth, winning is all

Find it so grim, so true, so real”

—Metallica, “…And Justice For All”



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Checks & Imbalances: Trump’s Tower Of Lies, Pompeo’s Book Sales

Today we look at two Republicans who have announced they are running for president, as well as a third who is expected to do the same.

This is the web edition of the free Checks & Imbalances newsletter, sent to inboxes on Fridays. You can subscribe here. Please support this work, if you can, by subscribing to Forbes.


Donald Trump Has Been Lying About Trump Tower For Decades

“As the former president tries to fend off authorities, new revelations about Trump Tower suggest that the building is—and always was—something of a fraud,” reports Dan Alexander.

Our latest look at Trump Tower uncovered three new revelations:

– Property records show that Trump has been lying about the financial performance of the building since it first opened in 1983.

– Tax and lending documents indicate that Trump lied about the square footage of the office and retail space at the base of the property (not to be confused with his lying about size of the penthouse atop the building, which Forbes previously exposed).

– Portions of a 2015 audio recording, released here for the first time, prove that Trump was personally involved in the efforts to lie about the value of Trump Tower’s commercial space.

Watch: Senior editor Dan Alexander joins Brittany Lewis to discuss this story.


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Mike Pompeo’s PAC Spent $42,000 On Books The Day His Memoir Was Published. It Became A Bestseller.

Mike Pompeo’s political action committee shelled out $42,000 on books the day his memoir hit bookshelves, according to a filing submitted to the Federal Election Commission on Monday.

“Never Give An Inch: Fighting for the America I Love” came out on Jan. 24. That same day, Champion American Values, a PAC that Pompeo chairs, paid Bulkbooks.com $42,000 for “mementos—books,” according to the filing.

Pompeo’s memoir debuted at No. 3 on the New York Times best-seller list for hardcover nonfiction. Three weeks later, it remains in the rankings at No. 10. The Times notes that retailers reported bulk orders of “Never Give An Inch.”

Pompeo is not a candidate for federal office, so he is allowed to personally profit when his PAC buys his book with donors’ funds, according to Brett Kappel, an attorney specializing in campaign finance at Harmon, Curran, Spielberg & Eisenberg.

Spokespeople for Champion American Values did not immediately respond to inquiries.

In addition to paying back an advance or earning royalties, politicians can benefit in other ways when their political committees buy their books. Publishers might be more likely to strike deals with politicians in the first place, knowing they have donor funds they can tap into for a bulk purchase. And purchases from retailers, even in bulk, can help a book reach the best-seller list, a marketing coup.

Pompeo’s PAC used the Times’ ranking to emphasize his book’s appeal. “Even the New York Times admits that my new book is a must-read!,” Pompeo says in a $400 Facebook ad campaign that started on Feb. 14. The Times did not review Pompeo’s book, suggesting that Pompeo was referring to its position on the best-seller list.

Other politicians have used their PAC funds to buy their own memoirs. In November, former Vice President Mike Pence’s Great America Committee spent $91,000 on his book at a New York City retailer. Unlike Pompeo though, when Pence’s memoir hit the best-seller list, the Times did not indicate any bulk orders.


Bankman-Fried Hit With Four New Criminal Charges Alleging Illegal Political Donations And Bank Fraud

“Former billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder of befallen crypto exchange FTX, has been charged with four new criminal counts including allegations of illegal political donations and bank fraud, an indictment unsealed in Manhattan federal court revealed on Thursday—tacking on to the eight charges already facing the former wunderkind as he gears up for trial later this year,” reports Jonathan Ponciano.

In a superseding indictment unveiled Thursday, prosecutors allege Bankman-Fried used billions of dollars in customer funds to fund speculative venture investments and try to purchase influence over cryptocurrency regulation in Washington, D.C. by steering tens of millions of dollars of illegal campaign contributions to both Democrats and Republicans.

The new counts include conspiracy to commit wire fraud, operate an unlicensed money transmitter, make unlawful political contributions and defraud the Federal Election Commission.


Republican Presidential Candidate Vivek Ramaswamy Sells $32 Million Of Biotech Firm’s Stock

“On Wednesday GOP presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy sold 4 million shares in biotech firm Roivant Sciences at a price of $7.95 per share for a total of $32 million, netting him an estimated $24.2 million in after-tax proceeds,” reports John Hyatt.

