Popular Economics Weekly
Donald Trump, among his many court battles, has three civil lawsuits that
accuse him, his eponymous school, the university’s former president, and an LLC
behind
the
venture of fraud, breach of contract, false advertising and racketeering, a
pattern of illegal activity — specifically mail and wire fraud — designed to
defraud the public.
Judge
Gonzalo Curiel, the U.S. judge overseeing two of the lawsuits against
President-elect Donald Trump and his Trump University told both sides they would
be wise to settle the case "given all else that's involved," reports Reuters.
Given that he is now President-elect, some are wondering why he doesn’t
settle before the November 28 trial, which would reveal in detail that Trump
University was a shell game—literally. It was a university in name only that
didn’t confer degrees, for example, and Donald Trump is accused of running a
criminal organization under RICO, The Federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act.
The latest development from a source familiar with the discussions says the
White House-bound mogul’s legal team wants a global settlement that would end
all three complaints, including a lawsuit brought by New York Attorney General
Eric Schneiderman, according to the New York Daily News.
But “We are not going to settle this case out cheaply,” Patrick Coughlin, an
attorney for the plaintiffs, told reporters last Thursday. So Trump’s allegedly
fraudulent behavior could seriously damage his pocketbook, as well as he
reputation.
The Trump University fraud trials have a 6-year history. Lawyers for the
president-elect are squaring off against students who claim they were lured by
false promises to pay up to $35,000 to learn Trump's real estate investing
"secrets" from his "hand-picked" instructors.
Instead, they were lured into maximizing their credit cards in what was
characterized as a classic Bait and Switch scheme. Instead of professional
courses in real estate investing that were personally supervised by Donald
Trump, they were handed materials copied from other courses, and taught by
instructors with no record of success, or any other qualifications.
And Donald Trump walked away with $millions. The underlying civil lawsuit
names Trump as a defendant and claims his now-defunct Trump University defrauded
students out of $40 million in course fees. The case was first filed in 2010 and
covers a class of some 7,600 students in New York, Florida and California–that
included veterans, retired police officers and teachers–but Trump personally
received approximately $5 million of it, despite his claim, repeated in the Time
Magazine interview, “that he started Trump University as a charitable venture.”
So Trump has good reason to fear the lawsuits over Trump University: They put
a lie to a central plank of his campaign. The disappointed students suing him
argue that Trump is not a wildly successful entrepreneur or a canny dealmaker
but rather a fraudster who made promises he couldn't keep,
said
Time Magazine. The legal proceedings have already
revealed the
details of the Trump University scam. Thanks to an order from Curiel, they
could also reveal a closely guarded secret:
Trump's net worth.
And now President-elect Trump is asking for Top-Secret clearances for his two
sons and son-in-law Jared Kushner, who are being tasked to run his more than 200
business connections. No conflict of interest there? And when President, he will
be in a position to appoint the next IRS Director, while his tax returns are
being audited.
USA TODAY reports the overall ugly picture of his business practices that
emerges goes far beyond Trump’s use of bankruptcy court, where debts can be
forgiven or restructured depending on their category and type of federal
bankruptcy filing. What’s most provocative about USA Today’s
reporting,
is how Trump has a longstanding pattern of ignoring his bills and walking away
from debts owed contractors and employees.
“At least 60 lawsuits, along with hundreds of liens, judgments and other
government filings reviewed by the USA Today Network, document people who have
accused Trump and his businesses of failing to pay them for their work,” the
newspaper wrote
recently. “Among them: a dishwasher in Florida. A glass company in New Jersey. A
carpet company. A plumber. Painters. Forty-eight waiters. Dozens of bartenders
and other hourly workers at his resorts and clubs, coast to coast. Real estate
brokers who sold his properties. And, ironically, several law firms that once
represented him in these suits and others.”
It’s almost two weeks before his trial on the RICO charges is scheduled to
begin on November 28. Trump probably will attempt to stall it into his
Presidency, though Judge Curiel has said he is not inclined to do so. So we will
get to see in more detail the sordid portrait of this man that some 60 million
have elected to be our next President, or we may not, if he agrees to a
settlement before then.
Either way, we hope it provides some justice to the 7,600 plaintiffs—many of
whom lost valuable life savings—in chasing his con game.
Harlan Green © 2016
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen