The Daily - How Trump Really Got Rich
Episode Date: October 3, 2018President Trump has long sold himself as a self-made billionaire. But after spending a year studying tens of thousands of pages of confidential records, our New York Times colleagues uncovered new det...ails about the president’s financial history. Here’s what they found.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You have to swear an oath of blood before you're allowed in, so.
Okay.
It has not been cleaned since we took it over.
Can you just kind of walk me through the piles a little bit?
These are thousands of property records, deeds, and mortgages,
and transfers on every property
you ever owned going back for 60 years.
There you've got all these buildings here.
There's the house that he owned.
And this is an aerial photograph of one of the buildings, I assume?
Right.
That's correct.
And then there's bank statements, tax returns, detailed accounting records where we can follow
where the money's going.
Okay, so I know this has been a sprawling, complicated investigation,
but I wonder if you could just boil it down for me.
What is the big question that you have been trying to answer?
For all of us, the question always comes back to
what's the actual ground truth about Donald J. Trump and how he got rich.
My father gave me great knowledge.
Didn't give me a lot.
The famous go-to talking point that Donald Trump says...
I started with a million-dollar loan.
I built a company that's worth more than $10 billion, okay?
...is that his father loaned him a million dollars.
It's not been easy for me. It has not been easy for me.
And that he parlayed that million dollar loan into this ten billion dollar empire.
My father gave me a small loan of a million dollars and I had to pay him back and I had to pay him back with interest.
This idea that he's a self-made guy.
I built this empire and I did it by myself.
And when you turn over the rock on that,
nobody did it for me.
It's just wholly untrue.
But there's more to the story
than just Donald Trump got more from his father
than is previously known.
Yeah, from the documents we've gathered,
we were able to unearth the tales about Donald Trump's wealth
that he has worked very hard for a very long time to keep hidden.
My colleagues Russ Buehner, Sue Craig, and David Barstow have spent much of the past year locked in a room,
poring over never-before-seen documents
as they investigated President Trump's financial history.
Today, the story of what they discovered.
It's Wednesday, October 3rd.
September 23rd, 2016 was just a chaotic day for me at the time as I was closing.
A page one story that day, and in between going from one place to another, I stopped at my mailbox.
And there was one piece of mail there, and I grabbed it, and I looked at my mailbox. And there was one piece of mail there,
and I grabbed it, and I looked at it,
and it was from somebody at the Trump Tower.
I wasn't sure what to make of it.
I just had a couple stories on them.
I wasn't sure if it was hate mail,
if it was who knows what it was.
And I open it, and it was three pages
of Donald Trump's tax returns from 1995.
And I just stood there.
And I've been working with my colleague, David Barstow, on a couple of other stories, and I immediately went over to his desk.
I remember I was on the phone, and Sue had this sort of agitated look on her face.
She was thrusting these papers kind of in front of my face
and when it dawned on me what I was potentially looking at,
I was like, oh my God, and immediately hung up.
Do you believe voters have a right to see your tax returns
before they make a final decision?
I don't think they do, but I do see...
As a candidate, Donald Trump broke with 40 years plus of tradition
by declining to release any of his tax returns.
Clearly, his tax returns tell a story that the American people deserve and need to know.
That has removed from the public record one of the main tools that we have traditionally used to
scrutinize the finances of our presidents. And at some point, I don't remember if it was that
afternoon or the next day, they came over to me, told me they had this thing they wanted to talk
me about, and we went into a small room. And what was it like to see those tax papers for the first time?
It was just holy shit.
The New York Times published three pages from the candidate's 1995 tax return.
They showed Trump declared a nearly $916 million loss.
These three pages were just like gold because they were the only glimpse we had into what he had told the IRS about his wealth.
The New York Times this morning reporting that Donald Trump declared a loss of nearly $916 million in 1995.
A loss of over $900 million.
Almost a billion dollars in a single year.
Almost a billion dollars in a single year.
That moment just sent us looking and starting to peel back more and more layers of the story of Donald Trump and money.
You may have heard, we've got some significant breaking news tonight.
So six months later in March 2017, Donald Trump is president.
