ELECTIONS

Allen Weisselberg, ex-CFO of Trump Organization, sentenced to 5 months for perjury

Weisselberg testified at Trump's civil fraud trial that he 'never focused' the size of Trump's penthouse apartment but Forbes magazine discussed it with him for years.

Bart Jansen
USA TODAY
  • Allen Weisselberg, former chief financial officer at the Trump Organization, was sentenced to five months in jail for perjury at Trump's civil fraud trial.
  • Weisselberg had already served five months for tax fraud, for not reporting $1.7 million in benefits and falsifying business records at the Trump Organization.

A New York judge sentenced Allen Weisselberg, the former chief financial officer for the Trump Organization, to five months in jail for perjury Wednesday − his second stint behind bars − for lying during former President Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial.

Weisselberg, 76, pleaded guilty in March to lying under oath when answering questions in a deposition in May and at the trial in October about allegations that Trump misrepresented his wealth on financial statements. Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, was ordered to pay $454 million for exaggerating the value of his real estate for years.

“It is a crime to lie in depositions and at trial – plain and simple,” Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office said in a statement.

New York Judge Laurie Peterson had said when Weisselberg pleaded guilty that she would sentence him to another five months, and on Wednesday he began his second stint at the Rikers Island jail complex.

Former Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg leaves the courtroom for a lunch recess during a trial at the New York Supreme Court on November 17, 2022 in New York City.

Weisselberg sentenced for perjury days before Trump's criminal fraud trial

Weisselberg has already served a jail term for tax fraud and falsification of business records in an unrelated case. But he received a $2 million settlement when leaving the Trump Organization and hasn't cooperated with prosecutors in Trump's criminal trial set to start Monday.

The perjury conviction could serve as a warning to other witnesses in Trump's trial on criminal charges of falsifying business records. Trump has pleaded not guilty.

Weisselberg testified during Trump's civil fraud trial that he “never focused” on the square footage of Trump’s penthouse apartment in Trump Tower. Trump's financial statements listed the apartment as nearly three times its actual size of 10,996 square feet, which resulted in a $200 million overstatement of its value.

But Forbes magazine had discussed the apartment’s value with Weisselberg for years while estimating Trump’s net worth.

Former President Donald Trump appears in the courtroom with his lawyers for the start of his civil fraud trial at New York State Supreme Court on October 2, 2023 in New York City.

Weisselberg on 'short leash' from Trump: Judge

New York Judge Arthur Engoron wrote in his civil fraud judgment that Weisselberg’s testimony was “intentionally evasive, with large gaps of ‘I don’t remember.’”

“The Trump organization keeps Weisselberg on a short leash, and it shows,” Engoron wrote.

Trump's lawyers in the civil case continued to support Weisselberg.

"To be clear, counsel for Defendants have no 'knowledge' that Mr. Weisselberg made false statements during the trial; to the contrary, many believe that Mr. Weisselberg only made such admissions because he was being threatened with life in prison," the lawyers wrote.

Weisselberg was chief financial officer for the Trump Organization from 2002 to 2022, when he pleaded guilty to 15 criminal counts of tax fraud for failing to disclose $1.7 million in benefits and for falsification of business records.

He was sentenced to five months in jail and released after 100 days. New York Judge Juan Merchan said that after listening to Weisselberg's previous criminal trial testimony he regretted agreeing to five months, and if not for a plea agreement, he "would be imposing a sentence much greater than that."