The stock sale, reported in a regulatory filing, came one day after Ramaswamy announced his longshot bid for the Republican presidential candidacy with an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal and an appearance on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News show…

Ramaswamy’s stock sale proceeds may go towards funding his presidential campaign. (He could not be reached for comment as of press time.) In recent days the biotech entrepreneur has been barnstorming across New Hampshire speaking about climate change, China and other campaign themes.

Not that Ramaswamy wants to make a habit of self funding. The filing reporting his Roivant stock sale came with a footnote that says, “The reporting person does not expect to sell additional shares of the Issuer [Roivant] for the foreseeable future.”


Tracking Trump

“Two pregnant women, a heart attack sufferer and a woman who needed airlifting to a hospital after a stroke were amongst hundreds victims of an alleged $4 million fraud perpetrated by a Christian ministry offering an Obamacare alternative, according to the FBI,” reports Thomas Brewster.

Members of the Medical Cost Sharing (MCS) ministry had been promised their medical bills would be covered in return for a monthly contribution. Those membership fees were to be “shared” with a network of “like-minded” Christians, in what appeared to be a legitimate faith-based nonprofit, effectively crowdfunding insurance and charitably disbursing money when claimants required aid. But clients claimed they were denied coverage for reasons they couldn’t grasp and left with thousands in unpaid medical bills, according to an FBI search warrant. The feds claim it was part of a fraud, one that saw the business owners—Missouri-based Craig Reynolds and James McGinnis—pocket $4 million of $7.5 million in membership payments, of which only $250,000 (3.2%) went on medical expenses. The feds say the organization has become even stingier in recent years, distributing no money whatsoever to members since 2021…

Meanwhile, according to investigators, Reynolds and McGinnis have enjoyed the fruits of their illicit labor, taking money out of MCS accounts to the point where the nonprofit didn’t have enough funds to cover claimants, the DOJ said in a complaint. Feds claimed the membership fees were used, among other things, to pay for a holiday to Mexico, various vehicles and a $300 gift to a Donald Trump political action committee.

*****

“Take a wild guess as to who’s providing ‘Trump Water’ to residents of East Palestine, Ohio. And take a wild guess as to who’s told everyone about it. Well, you probably don’t need 45 guesses. The answer to both of these questions was the 45th U.S. President and current Mar-a-Lago resident Donald Trump,” reports Bruce Y. Lee.

*****

Kari Lake, an Arizona Republican who lost her gubernatorial run, returned to Mar-a-Lago last week, according to an Instagram post.

*****

Steve Wynn, a casino mogul who resigned from his company after accusations of sexual misconduct (he denied the allegations), appeared at a second Trump property in the past month.

*****

Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares will headline the 6th Annual Loudoun Conservative Gala on April 29 at Trump’s Virginia golf club. Tickets are $150.

*****

The Hispanic Police Officers Association of Dade County commemorated President’s Day by sharing a photograph of the group’s president at Trump’s Miami resort.

*****

Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli performed at Mar-a-Lago last weekend during the wedding reception of major Republican donor Adam Kidan. Trump attended the event.


Across Forbes


In Closing

It’s all right, it’s okay

And you may look the other way

We can try to understand

The New York Times’ effect on man

— Bee Gees, “Stayin’ Alive”



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Checks & Imbalances: AOC’s Dress, Hair And Makeup Likely The Focus Of Ethics Investigation

Today we go deep into the ethics investigation into Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

This is the web edition of the free Checks & Imbalances newsletter, usually sent to inboxes on Fridays. You can subscribe here. Please support this work, if you can, by subscribing to Forbes.


Why Is Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Under Investigation? Probably For Her Dress, Makeup And Hairstyling At The Met Gala


News broke two months ago that one of America’s most-polarizing lawmakers was facing an ethics probe. No one is willing to officially explain the rationale behind the investigation, but Forbes’ reporting all points to one glamorous night on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.


I

t was September 2021, around the time that the world was beginning to emerge from lockdown, when Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez showed up at one of the flashiest parties in America, the Met Gala. The congresswoman came with a message, delivered via her strapless gown. On the backside of the white dress, scrawled in blood-red lettering, were the words “Tax The Rich.”