And Rachel Maddow, late in the day, sends out a tweet saying she's got a copy of Donald Trump's tax returns. And so we were all like, holy cow. What I have here
is a copy of Donald Trump's tax returns. We have his federal tax return for one year, for 2005.
And in terms of what's on here, let me give you the basics. Aside from the numbers being large,
these pages are straightforward.
Well, it turned out that it wasn't very relevatory or as telling as we would have hoped.
But if you add up the lines for income, he made more than $150 million in that year. Mazel tov.
It raised interesting questions to us.
The partial tax return that we had from 1995 showed that he was bleeding money.
And then by 2005, it showed that
he was making significant amounts of money. So we started trying to figure out how does the guy go
from having a loss of $900 million plus in 1995 to booking $150 million of income in 2005?
What's going on? Was there something extraordinary that happened in his life that year?
Could the apprentice account for some part of that? It had started the year before. Did he sell things?
And then we came across this little smattering of clips that mentioned that in 2004,
Donald Trump and his siblings had sold their father's real estate empire in Brooklyn
for over $600 million. We're like, that's interesting.
And it made us want to learn everything we possibly could
about that particular empire.
And we started reaching out to people
who had been involved in that empire,
had disputes with it, worked for it.
We were trying to reconstruct a 50-year history
of Fred Trump in New York City.
And we started acquiring these documents.
We started going through these documents.
Previously unseen documents.
Writing names down.
50,000 pages of internal documents.
And then we called people again and again.
And eventually we were left with a detailed view of Fred Trump's empire
no one had ever seen before.
So tell me about Fred Trump, Donald Trump's father.
Fred Trump was born in 1905 from the Bronx, the son of immigrants.
His father had come from Germany, built some bars, some brothels maybe.
And when he was 12 years old, his father died. And Fred, at a very young age, becomes enamored with the construction business.
It's just sort of an incredible thing.
By the time he was 15 or 16, he started building houses.
Not just like as a construction worker, like overseeing the whole thing.
He was described as kind of the Henry Ford
of home construction.
So he would hire a whole team of brick masons.
He'd get them set up with these high-speed mixers.
He'd set up floodlights.
He'd run them two shifts a day.
And by 35, he was building hundreds of houses a year.
The day of days for America and her allies.
Then when World War II ends.
Reporters rush out to relay the news to an anxious world
and touch off celebrations throughout the country.
There's this huge demand for housing for returning veterans.
More than a million sing and dance in the streets.
People say luck is when being prepared meets opportunity.
Well, that was an incredible opportunity,
and Fred Trump was better prepared than anyone in the country.
Federal government offered developers low-cost loans
to encourage them, incentivize them
into building lots of middle-class housing.
Many millions of Americans still live in habitations
which not only fail to provide the physical benefits of modern civilization,
but breed disease and impair the health of future generations.
Fred Trump became one of the country's largest recipients
of those federally subsidized building loans. And he immediately
launched on making these huge projects with low interest government guaranteed loans and keeping
the costs so low that he was guaranteed a life of extraordinary wealth.
So as you're going through all of Fred Trump's documents, at what point does Donald Trump appear?
Donald Trump starts to show up in his father's business affairs when he's three years old in 1949.
So what the documents revealed to us was that when Donald Trump was three years old, he was actually Fred Trump's landlord.
Fred Trump gives his children the land under these massive apartment projects that he's built and then begins paying them rent.
And as we begin tracking those payments, we see that those payments made Donald Trump the equivalent of a millionaire in today's dollars by age nine. And then in the early 1960s, Fred Trump was beginning to actually transfer buildings,
actual buildings, to his kids.
He runs them still.
He does all the labor.
But on paper, his children are the owners
and the profits for those buildings start going to them.
So Donald Trump, at age 17,
became an owner of a 52-unit apartment building in Brooklyn.
And things just keep coming at him.
1968, he graduates from college, and he lands right into a cushy job at his father's company with a salary.
Fred Trump found a way to make Donald Trump one of his bankers.
He gets consulting fees for doing things for his father. He leased a car for him. He built his first offices in
Manhattan for him. He also found ways to give him the laundry revenue from his buildings.
And then in 1976, you see this article in the New York Times. Let me grab it.
And I'll just read you the lead. It says,
he is tall, lean, and blonde with dazzling white teeth. He looks ever so much like Robert Redford.
He rides around town in a chauffeured silver Cadillac. He dates slinky fashion models,
belongs to the most elegant clubs, and at only 30 years of age,
estimates that he is worth more than 200 million dollars.
He took the New York Times reporter on a tour of what he was describing as his empire.
Showing this reporter all the things he's done, all the things he's built, all of his jobs.
This building and this building and this building.
What we now know from looking at these records is that Donald Trump didn't own any of that.
Donald Trump hadn't been involved in the building of any of that.
It's accurate probably that he was dating slinky fashion models, but we've come to learn.
It was all his father's empire, his father's success, and he was just appropriating all of that as his own to build his own myth.
This is sort of like the first instance where you just see the lie begins.
Thank you, Mr. Trump, for joining us this morning.
Hiya, Dan.
I have heard that you are worth something like $3 billion.
It seemed like in the 1980s, every time you turned on the TV...
Well, I've always said,
you know, money isn't a totally essential ingredient, but it does make it easier. He was
there. He's young. He has Robert Redford, good looks, and he's rich. And he was telling you
how successful he was. Anything else you want to buy as you look out there? Any good properties
that we can see? I'd really like to buy everything if they were fashionable. I bet you would. It's at that point in time when Donald Trump begins to realize,
I can say almost anything to reporters. Are you smarter than most people who would call
themselves entrepreneurs? And it will come to a newer benefit to my image and my reputation,
and I can make money off of that reputation. Well, that's an interesting question. I don't
know if anyone's ever asked me the question,
am I smarter than other people?
I think that...
He starts buying casinos, yachts from princes.
He buys the Plaza Hotel.
I just bought the Plaza Hotel in New York
and my business, real estate,
that's the ultimate crown jewel.
He's able to convince bankers
to give him these tremendously outsized loans
based just on the image,
the myth that he's built for himself already.
And one thing that we found that I don't think anybody ever knew before is that his father goes
along with the ride on some of that. They had this particularly intimate father-son relationship.
They talked to each other constantly and they each shared this view of the world, that the world was this zero-sum game.
The idea that your worth in a family matters based on how much money you're making.
And you were either a killer or you were killed.
And there was kind of nothing in between.
And there was sort of nothing in between.
So one of the revelations that we came across in the documents was how Fred and Donald Trump coordinated stock purchases together.
For example, in the late 1980s.
New York tycoon Donald Trump wants control of the nation's largest airline.
Donald Trump would leak to the financial press that he was taking a position in American Airlines. He doesn't have the financial wherewithal to take over those corporations, but his father, we can see in his tax returns, buys stock
in American Airlines. Then American Airlines was the most active stock on
the big board yesterday, pushing all transportation issues sharply higher. The
stock goes way up and his father tries to sell before it goes down. He
doesn't make it. We saw this pattern in multiple instances. In another case, Donald made a public
comment that he was going to take over Time Inc., the magazine and publishing company. His father
did buy stock right before Donald made those comments. A week later sold it and he wound up
making $40,000 just on his son's hot air, basically.
It was a very clear manifestation of these two guys executing financial strategies together.
It was more than just a father-son relationship.
They were trying to achieve something together in terms of elevating the idea of Donald Trump as self-made billionaire.
This goes on for years.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the author of this book right here,
Trump, The Art of the Deal, Donald Trump.
In 1987, Donald Trump published this book, The Art of the Deal.
Where do you learn The Art of the Deal?
I mean, what point were you working with your father
and you knew that there were bigger things for you? Well, I really think you
have it or you don't have it. The premise of the book was that he only made good deals,
that he could tell the world how to make good deals and get rich on their own. And you have
to go and be driven and, you know, do all the different things that we all sort of know about
and the things I discuss in the book. But by 1990, All of his bets had gone bad. He was already getting deep into the hole
that would lead to his darkest moment.
Casinos are failing, businesses are failing.
He was just buried in debt.
He is going through a very rough divorce with Ivana Trump.
What we found and what people haven't known before
is the degree to which his father helped him out of that hole.
