What A Day - A Heartbreaking Work Of Staggering Fraud
Episode Date: September 22, 2022New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a $250 million lawsuit against former President Donald Trump and his three adult children, accusing them of "persistent and repeated" business fraud. Roll...ing Stone politics reporter Nikki McCann Ramirez joins us to discuss the case and what's at stake for the Trumps.Russian president Vladimir Putin declared a “partial” military mobilization to shore up forces in Ukraine. It was the first such move since World War II, and was met with rare protests.And in headlines: demonstrations in Iran continued over a woman who died in police custody, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates again, and a former Minneapolis police officer was sentenced to three years in prison for his role in the murder of George Floyd.Show Notes:Vote Save America: Every Last Vote – https://votesaveamerica.com/every-last-vote/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Thursday, September 22nd.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Travelle Anderson, and this is What A Day.
We were reaching the point in the Adam Levine Instagram DM scandal
where we're wondering why he never messaged us.
Yes, obviously it would have shaken me to my core,
probably made me delete every app,
but I can't help but feel a little excluded.
I'm not giving up yet. One day I will trap the Maroon 5 thirst.
On today's show, waves of protests have swept over Iran after a woman died in police custody.
Plus, the Federal Reserve delivered another aggressive interest rate hike to tackle inflation.
But first, New York's Attorney General Letitia
James filed a sweeping civil lawsuit yesterday against former President Donald Trump, his three
adult children, and the Trump Organization. It was the culmination of a three-year investigation
into their financial dealings in the state. During a press conference announcing the suit,
she summed it up like this. The complaint demonstrates that Donald Trump falsely inflated his net worth by billions of dollars
to unjustly enrich himself and to cheat the system, thereby cheating all of us.
She has a great voice.
I know, that's right.
Priyanka, can you walk us through what's going on here?
We've been following this for a little minute at this point.
Yeah.
So according to the complaint here, Trump lied about the value of many of his real estate holdings, including Mar-a-Lago, for years.
And he did this in order to get bigger loans, better insurance policies, and to lower his
taxes.
Gotcha.
So he's accused of inflating his net worth by billions of dollars. That sounds
pretty on brand to me. I feel like we knew that already. Right. But what is Letitia James trying
to get from this lawsuit? The complaint gives over 200 examples of alleged fraud over the course of
at least a decade. So among other things, she is seeking about $250 million in penalties,
and she wants Trump and his adult children to be permanently banned from operating a business
in the state of New York. That seems huge to me. Pretty significant. Especially since they're
always talking about their businesses and their real estate and all of that. Real girl bosses
over there. Let's quickly talk about Trump's reaction to the suit.
I'm sure he lost it, okay?
Because that's what he does, right?
Right.
What can you tell us?
Yeah, so in the least surprising news of all time,
Trump is reportedly livid.
He is digging into his usual defense
that he did nothing wrong.
He went on Fox News yesterday.
He posted up a storm on Truth Social.
He called the suit a, quote, bullshit, damn witch hunt. You think that maybe, you know, it would get a little more of original name. But no, implications, though, I spoke with Nikki McCann Ramirez.
She is a politics reporter at Rolling Stone and has been following this particular probe.
Attorney General James started investigating the Trump organization while Trump was still president.
And we've been seeing kind of the trickle of her findings throughout the end of his presidency, the last couple of years. Really,
I think the most interesting thing is that now we get to see some of the details of what those
specific financial dealings, what specific fraud took place. I think some of the highlights for me
were the fact that Mar-a-Lago was overvaluated by what the attorney general says was about $600 million.
Trump, in one instance, tripled the size of his apartment to give it more kind of like square footage value. But that's obviously something you can measure. You can measure
the square footage of an apartment. If you're committing fraud, there are other less obvious
ways. Don't commit fraud. And of course, you know, I think one of the biggest things that Attorney
General James is looking into is how those overvaluations were taken to banks and then
used to secure loans. One of the big things that will come up in this lawsuit is the Trump Hotel
in D.C., which is no longer the Trump Hotel because they sold it for a profit. But the loans
that were used to pay for that hotel when they first purchased it
were allegedly acquired using fraudulent information from the Trump organization.
Got it. Okay. So this civil case seems complicated, but why is Letitia James so
adamant about filing it now? Yeah. Attorney General James spoke to this in her press
conference announcing the lawsuit.
