1/ The Qatar Investment Authority, a sovereign wealth fund that acts as an arm of the Qatari government, has been renting space in Donald Trump’s most valuable property. But thanks to loopholes in federal disclosure laws, the deal has remained a secret. penguinrandomhouse.com/books/623950/w…
2/ It appears to be just the sort of arrangement the founding fathers feared. A foreign government, it seems, has been paying the president of the United States for more than a year. Undetected. vanityfair.com/news/2020/09/h…
3/ I first stumbled upon it when I found a document that listed the tenants in 555 California Street, a San Francisco skyscraper that happens to be Trump's most valuable holding. You can see a snippet of the document here.
4/ Since I had never heard of the arrangement, I wasn’t sure if it was true at first. The website for the Qatar Investment Authority’s listed an office in New York, but not one in San Francisco. So I booked a trip to California to see.
5/ When I got to the building, security was tight. Guards watch over the elevator banks. They had a directory on the first floor, but it skipped straight from “Private Wealth Management” to “Quijada Realty Group,” with no mention of the Qatar Investment Authority.
6/ To get upstairs, I reserved a desk in a coworking space that happened to share an elevator bank with the Qatar Investment Authority.
7/ The security guards waved me through, and I rode to the 43rd floor of the building. I walked off the elevator, and there it was. A beautiful, spotless office for the Qatar Investment Authority.
8/ The strange thing, though, was that no one was there. It looked like no one had ever stepped foot in it. On the welcome desk, there was a plant. It looked like it died long ago.
9/ I knocked on the glass doors -- hard -- but no one answered. The next day, I went back at a different time of day, thinking that maybe the office had unusual hours. No sign of life the second time either.
10/ To try to make sense of it all, I reached out to someone who worked in the skyscraper. He told me he that, after the construction workers finished building out the office, he never once saw someone in the Qatari space. Here are a few of his messages.
11/ Why does this all matter? The Constitution. The emoluments clause prohibits officials from accepting "any present, emolument, office, or title, of any kind whatever, from any king, prince, or foreign state" without getting approval from Congress.
12/ Trump’s lawyers have previously said that the president is not violating the constitution when foreign governments visit his hotels because it’s a “value-for-value exchange.” They pay money, they get a hotel room.
13/ That argument falls apart here. The Qataris are apparently paying Trump. But in return, what are they getting? An empty office with a dead plant on the counter and not a soul in sight. This doesn't look like a normal business transaction.
14/ And it's just one of the many potential conflicts in Trump's portfolio. For more of the story, check out my book, White House Inc., which comes out on Tuesday. Or read an excerpt published today in @VanityFair. vanityfair.com/news/2020/09/h…
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1/ "I WILL NOT BE TESTIFYING ON MONDAY," Donald Trump says in an all-caps statement posted on his social-media platform, Truth Social.
He'd been slated to retake the stand in his fraud trial against the New York attorney general.
I have a lot of thoughts on this development.
2/ The likelihood that Trump was going to say anything that would help his case was close to zero. He admitted as much in his statement.
3/ There was, however, significant risk in getting on the stand again because, after all, committing perjury comes with consequences. Let's examine Trump's previous testimony. forbes.com/sites/danalexa…
1/ Donald Trump Jr. enters the New York City courthouse where he and his father on in the midst of a fraud trial. Follow along for an account of the day, including a detailed blow-by-blow on the Forbes website: forbes.com/sites/danalexa…
2/ Don Jr. is on the stand. He talks about how his family limited its international licensing business after his father became president. “In retrospect, that was probably a mistake,” he says, noting that his family did not get much credit for it.
3/ So far, Don Jr. has spent most of his time on the stand praising his father's assets. His lawyer is going through the assets one-by-one with a PowerPoint-style presentation. Now we're on Mar-a-Lago, which Don Jr. calls “one of the few sort of American castles.”
1/ Ivanka Trump just made the long walk up the stairs of the Lower Manhattan courthouse where she will face questioning this morning from the New York attorney general’s office as part of her father’s 250 million fraud suit. I’m headed inside now. Follow along here for updates.
2/ "All rise!" Judge Engoron walks into the courtroom. Other major players are mostly here, too: Trump's lawyers, the attorney general. Not here yet: Ivanka Trump, who was just called to the witness stand.
3/ "Witness entering," announces an officer. Ivanka Trump walks in smiling and approaches the witness stand. "Raise your right hand," instructs another officer. Ivanka is now under oath. She gives her name and address, on a billionaire-loaded island in Miami.
2/ First observation: There are far more people here today than we've seen in the last several weeks. The courtroom is packed. Same with the overflow room, which generally has only a handful of people. Same with a 2nd overflow room, where I'm watching.
3/ The attorney general's team arrived a little while ago, climbing up the steps for a monumental day. Trump is at the defense table in the courtroom, wearing what has become something of a uniform for him this trial--blue tie on blue shirt on dark suit.
1/ I’m back in Lower Manhattan, where Donald Trump and his associates are facing fraud allegations. Eric Trump returns to the stand this morning after tense testimony yesterday.
2/ Eric strolls into the courtroom, wearing a dark suit and blue tie. He stands at the defense table, with his hands in his pockets. The attorney general is here as well, seated in her usual front-row spot. When the judge arrives in about 5 minutes, things should start rolling.
3/ "All rise!" Judge Engoron walks in and scampers up to his perch, as he usually does. "As the day goes on, I go slower and slower," he jokes.
1/ I’m back at the courthouse in Lower Manhattan for Donald Trump’s fraud case.
His two oldest sons, Eric and Don Jr., are both expected to testify today. The security lines are longer than anything I’ve seen yet.
Should be an exciting day. Follow along for updates.
2/ Donald Trump Jr. enters the courtroom, wearing a Navy blue suit, pink shirt and light blue tie. Like yesterday, he has his hair slicked back and is sporting a beard.