Ex-Trump Org CFO Allen Weisselberg pleads guilty to perjury in fraud case

Former Trump Organization Finance Chief Allen Weisselberg appears for a hearing in Manhattan Criminal Court on March 4, 2024, in New York City. Weisselberg is expected to plead guilty to perjury charges after reaching an agreement with Manhattan prosecutors. He will admit to lying to investigators from the Attorney General's office when they were investigating former President Donald Trump for fraud. A judge ruled against the former president and handed down a penalty of more than $450 million with interest. Weisselberg is not expected to implicate his former boss. (Curtis Means/Pool/Getty Images/TNS)

NEW YORK — Donald Trump’s former finance chief Allen Weisselberg copped to new criminal charges in a lower Manhattan courtroom on Monday — admitting he told lies to the New York attorney general concerning what he knew about the actual size of Trump’s Fifth Avenue penthouse, and when.

In the latest legal setback for the former president’s loyal longtime moneyman, the already-convicted Weisselberg pleaded guilty to two first-degree perjury counts at a brief Manhattan Criminal Court hearing stemming from his testimony in the AG’s investigation into Trump’s real estate empire.

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That case recently culminated in staggering judgments against Trump and his company execs, including Weisselberg, totaling nearly half a billion dollars.

Prosecutors at Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office charged the Trump Organization’s retired chief financial officer with five counts and, in a plea deal, allowed him to plead guilty to two. They requested he serve another term of five months in jail when he returns to court on April 10.

Weisselberg, who handled the Trump family’s company finances for almost half a century after his hiring as a bookkeeper by Donald Trump’s father, Fred, in the 1970s, ignored a question from the Daily News after the hearing. In a statement, his lawyer, Seth Rosenberg, said he “looks forward to putting this situation behind him.”

The 79-year-old Weisselberg served almost 100 days in jail last year after pleading guilty to criminal tax fraud charges brought by the Manhattan DA related to his work at the Trump Organization. That was separate from both the new perjury case and the AG’s civil fraud lawsuit, in which Trump, his sons Eric and Don Jr, Weisselberg, and former Trump Org controller Jeff McConney were recently found liable for falsely inflating Trump’s net worth by billions and ordered to pay New York state at least $464 million, including interest.

Trump is on the hook for most of the mammoth judgment, which he must secure with the court by March 25 as he appeals despite his efforts to shave it down.

As part of his financially crushing Feb. 16 ruling, Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Arthur Engoron barred Weisselberg from ever handling a company’s finances again and ordered him to pay back half of the $2 million severance he received from the Trump Organization on his way into jail.

The CFO’s testimony at the fraud trial was stopped when the AG lawyers notified Engoron of potential omissions. On Monday, he admitted to Judge Laurie Peterson that he lied during the trial and multiple other junctures during the AG’s years-long Trump probe. His plea stemmed from a deposition on Jul. 17, 2020, concerning the value of the Trump Tower triplex, which evidence showed was falsely recorded as three times its size in business deals — ballooning its value by more than $200 million.

During the deposition, Weisselberg claimed that his deputy, McConney, was responsible for the bogus square footage recorded between 2012 and 2017. He said he didn’t become aware of it until a May 2017 investigation published in Forbes that revealed the triplex was a third of the size Trump claimed. However, emails between Forbes reporters and Trump Org employees, including Weisselberg, directly contradicted his testimony, according to Assistant District Attorney Gary Fishman. A recording of Trump and Forbes reporters at the triplex in 2015, when Trump said the triplex was 33,000 square feet in front of Weisselberg, further belied his claim that he’d never heard Trump describe the triplex’s size.

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