What? That's what the entire case was about, the discrepancy between property values given to lenders vs tax authorities.
I don't know what, or how much you've been reading, but it's obviously not very much.
Here's an article that uses financial statements gathered through the FOIA to show the difference between numbers given for the same property to different officials.
I don’t know why some people on here can’t just have an intelligent conversation without lobbing insults. I could easily do the same, but I won’t.
The article you provided doesn’t relate to the case at all. (Well, one sentence does.) Your article is an independent investigation by some group and they outlined all the things they found on the documents that they think is fraud. But in the whole thing, it only once mentions the trial we are talking about. And in the sentence, it mentions just the concern of inflating and deflating assets. Not overreporting or underreporting vacancy rates, rent rolls, or any of that. So your article further makes my point.
Here is the summary of the case, directly from the NY AG office. You’ll notice the only “crime” it mentions, including what Peek-A-Boo herself directly says, is about inflating the value of assets.
Might I make the friendly suggestion that in the future, instead of focusing on the volume of articles you read, you focus more on reading comprehension to better understand what you are reading.
The article you provided doesn’t relate to the case at all.
Part of being well informed about something in the news is reading a wide variety of articles over the time period things are developing. If you keep up with news as it happens, it's easier to see how all the puzzle pieces fit together than it is to go back years later and then try to figure out what was going on.
So, if you had been paying attention to things as they were happening, you would see that this article was written after rumors and allegations of Trump committing real estate/tax fraud were wide spread. This article is the next logical step in the process of how news works. Investigating the allegations made. In large part to investigative journalism like this, the DA is made aware of possible crimes and uses that info (along with a ton of other stuff) to help determine if the DA's office should investigate it themselves. Lawsuits aren't just magically conjured for no reason from thin air.
So that is how this article relates to the case. It's one of the reasons the case even exists. It's absolutely exhausting having to spoon feed this stuff to people.
And in the sentence, it mentions just the concern of inflating and deflating assets. Not overreporting or underreporting vacancy rates, rent rolls, or any of that.
When they talk about inflating and deflating assets, who do you think those numbers are for? Where do you believe they got those numbers? How do you think they determine those numbers?
The article plainly says that they got this information from FOIA acts from forms/paperwork Trump's people gave to loan officers and forms/paperwork they gave to tax authorities.
The paperwork/forms that they're giving people are where you'll find the information on vacancy rates, rents rolls, and property information. That is how they determine the value of assets. How much people are paying to rent an apartment, if anyone is renting the apartment at all, and how large the apartment is has quite a bit to do with determining how much that apartment is worth. See how that works?
I'm not sure why you think this needs to be spelled out specifically in the article. In all the conversations I've had about this, and involving this article (and I've had many), this is the first time someone has not understood the basics of how the value of assets for commercial rental property is determined.
But it is absolutely precious that you're criticizing my reading comprehension here. Ironic, as well.
What? That's what the entire case was about, the discrepancy between property values given to lenders vs tax authorities.
I don't know what, or how much you've been reading, but it's obviously not very much.
Here's an article that uses financial statements gathered through the FOIA to show the difference between numbers given for the same property to different officials.
https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-inc-podcast-never-before-seen-trump-tax-documents-show-major-inconsistencies
I don’t know why some people on here can’t just have an intelligent conversation without lobbing insults. I could easily do the same, but I won’t.
The article you provided doesn’t relate to the case at all. (Well, one sentence does.) Your article is an independent investigation by some group and they outlined all the things they found on the documents that they think is fraud. But in the whole thing, it only once mentions the trial we are talking about. And in the sentence, it mentions just the concern of inflating and deflating assets. Not overreporting or underreporting vacancy rates, rent rolls, or any of that. So your article further makes my point.
Here is the summary of the case, directly from the NY AG office. You’ll notice the only “crime” it mentions, including what Peek-A-Boo herself directly says, is about inflating the value of assets.
https://ag.ny.gov/press-release/2024/attorney-general-james-wins-landmark-victory-case-against-donald-trump
Might I make the friendly suggestion that in the future, instead of focusing on the volume of articles you read, you focus more on reading comprehension to better understand what you are reading.
Part of being well informed about something in the news is reading a wide variety of articles over the time period things are developing. If you keep up with news as it happens, it's easier to see how all the puzzle pieces fit together than it is to go back years later and then try to figure out what was going on.
So, if you had been paying attention to things as they were happening, you would see that this article was written after rumors and allegations of Trump committing real estate/tax fraud were wide spread. This article is the next logical step in the process of how news works. Investigating the allegations made. In large part to investigative journalism like this, the DA is made aware of possible crimes and uses that info (along with a ton of other stuff) to help determine if the DA's office should investigate it themselves. Lawsuits aren't just magically conjured for no reason from thin air.
So that is how this article relates to the case. It's one of the reasons the case even exists. It's absolutely exhausting having to spoon feed this stuff to people.
When they talk about inflating and deflating assets, who do you think those numbers are for? Where do you believe they got those numbers? How do you think they determine those numbers?
The article plainly says that they got this information from FOIA acts from forms/paperwork Trump's people gave to loan officers and forms/paperwork they gave to tax authorities.
The paperwork/forms that they're giving people are where you'll find the information on vacancy rates, rents rolls, and property information. That is how they determine the value of assets. How much people are paying to rent an apartment, if anyone is renting the apartment at all, and how large the apartment is has quite a bit to do with determining how much that apartment is worth. See how that works?
I'm not sure why you think this needs to be spelled out specifically in the article. In all the conversations I've had about this, and involving this article (and I've had many), this is the first time someone has not understood the basics of how the value of assets for commercial rental property is determined.
But it is absolutely precious that you're criticizing my reading comprehension here. Ironic, as well.