Weisselberg does not have blanket immunity, much as all those tweets making grave predictions are predicated on it being sohttps://nyti.ms/2MR2Yaz
-
-
Filing on extension is pretty typical when your income is derived from pass-through entities that have to file first and issue K-1s. Almost impossible to file 1040 by 4/15.
-
Yeah, but as I said, re-classifying Cohen's invoices now would require Weisselberg and Trump Jr to admit they breached their fiduciary duties by accepting the sham invoices and by misclassifying them as expenses without adequate backup. Weisselberg's deal may also preclude it.
-
But their fiduciary duties as trustees of Trump’s rev trust flow to Trump, making any breach irrelevant. Not saying it’s not criminal as campaign finance violation, but not tax fraud unless and until Trump files 1040 reporting as such.
-
Two things: Would reclassification require consent of both Trustees? And, would reclassification be inculpatory with respect to the conspiracy campaign finance case, since it could be construed as an admission of knowledge that the Cohen invoices were a sham in the first place?
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.