It was loan after loan after loan.
He owed his father at that point in time
somewhere between $15 and $25 million
that he never talked about and that he wasn't paying back.
In the financial records that we've obtained,
we can see that the flow of money from Fred Trump to Donald Trump
increased at moments when Donald Trump was in his highest duress.
He can't make his loan payments. People are talking about foreclosing, taking away everything.
He gets down at one point to just having a couple of million dollars in the bank,
and he's burning through more than that every month.
So in the course of our reporting, we've learned that in 1990, in this just really dark period in Donald Trump's life, he makes an aggressive play to get more control of his father's wealth.
It's one of the most remarkable discoveries we made along the way.
So what was this remarkable discovery you made in your investigation?
So at that crucial point in his life, 1990, we found Donald Trump crafts, in essence, a new will for his father.
It amends the will that's there.
And then he sends lawyers to his father's house to have him sign it. His father had no idea this was coming and flipped out. And according to the
sworn testimony of his relatives, as he read it, he began to realize that what this document would
do is that it would give Donald Trump extraordinary control over his estate upon his
death. His father was 84 years old, but still an incredibly savvy man and looked at this and
thought, this is my son who is in incredible trouble right now trying to get control of the
empire that I built. You know, that was a step too far for Fred Trump.
This means that my son's creditors could come after my wealth, my empire, and he shuts the whole thing down. He calls his daughter, Marianne Trump Barry, has her organize a legal team to come
up with a new will that will make sure that Donald Trump doesn't have any more control than any of his siblings,
and that his business problems can't drain his own empire.
That episode, it is this moment, this jolt.
It kind of triggers a deeper reckoning within the Trump family.
It forces them to come to grips with two facts.
One is that Fred Trump is starting to get frail.
His health is failing.
He's starting to suffer the effects of dementia.
And then the kids start to recognize
dad has this enormous fortune.
He had all these buildings
that were worth hundreds of millions of dollars,
and he had tens of millions of dollars running through his bank accounts.
We just couldn't believe when we started looking through the financial records of his companies
how much cash he had.
And what they were recognizing at that moment was that if Fred Trump died,
all of that, every penny of that, is subject to a 55% estate tax.
So that means if Fred Trump passed away and was worth a billion dollars.
55% of all of that goes to Uncle Sam.
And so the Trumps come up with a plan.
A plan beyond the bounds of the law.
One of the first steps they took was to create something called All-County Building Supply.
All-County Building Supply and Maintenance.
So Fred Trump bought an enormous amount of goods and services to keep his buildings going.
For years, Fred Trump was buying everything he needed for his buildings directly from wholesalers.
So he needed an air conditioner.
He'd write a check, get an air conditioner.
He needed paint supplies, go and get paint supplies. And then all of a sudden, this new company comes along
called All County. And it starts buying everything. So it will pay $100 for the air conditioner,
$300 for the fridge, $100,000 for the boiler. And then they turn around and they bill Fred Trump for the very same items
at this marked up price. And if they paid $150 for the air conditioner, they then bill Fred Trump
$250 and they pocket the difference. Same thing with the fridge and stove. They buy it for $200,
they send an invoice to Fred for $300, all county pockets the difference. It's a kind of a middleman
that's doing nothing. This company had no employees.
It was doing no negotiating of its own.
Literally, it's an invoice padding operation.
All County was a company set up with the sole purpose of deceiving the IRS.
And we've run this scenario past some of the best tax experts in the country, and every single one of them says
that's fraud. It's incredible to think about. One of the things that really jumped out at us is how
effective that process was. It started out relatively small in 1992, but by 1998, it was
generating millions of dollars a year in profits to the Trump children.
By the time he dies in 1999,
he goes from being a guy who was sitting on tens of millions of dollars of cash
to a guy who has less than $2 million left.
His biggest asset is a $10 million debt that Donald Trump owed him.
And that in and of itself is a testament to simply how
successful they were at making cash disappear. But the second part of the scheme was actually
maybe the most ingenious, and it involved the biggest tax dodge of all. By the early 1990s,
they're basically through All County and another entity that they set up, getting their father's profits from his empire.