As Ocasio-Cortez spoke to the line of cameras near the entrance, her outfit blared the message to monied guests passing by, including billionaire Tory Burch and centimillionaire Kris Jenner. The moguls were not the only ones eyeing the dress. Photos of the gown instantly blew up online, prompting a viral mix of praise and outrage that even the Kardashian family would envy. In Washington, meanwhile, a different set of onlookers took interest for a more consequential reason—the attire indicated a possible violation of House ethics rules.

The one-of-a-kind dress, which Ocasio-Cortez helped create for the occasion, did not belong to the congresswoman. Congressional guidelines generally prevent lawmakers from accepting gifts. Ocasio-Cortez claimed that she “borrowed” the piece from its designer, Aurora James, an acclaimed artist known for working with people like Beyoncé. It’s harder to borrow hair styling and makeup, which Ocasio-Cortez also received from acclaimed artists.

Even if Ocasio-Cortez had, in fact, borrowed a more standard gown, it still could have caused her to violate House gift rules, according to Kendra Arnold, the executive director of the Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust. “Borrowing is not allowed, and the primary reason for that is because it could be simply used as a way to evade all of the ethics rules,” says Arnold. “As soon as she said that she had ‘borrowed items,’ we believed that it was indicative of a gift.”

Added Kathleen Clark, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis who specializes in government ethics and has been highly critical of politicians on both sides of the aisle: “It’s not obvious to me how she could have accepted them.”

The Met Gala has caused ethics problems for others, as well. Another New York Democrat, former Rep. Carolyn Maloney, faced an investigation from the Office of Congressional Ethics over her attendance at the event. As part of that probe, the ethics office secured receipts and documents that showed Maloney paid for dresses she wore to the gala in 2018, 2019 and 2021. Maloney also provided documentation showing that she paid for her hairstyling and makeup.

A spokesperson for Ocasio-Cortez, Lauren Hitt, declined to answer questions. “The ethics committee’s statement did not comment on the subject of their review and so, out of respect for their ongoing process, neither will we,” Hitt said, adding that the congresswoman is cooperating with the investigation.

The dress designer also declined to comment. The hair stylist and makeup artist who helped Ocasio-Cortez prepare for the evening did not respond to requests for comment. Vogue, which published footage of Ocasio-Cortez getting ready for the gala and whose editor, Anna Wintour, oversees the event, also did not respond to inquiries.

If Ocasio-Cortez had taken care of her own clothes, hair and makeup, her mere presence at the gala might have been enough to prompt ethics concerns, given that tickets to the event reportedly go for $35,000. The morning after the party, the congresswoman took to Instagram to defend her attendance. “BEFORE anybody starts wilding out,” she wrote, “NYC elected officials are regularly invited to and attend the Met due to our responsibilities in overseeing our city’s cultural institutions that serve the public. I was one of several in attendance.”

That explanation did not make much sense to Tom Jones, founder of the American Accountability Foundation, which called for an ethics investigation into Ocasio-Cortez the day after the party. “The idea that this is somehow constituent service is a joke,” he said. “I’ve worked in congressional offices. Constituent services is going out to the local community-development organization and helping them set up a food bank or saying, ‘I can help you complete this grant application in a way so that you can get funds to serve your community.’ It’s not going to a $35,000-a-year gala, listening to rock stars, looking beautiful and driving some lefty message.”

Ocasio-Cortez’s suggestion that other people in her position attend the event does not entirely hold up, either. Asked if members of Congress receive invitations to the gala, a spokesperson for the Met said that citywide officers, like the mayor and parks commissioner, typically get invitations, but did not mention congresspeople. As for whether or not House investigators have contacted anyone at the museum regarding Ocasio-Cortez’s appearance, the spokesperson said that the Met doesn’t comment on active investigations.

Additionally, lists of government officeholders who were supposed to be invited to the Met Gala in 2016 and 2018 show zero members of Congress. Only one other federal lawmaker appeared in Vogue’s 182-photo recap of “every celebrity look” from the 2021 gala: Maloney, a congresswoman who, unlike Ocasio-Cortez, represented a part of New York City right by the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Voters ousted Maloney from Congress during last year’s primary, so House ethics officials probably won’t say much more about the investigation into her. The committee on ethics, however, has promised to provide an update on its inquiry into Ocasio-Cortez sometime after its first meeting of the new Congress. It’s not clear when that will be. Kevin McCarthy won an election to become speaker of the House on Jan. 7, but the first meeting for the committee has yet to be scheduled.

Watch: Your correspondent joined “Forbes Newsroom” to discuss the investigation into Ocasio-Cortez.


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Exhibits In Maloney Report Underscore Just What A Met Invite Can Do

Readers of this newsletter are probably already aware of what favors and money can buy in D.C., but two emails from Met officials included in the ethics report into Maloney put it all on display.

When the congresswoman learned she would not be invited to the Met Gala in 2016, “she went on about how much she does for the Met, always responsive when you call, and proactive re the institutions concerns in DC,” according to the Met’s president at the time, Emily Rafferty, in an email to her colleagues.

In another email, Thomas Schuler, the museum’s chief government affairs officer, points out that inviting New York power players to a dinner “paid off handsomely” as the museum went on to obtain $7.9 million in new capitol funding from the city. “The first significant allocation in a number of years,” he wrote.


‘Change The Math’: Inside Democratic Rep. Sean Casten’s Legislation To Expand Congress

Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.) joins Brittany Lewis to discuss his new package, “A Common Sense Vision for American Democracy,” which would add more members of the Senate and House as well as institute changes to the Supreme Court.


Continuing Irresolutions

Updates on Checks & Imbalances’ previous reporting

Former Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) joined DLA Piper’s regulatory and government affairs practice, the law (and lobbying) firm announced this week. DLA Piper has plenty of connections in the nation’s capital. Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff worked there before his wife, Kamala Harris, became vice president. Former Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) is currently a partner at the firm.

While in office, Burr raised $570,000 to aid in his legal defense after facing scrutiny over stock trades he made at the onset of the pandemic. The Department of Justice closed its investigation without filing charges. Chambliss’ wife, Julianne, donated $2,500 to Burr’s fund.

Meanwhile, Chambliss left the Senate in 2015, but his campaign committee remains active. In 2021 and 2022, it donated $34,000 to political campaigns.

*****

“James O’Keefe, the founder and chairman of Project Veritas, has taken a paid leave from the conservative nonprofit media organization as its board considers whether to remove him from his leadership position,” New York Magazine reported on Wednesday.

Project Veritas paid O’Keefe more than $2.7 million between 2012 and 2021. In 2021, his salary dropped by $16,000 from the previous year.

*****

Last week, a judge fined the attorney for former Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (R-Neb.) $500 for making an improper closing argument in the congressman’s trial. John Littrell was sanctioned for “his representations about what Fortenberry would have said if he had testified.” In March, Fortenberry was found guilty of concealing information and making false statements to the FBI. He resigned from Congress a week later. Fortenberry, who was sentenced to two years of probation, has appealed his conviction.

*****

ETFs that aim to track the stock trades of Democratic (Ticker: NANC) and Republican (Ticker: KRUZ) members of Congress debuted Tuesday on the CBOE BZX exchange. The ETFs are a partnership between Subversive Capital Advisor and Unusual Whales, an options-flow platform that also monitors lawmakers’ securities transactions.


Tracking Trump

“A former Twitter employee-turned-whistleblower told the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday that the Trump White House urged it remove a 2019 Tweet by celebrity Chrissy Teigen insulting then-President Donald Trump—a claim that contests Republicans’ narrative that Democrats colluded with Twitter to suppress conservatives content on the site,” reports Sara Dorn.

*****

The campaign for Rep. Claudia Tenney (R-N.Y.) spent $950 at Trump’s Bedminster, N.J. golf course in December. Trump previously endorsed Tenney.

*****

Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro was at Trump’s Miami resort last weekend to speak at Turning Point USA’s Power of the People event.


Across Forbes


In Closing

“Listen to me, don’t listen to me

Talk to me, don’t talk to me

Dance with me, don’t dance with me

No

Beep-beep”

— David Bowie, “Fashion”



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