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Trump casino was money laundering operation

(CNN)The Trump Taj Mahal casino broke anti-money laundering rules 106 times in its first year and a half of operation in the early 1990s, according to the IRS in a 1998 settlement agreement.

It's a bit of forgotten history that's buried in federal records held by an investigative unit of the Treasury Department, records that congressional committees investigating Trump's ties to Russia have obtained access to, CNN has learned.

The casino repeatedly failed to properly report gamblers who cashed out $10,000 or more in a single day, the government said.

Trump's casino ended up paying the Treasury Department a $477,000 fine in 1998 without admitting any liability under the Bank Secrecy Act.


CNN obtained 417 pages of Treasury Department documents under the Freedom of Information Act. The records included the 1998 settlement, draft and final copies of a similar settlement in 2015, and exchanges between the Trump casino lawyers and federal regulators.

The 1998 settlement was publicly reported at the time, and the Associated Press noted it was the largest fine the federal government ever slapped on a casino for violating the Bank Secrecy Act.

But key details of the casino's cash reporting violations are missing from the publicly released documents, including the identities of the gamblers and casino employees involved in the transactions.

The congressional committees had asked the Treasury Department's financial crimes enforcement network, or FinCEN, to provide any information it has on Trump, his businesses, his top officials and campaign aides.

House and Senate investigators both said they had obtained access to data housed at Treasury's FinCEN -- which will include details of these violations and potentially more, according to sources familiar with the investigation.

Congressional investigators say they are interested in the global network of Trump's finances to determine if FinCEN's data shows connections between Trump associates and Russia.


The White House declined to comment, referring questions to the Trump Organization.
In a statement, the Trump Organization said it "has had no involvement with the Taj Mahal, or any other Atlantic City property, for over a decade and has no knowledge of the events referred to in your email."

The 1998 settlement agreement itself, at just two-pages, is short on details. It only shows that the Taj Mahal "failed to file" currency transaction reports "within the time period required." It states that Trump's casino, which opened in April 1990, made the violations sometime before December 1991.

In the settlement agreement, the casino disputed "any willful failures" to comply with the Bank Secrecy Act.

Normally, if a gambler cashes out $10,000-plus in a single day, the casino must fill out a form listing their name, physical address, Social Security number, and birthdate. The casino has 15 days to send the form to the IRS.

According to a dozen anti-money laundering experts, casinos often run into these problems. But getting caught with 106 violations in the casino's opening years is an indicator of a serious problem, they said.


The violations date back to a time when the Taj Mahal was the preferred gambling spot for Russian mobsters living in Brooklyn, according to federal investigators who tracked organized crime in New York City. They also occurred at a time when the Taj Mahal casino was short on cash and on the verge of bankruptcy.

Trump took on an enormous amount of debt to launch what was -- at the time -- the world's largest, most flamboyant casino.

The Taj Mahal emerged from bankruptcy in late 1991, and Trump sold 50% of his stake to bondholders.

There were also financial issues at a second location in Atlantic City, The Trump Castle Hotel Casino, according to a 1991 New Jersey Gaming Enforcement report.

In the report, regulators described an incident on December 18, 1990, the day Trump owed an $18.4 million interest payment.

An attorney named Howard Snyder walked into the Castle casino with a certified check for $3.35 million drawn from a bank account belonging to Fred C. Trump. Snyder exchanged the check for 670 of the casino's gray gambling chips, which he put into a case. He then walked out of the casino.


By not cashing out the chips, the transaction amounted to a loan, regulators said.

New Jersey gaming regulators charged Trump's operation with violations of the state's Casino Control Act for not disclosing his father as a financial backer.

More dirty business here:
http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/22/politics/trump-taj-mahal/index.html
 

Chinner

Banned
Look, do you realise how many people touch money on a daily basis? It's disgusting. Donald Trump has led a campaign to clean our money to ensure that the spread of disease is stunted and saving literally 10s of Americans from dying.
 
The dude has been dealing with the mafia for decades. How this stuff was not blasted through the media every day during his campaign is a mystery to me.
 

alr1ght

bish gets all the credit :)
The violations date back to a time when the Taj Mahal was the preferred gambling spot for Russian mobsters living in Brooklyn, according to federal investigators who tracked organized crime in New York City. They also occurred at a time when the Taj Mahal casino was short on cash and on the verge of bankruptcy.
Trump took on an enormous amount of debt to launch what was -- at the time -- the world's largest, most flamboyant casino.

yuk yuk yuk
 
I feel like I read this before the election. In one of the long-form pieces done on his Atlantic City failures. Could be wrong, though.

Fred Trump buying out 3 mill of chips and walking out, we knew. Not that they had this many flags as a money laundering scheme. Curios is his is part of the "losses" in Trump's leaked tax return that allowed him to not pay Fed tax.
 

Ithil

Member
damn. This gotta be big, right guys?

This is an old story, but it also points to yet another connection to him and Russian money, in fact it may be the starting point of his connections to Russia. Remember there were Russian mobsters running a money laundering scheme in Trump Tower too.
 
It really just goes to show how poorly Trump conducts business.

He's not particularly detail oriented. He is all about giving the illusion of luxury while cutting as many corners as possible.
 

DonShula

Member
Considering Trump was handed $10 million by his daddy and could have just thrown it into an index fund and pursued any number of interests in the meantime, he's a fucking moron and a sham of a businessman. How do you fuck up so badly that you're running a money laundering operation to make less than if you literally did nothing?

He's one of the greatest cons of all time.
 

Iksenpets

Banned
I feel like I read this before the election. In one of the long-form pieces done on his Atlantic City failures. Could be wrong, though.

Yeah, pretty sure this was known. Trump just had so much shit on him people could pay attention to it all, and in the end they just didn't care
 

Bedlam

Member
One of the few (maybe only?) good things that comes out of Trump being president is that all of the shady shit he did for decades now comes to light.
 

DonShula

Member
I feel like I read this before the election. In one of the long-form pieces done on his Atlantic City failures. Could be wrong, though.

No, you're correct. This info was available well before the election. People just didn't read it. They were lost at long-form.
 

Shadybiz

Member
I think this is one of the more damning parts:

According to a dozen anti-money laundering experts, casinos often run into these problems. But getting caught with 106 violations in the casino's opening years is an indicator of a serious problem, they said.

The violations date back to a time when the Taj Mahal was the preferred gambling spot for Russian mobsters living in Brooklyn, according to federal investigators who tracked organized crime in New York City. They also occurred at a time when the Taj Mahal casino was short on cash and on the verge of bankruptcy.

Quite the coincidence that they would occur at that point in time...

Fred Trump buying out 3 mill of chips and walking out, we knew. Not that they had this many flags as a money laundering scheme. Curios is his is part of the "losses" in Trump's leaked tax return that allowed him to not pay Fed tax.

Correct; knew about Fred, but not the other stuff.
 

JC Lately

Member
So in other words, it was a casino.


Trump could drop kick a baby on live TV and his base will still vote for him in 2020*. Unless this leads to a smoking gun for his Russian connections, it doesn't matter.




*-Unless the baby was white. Then he's screwed.
 

Xe4

Banned
Not shocked at all, lol. Pretty much all casinos launder money, it's just too good of a use to not too. It was settled and all, but this just further confirms that Trump is scum.
 

Moppet13

Member
Not shocked at all, lol. Pretty much all casinos launder money, it's just too good of a use to not too. It was settled and all, but this just further confirms that Trump is scum.
What's makes you say all casinos launder money?
 

Oersted

Member
Nope.

There are tons of things that are in play for Trump's fall. Whether some laundering scheme in 1998 is still in play today is likely not to be the thing that gets him.

At best, it will be supplemental.

Nope

It's a bit of forgotten history that's buried in federal records held by an investigative unit of the Treasury Department, records that congressional committees investigating Trump's ties to Russia have obtained access to, CNN has learned.

It is about reevaluting his ties with Russia, not only his money laundering sheme alone.

Edit:

Bonus from the article

The congressional committees had asked the Treasury Department's financial crimes enforcement network, or FinCEN, to provide any information it has on Trump, his businesses, his top officials and campaign aides.
House and Senate investigators both said they had obtained access to data housed at Treasury's FinCEN -- which will include details of these violations and potentially more, according to sources familiar with the investigation.

Huh, so this is getting brought up again because of the Russia connections?

Yes
 
Look, do you realise how many people touch money on a daily basis? It's disgusting. Donald Trump has led a campaign to clean our money to ensure that the spread of disease is stunted and saving literally 10s of Americans from dying.

Trump has the best money laundry service out there.
 

Xe4

Banned
What's makes you say all casinos launder money?

They're a really good way to launder money, given all the exchanging and betting going on, even good financial analysts would have trouble telling that a money laundering operation was going on. For instance, you could have someone buy chips with illegal cash and then proceed to gamble it away. There's no way you could keep track of it.

That's not to say every single casino in the world launders money, but tons and tons do.
 
It is about reevaluting his ties with Russia, not only his money laundering sheme alone.

Right, which is supplemental to all the other ongoing investigations in regards to his ties with Russia.

This particular thing isn't what will topple him, in my opinion. It will be a culmination of things.

When people say, "Is this the thing that does it?" I respond the way I did cause I don't think this will be "the thing" on its own.
 

Ether_Snake

安安安安安安安安安安安安安安安
I wonder if the average American can settle with the IRS when they miss paying a hundred dollars in due taxes.
 

jelly

Member
So, on the verge of bankruptcy or afterwards Trump goes to dodgy people for help because normal banks won't lend him more money. There is something there....

Please tell me there is no way Trump can hide stuff like this from the investigation.
 

Moppet13

Member
They're a really good way to launder money, given all the exchanging and betting going on, even good financial analysts would have trouble telling that a money laundering operation was going on. For instance, you could have someone buy chips with illegal cash and then proceed to gamble it away. There's no way you could keep track of it.

That's not to say every single casino in the world launders money, but tons and tons do.
I'd believe during the mob affiliated days that the casinos were definitely used for money laundering. But today I'd have trouble believing most casinos are even remotely interested in money laundering with the exception of card rooms. The players can try to clean their dirty money but that's different. Your example is rather inaccurate though. You might be right on some small time privately owned casinos though.
 
Not shocked at all, lol. Pretty much all casinos launder money, it's just too good of a use to not too. It was settled and all, but this just further confirms that Trump is scum.
The point here is that normally casinos have to report big transactions to the IRS, so they can track and investigate large scale money laundering. Trump's casino didn't, thus making them a far more attractive target than the "average" casino. Combine that with the establishment being popular with Russian mobsters, this looks far worse than just "lol crooked casinos!"
 
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