And one of the things she emphasized is that while white collar crimes, financial crimes may kind of seem a little esoteric, a little above the day-to-day realities of working
class people, the reality is that these kinds of crimes harm the communities they take place
in because, and especially in this case, if you are committing financial fraud, be it with banks, with insurers, in your taxes,
a lot of times that means that there is tax revenue, resources, opportunities that should
have gone to the community to working class people that are no longer available to them.
Right.
In a secondary mode, what it does it also,
not prosecuting these cases,
allowing this kind of fraud to stand or to go unchecked,
creates a two-tiered system of justice.
Because if a regular middle-class, blue-collar working person
went to a bank and lied about their assets to get a loan,
be it for a car, for a house,
the government would throw the book
at them. No questions asked. The IRS would be down your neck. You could probably go to jail.
And there should be no difference in the way we treat these billionaires who are the people that
have access to amounts of money that can reshape a community and allow them to get away with that
kind of fraud. And I think it's really important, regardless of kind of the reasoning behind this lawsuit, regardless of really the final outcome,
ensuring that prosecutors, attorney generals, not just in New York, but throughout the country,
put a little bit of pressure on people making major financial transactions, engaging in big
commercial adventures and real estate deals for them to feel that pressure that there is like the threat of consequences.
I think that's very important.
Yeah, definitely.
So a big part of this centers on, you know, how Trump deliberately inflated how much of
his company's assets and properties were worth.
But what are the stakes for him here with this lawsuit?
What could happen?
First of all, he's livid.
The stakes here are also that Trump no longer has
the cover of being president to kind of protect himself from these lawsuits. If you've been
following him post-presidency, you know that protection from criminal scrutiny, civil prosecution
is still something that's very much on his mind. That was one of the like big benefits he had throughout the presidency that there was not a lot of existing legal precedent for how to like
try a sitting precedent. So now he sees the writing on the wall. He has this lawsuit. He has
two separate Department of Justice investigations, one related to Mar-a-Lago, one related to efforts
to overturn the election in various states.
Right.
There's many right now.
There's so many.
It's impossible to keep track of.
There's so many.
And I think it's also important to remember here that this isn't the first time the Trump
organization has faced this kind of scrutiny.
We know the Trump organization has a very long history of kind of trying to skirt around laws of shady business dealings.
And as much as Donald Trump wants to call this a witch hunt, a lot of these actions predate his presidency.
Totally.
So you just outlined the several investigations and things that are going on in Trump world.
What happens next with this particular one?
And will this particular case be difficult to prove?
I expect that we're going to probably see some counter filings,
some maneuvering from the Trump organization.
I think one of the things that Donald Trump's lawyers love to do is stall.
Right.
We're seeing it right now with the Mar-a-Lago documents investigation.
They really pushed for a special master in that investigation. And that has kind of backfired a little. In terms of white collar crime, white collar crime is always a little difficult to litigate because a lot of times these valuations putting kind of a monetary amount on how much a property is worth or how much like a specific business is worth. It's often subjective. It depends a lot on the criteria of the evaluations. But if you have one
thing you're telling investors and you have another thing you're telling, you know, your tax
guy when tax season comes around and those numbers are significantly different. Well, either one or
neither of those numbers is true. So I think prosecutors are going to try and focus on that kind of hard discrepancy.
Yeah.
And we'll see where it leads.
I think Attorney General James has, if anything, been extremely patient with this case.
She's been dealing with it for three years.
She's not one to let things go.
So it might take a while, but I think we'll see incremental progress now that it's being litigated.
That was my conversation with Nikki McCann Ramirez.
She is a politics reporter at Rolling Stone. Thank you so much for that, Priyanka.
Now on to an update on the war in Ukraine. Hide your sons and hide your husbands and all of the
men's too, because on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared a partial military
mobilization.
It's the country's first since World War II.
That basically means there's a draft in place for some male citizens of the country who now don't know the hour or the day when they might get called up for duty.
Reports are already saying that police in different cities are barring men from trying to leave the country.
They're literally searching cars and turning people around at checkpoints.
Wow.
But according to Russia's defense minister, the draft right now is limited to those with
experience as professional soldiers and that students and conscripts would not be called up.
But they are aiming to add 300,000 reservists to send them to Ukraine.
Okay, so this is a big deal, very different than what's been happening up until now.
Why is this happening?
Can you tell us a little more about why Putin is making this decision?
Yeah, so, you know, as we've mentioned on the show before, Ukraine has been regaining
ground over the last couple weeks and doing so very fast.
Right.
This turn was kind of unexpected, right?
Because after nearly seven months,
it seemed like Russia had the upper hand. And then, you know, Ukraine came out of nowhere and
was like, now, wait a minute. We're still here. We're still fighting back. Right. And so now
Russia needs to find more manpower, hence the mobilization. But what's also alarming is a very
much not subtle threat that Putin made. In that same address Wednesday, Putin accused NATO states of threatening
to use nuclear weapons against Russia,
which is not true.
He then said that those countries should know that,
quote, the weather vane can turn towards them.
And that, quote,
when the territorial integrity of our country is threatened,
we will certainly use all the means at our disposal
to protect Russia and our people.
It's not a bluff. All right. I don't think my eyebrows can raise any higher. This is a little
bit terrifying. So the U.S., along with other countries, are huge supporters and allies of
Ukraine. How has our government responded to this? Well, President Biden called the threats
reckless and irresponsible, and he called the invasion part of Putin's, quote, imperial ambitions.
Here is Biden speaking to the United Nations General Assembly yesterday in New York.
This war is about extinguishing Ukraine's right to exist as a state, plain and simple, and Ukraine's right to exist as a people. Whoever you are, wherever you live,
whatever you believe, that should make your blood run cold. Yeah, it certainly does,
especially when he puts it like that. Definitely. But there's one other thing I wanted to note from
Putin's address. In addition to instituting the draft, he also mentioned that Moscow would support separatist leaders in four Ukrainian enclaves as they stage referendums to join Russia.
This is supposed to be happening this week, starting on Friday through Tuesday in statelets in Ukraine's Kherson, Donetsk, Luhansk and Zaporizhia regions.
These, by the way, are regions in which Ukraine has been gaining ground over the last couple weeks.
Now, the votes, if they happen, would be illegal under both Ukrainian and international law.
But it doesn't seem like, you know, Russia is caring about any of that.
Yeah, it doesn't seem to have stopped them before. So, okay, how are Russian citizens responding to this combination of sham elections
and also the possibility
that they might be called up to fight?
Well, let's just say that when this announcement came down,
the price of one-way flights out of Russia skyrocketed
and flights to neighboring countries
that don't require Russians to have visas, they sold out.
Not surprising.
Right, right.
So in addition to people trying to get the hell up out of Dodge, protests broke out, right?
Now, demonstrations in Russia aren't too common because free speech is not protected there.
You know, so much so that the Moscow prosecutor's office, hearing that there were calls online for folks to get out into the streets, they even reminded citizens that participation in, quote unquote, unauthorized
street protests could result in up to 15 years in jail.
They also said that folks could be prosecuted for discrediting the military and for spreading,
quote unquote, fake news about the so-called special military operation in Ukraine. That's what they call it.
They don't call it a war or an invasion. Right. But people did take to the streets across Russia
nonetheless. And according to the independent protest monitoring group OVD Info, more than
1,300 people were detained during protests by the time of our recording Wednesday night.
Yeah, that is incredibly brave of these people to stand up in a country that, you know,
absolutely does not support them, does not support anyone speaking out, saying the truth.
I hope that these people, these 1,300 people who were detained are safe.
Definitely.
So more on all of this very soon, because we know Russia will continue to do what it
has been doing.
But that is the latest for now. We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Wednesday marked the fifth day of violent clashes between anti-government demonstrators and police in Iran since the death of Masa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who recently died
in police custody.
Amini was arrested last week by Iran's quote-unquote morality police. They're a
unit that enforces the country's strict Islamic dress code requiring women to wear hijabs or
headscarves in public. They accused Amini of wearing her hijab too loosely and a few days
after her arrest she died. Authorities say that she suffered a heart attack but her family believes
that she was beaten to death in their custody. Amini's death has sparked massive outrage, especially among Iranian women who are
tired of living under their country's oppressive laws. Many of them have even taken to the streets
in several cities to remove their hijabs and burn them in protest. According to human rights groups,
at least seven protesters have been killed in clashes with police.
Meanwhile, senior Iranian officials have promised a full investigation into Amini's death.
The Federal Reserve raised interest rates yet again on Wednesday, this time by three quarters of a percentage point.
This is the fourth time the central bank has raised its rates this year alone, all in an effort to combat inflation. But experts worry that we don't have
enough data to know whether these rate hikes are actually helping the economy and that increasing
the interest rate even further and doing so too quickly could bring us closer to a recession.
Still, the Fed is expected to raise interest rates two more times before the end of the year.
A former Minneapolis police officer was sentenced to three years in prison yesterday
for his role in the murder of George Floyd.
Thomas Lane had pleaded guilty to a state charge of aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter.
He is already serving a 30-month sentence in a federal prison in Colorado
for violating Floyd's civil rights.
Walmart and CVS agreed to settle their opioid lawsuits
with the state of West Virginia on Wednesday
for over $147 million.
The suit was filed by State Attorney General Patrick Morrissey,
who alleged that the two pharmacy chains
fueled his state's opioid epidemic
by contributing to the oversupply of opioids in the state.
West Virginia has been hit
especially hard by the opioid crisis over the years. According to the CDC, the state has the
highest overdose death rate in the country, and every year thousands of those deaths are attributed
to opioids. Meanwhile, Walgreens and Kroger are set to stand trial next year for their role in
West Virginia's opioid epidemic unless they agree to
settle before then as well. That sounds like a lot of money. It is a lot of money, but there's no
amount of money in the world that can undo what the opioid epidemic has done to this country and
our world. Florida's Governor Ron DeSantis is learning the risks of playing politics with
people's lives. On Tuesday, a class action lawsuit was filed on behalf of the nearly
50 Venezuelan migrants who were flown
by DeSantis from Texas
to Martha's Vineyard. The suit alleges
that the callous act of political theater
violated the 4th and
the 14th Amendment rights of these
individuals and the Civil Rights Act
of 1964. And if you
thought we'd reached the bottom of the ethical black
hole inside Ron DeSantis,
The Intercept has some bad news for you.
They reported yesterday that the aviation firm that Ron DeSantis hired to transport
the migrants has contributed exclusively to Republican causes, including Republicans in
Florida.
They received over $600,000 in taxpayer money for the job, which I'm sure was given to
them just completely randomly and not because they donated to this man.
Why would they do that, Priyanka?
No, no, certainly couldn't happen that way.
Absolutely not.
And another update from the political party of alpha males who eat meat and protect their wives and don't let their sons cry.
A Republican congressional candidate from Ohio apparently lied about his military service.
His name is J.R. Majewski, and he's famous for speaking up in support of QAnon,
turning his lawn into a big painted Trump flag, and at least one semi-viral pro-Trump rap video.
Wow.
Maybe the thing he hasn't gotten enough credit for is his storytelling skills, because according to an AP report yesterday, his claims of having done an Air Force tour in Afghanistan are untrue.
And in reality, he mostly served in Japan and spent six months helping to load planes in Qatar.
Majewski has said harsh conditions in Afghanistan forced him to go 40 days without a shower.
Excuse me?
Which is the exact type of detail fiction writers use to hook their audience.
We'll let you decide which of Majewski's crimes is worse, though.
Stealing military valor or stealing rap valor like he does here.
Oh, God. They want to make us woke and force us to get the vaccine.
Taking pictures with the Pope will get us to all relax.
Not to put fun at dementia.
It's a serious disease.
But come on, man.
Squeeze your cheeks when you sneeze.
Squeeze your cheeks when you sneeze, Priyanka.
What?
Excuse me?
Okay, I was going to say this man definitely in the wrong field.
Why is he pursuing congressional office i was gonna say he
has maybe a future in uh music after listening to that absolutely no go with fiction route i think
you know you're very creative soul clearly yeah why don't why don't you try to write a little bit
that could be nice for you you know i will give credit to whoever made the beat the beat was
pretty good cute beat the beat was pretty good. It's a cute beat. The beat was pretty good. It's a cute beat.
Which is unfortunate for both of us.
But the lyrics, if you take two and a half seconds to listen to what he is saying, it is cringe as hell.
Absolutely.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
A whole new batch of progressive merch just dropped at the Crooked store.
We've got tees and hats and some new bumper stickers, too.
So you can show where you stand on reproductive rights and canceling student debt, even when you're sitting in traffic on that 405.
OK, we know.
Head over to the Crooked store and go ahead and pick out something to wear to the voting booth or your morning coffee run or wherever.
You all know how T-shirts work.
Check it out at Cro.com slash store.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
mow a lawn with Trump's face on it, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just the lyrics to anti-Trump raps like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at Crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Travelle Anderson. I'm
Priyanka Arabindi. And DM
us while you still can, Adam
Levine. I don't know if there's a
DM rehab. This man's certainly
going.
So hit us up while you still
can. I mean, I don't think I have anything to
say to you, but like it would be fun to show my friends.
You know, to tell my grandchildren about.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance,
Jazzy Marine and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein and our executive producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.