But their father still owns the buildings themselves.
He owned all these buildings, hundreds of millions of dollars, bricks and mortar.
And they're going to take control of that empire through this particular kind of trust that's called a grat.
Lots of rich people have trust. It's a kind of a vehicle for transferring wealth from one generation to the next.
In this case, what the Trumps did is having put all of these apartment buildings in this trust,
they then systematically lowballed the value of each apartment building.
They went out and they got an appraiser, and the appraisals that came back are just unbelievable.
They had all of these buildings in Fred Trump's empire appraised so that rather than being what they really were,
which was 10, 15, 20 million dollar buildings, instead having them appraised as if they were 1, 2, 3 million dollar buildings.
They find an appraiser who says some of Fred Trump's biggest apartment buildings are absolutely worthless. And they did this over and over and over again. And then they pushed the
limits in other ways as well to reduce the overall value of this tremendously profitable,
massive empire. They put a value ultimately on this empire of $40 million. What we found in our analysis is that in real life, in market value,
it was worth at least 10 times that.
This is an empire that less than a decade later,
the banks would place a value of almost a billion dollars.
The tax experts that we've interviewed are saying that the way
that Trump's took this legal thing and twisted it is, in fact, illegal.
You're not allowed to submit bogus appraisals to the IRS.
The appraisals really have to reflect reality.
I started off with a very, very small amount of money.
And by the way, when my father passed away, remember, I have four, I have a total of five in my family.
So we have brothers, sisters split.
And my father didn't leave a great fortune.
It was Brooklyn and Queens real estate.
It's interesting because that estate has, again, fed into this narrative.
When Donald Trump points to it, he can say, look, my father's estate was only worth, you know, 20, 30 million dollars. But now what they do is they build it up like, oh, he left
Donald money. I started off with one million dollars and now I'm worth over 10 billion dollars.
This guy, the 45th president of the United States, he inherited hundreds of millions of dollars from
his father and much of it was gotten through fraudulent means.
I mean, that's an important chapter in his history
that should be set straight and people should know about.
So now that this investigation has been made public, what could come of these revelations?
Where all this falls, I don't know.
A lot of it has passed statutes of limitations.
Criminal statutes generally limit people's exposure to a criminal charge to five to seven years.
All those clocks have long since told.
There is still the possibility for the IRS to perhaps penalize the family for what they did,
pursue back taxes, issue fines.
The statute of limitations on that is forever.
So they could come back at any point in time and look at that and impose penalties on them.
But the IRS in this case is
under the management of President Trump. And the likelihood of that seems very remote.
We, on the one hand, feel like, okay, we have peeled back many, many new layers of the onion
of the story of Donald Trump and his money, simply by taking his father's tax returns
and taking all of these other documents
that lay bare the financial relationship
between Fred and Donald Trump.
That tells us so much about the first,
say, 50-plus years of Donald Trump's life.
But just imagine how much more we could learn,
how many more questions we could ask,
how many more layers we could peel back
if we could just get our hands on his tax returns.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The Times reports that the FBI is expected to complete its investigation into allegations of sexual assault against Brett Kavanaugh
and deliver the results to the Senate as early as today.
It'll be made available to each senator,
and only senators will be allowed to look at it,
and that's the way these reports are always handled.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the FBI report would not be made public
before the Senate votes on Kavanaugh's confirmation.
But several of his Republican colleagues, including Senator John Cornyn of Texas,
said they would seek to release its findings in some form.
People are not going to be satisfied until some public statement
about what the FBI supplemental background investigation showed.
A few hours later, during a campaign rally in Mississippi,
President Trump mocked the accusations of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford.
36 years ago, this happened.
I had one beer.
Right?
I had one beer.
Well, you think it was...
Nope, it was one beer.
Oh, good.
How did you get home?
I don't remember.
How'd you get there?
I don't remember.
Where is the place?
I don't remember.
How many years ago was it?
I don't know.
I don't know. I don't remember. How many years ago was it? I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know.
What neighborhood was it in? I don't know.
Where's the house? I don't know.
Upstairs, downstairs, where was it? I don't know.
But I had one beer. That's the only thing I remember.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.