Trump: Follow the Money

THERE’S a scene in the classic 1976 movie All the President’s Men when Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward (aka Robert Redford) says to his source Deep Throat regarding the Watergate break-in: “The story is dry. All we’ve got are pieces. But we can’t seem to figure out what the puzzle is supposed to look like”. Famously, Deep Throat replies: “Follow the money”.

That’s what we should do regarding Donald Trump – following the money trail in Scotland.

Ever heard of an Unexplained Wealth Order, or UWO? These came into force in the UK in January of this year. A UWO requires that a person who is reasonably suspected of involvement in – or just connected to a person involved in – serious crime must explain the nature of their interest in a named property – say a golf course that loses a lot of cash.

Scottish Ministers have the right to seek a UWO from the Court of Session. The legislation is clear that a UWO can be applied against politicians from outside the UK or European Economic Area, or against their family and associates. That would include not just The Donald, but his son Eric, who runs Trump’s two golf courses in Scotland. Or Trump associates such as Erik Prince, former boss of the Blackwater mercenary corps, who is under investigation in America as a key player in the President’s alleged links to Russian money.

In a Russian Bunker

But are there “reasonable” legal grounds for suspecting Trump has links to possibly criminal persons? Remember that for an investigatory order to be granted, all you need is a reasonable suspicion he may have been in contact (consciously or not) with dodgy elements – not that he was a co-conspirator.

Trump owns two golf courses in Scotland – Turnberry and Aberdeen. He purchased Turnberry in 2014 with cash – unusual in the golf business. In the same period, from 2006 to 2014, he bought no less than 12 other properties cash down without mortgages – a remarkable change of tack for the self-proclaimed “king of debt”. Where did this money come from?

After a series of bankruptcies in the 1990s left the property business Trump inherited from his father largely unable to borrow from mainstream banks, The Donald turned to Russian backers. This was a time when the former Soviet Union’s new oligarchs were desperately seeking foreign havens for their newfound loot – mostly acquired by dubious means in the chaos that followed the collapse of Communism. In 2008, Trump’s son, Donald Jr, boasted to a real estate conference: “Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a lot of our assets… We see a lot of money pouring in from Russia.”

And a lot of money it was. For instance, according to a Financial Times special investigation, one Russian oligarch bought a Palm Beach estate from Trump in 2008 for $95m – more than double what Trump had paid for it four years earlier. Reuters reports that in Florida, 63 Russians – some with known political connections – spent $100m buying property at seven Trump-branded luxury tower blocks. Money laundering?

The Scottish Connection

Clearly the US authorities believe there are reasonable grounds to investigate Trump’s links with Russian cash of a dubious provenance. Paralleling separate investigations by Special Counsel Robert Meuller, the US Senate has already taken testimony regarding Trump’s two Scottish golf resorts. If that’s not grounds for ScotGov asking some questions of its own via a UWO, I don’t know what is.

The economics of Trump’s Scottish businesses are weird to say the least. His Turnberry golf course lost $4.5m (£3.5m) in 2017 – its fourth consecutive year in the red since he acquired the property. To date, Trump has invested over $212m in Turnberry – $67m for the purchase plus an additional $144m for renovation and to cover consistent annual losses.

Not that The Donald is completely out of pocket – thanks to the generosity of the Scottish taxpayer. Trump’s Turnberry operation benefited from public subsidies to the tune of £109,530 in 2017-18, under the transitional business rates relief scheme. Fortunately, Finance Secretary Derek Mackay has changed the rules, so Trump won’t get any more of this boondoggle.

Trump’s ability to find cash comes at a time when his business empire is doing badly. Recently his company lost hotel franchises in Panama, Toronto and New York’s SoHo neighbourhood, as the property owners severed ties with his increasingly toxic brand. In New York and Chicago, hotels under his personal ownership have seen a sharp decline in custom since 2015. One more reason for asking him to open his books.

Now here’s the interesting part about an Unexplained Wealth Order. While the UWO is only an investigation tool, any failure to respond – and you can just imagine Trump telling the Scottish Government to get lost – allows the civil authorities to launch legal proceedings in the Court of Session to seize the properties concerned, under the proceeds of crime legislation. Just saying.

Comments (8)

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  1. Rebekah Ray says:

    Please go after him Scotland.

  2. Graham Ennis says:

    This article says about as much about the present leadership of the SNP as it does about Trump. Here we have, bluntly, a deafening silence and inaction, when it is manifestly obvious that the American legal inquiries now encompass Trump, and his Scottish assets. Hmmm….very curious. once again, the attitude of the Grandees who have now got their feet comfortably under their ministerial desks is unmasked. Why has the Justice minister not asked police Scotland for an opinion, and if they know anything?…Police Scotland are legally entitled to ask the American authorities, and the FBI, what is known. Quite obviously, they have not done so, and that in itself speaks volumes about the Justice secretary, and the police. I think we are entitled to make public demands as to why nothing has been done. My first port of call would be a ce#ertain feisty female media eminence, well known, who needs to be asked if she will do a story on it. (we all know who I am talking about ). That would be a start.Short of further media interest, nothing much will otherwise happen. This is a very legitimate subject for the Scotttish media. Come on Lesley, your country needs you.

  3. Graeme McCormick says:

    It would be interesting to see the Law Society’s Compliance Department checking out the due diligence Trump’s Scottish solicitors undertook to satisfy themselves that the cash used to purchase these assets was clean. I’ve long believed that the Land Register of Scotland could prevent the purchase of property with laundered money if it required to see evidence of the source of purchase funds before it agreed to register titles . Without a title the property would be worthless and I marketable

  4. Alf Baird says:

    This is small beer relative to what is going on in London. Or how about looking into the offshore ownership of former Scottish ‘utilities’, land, whisky, oil&gas, aggregates, renewables, and anything else Westminster sold off and deregulated in the self-interest of its new owners, whoever or wherever they may be? Most of Scotland and its assets are not owned far less controlled by Scots. Scotland today is simply a nice wee deregulated global asset play full of gullible No voters who think there is a ‘union’.

  5. Willie says:

    Good article Mr Kerevan but I cannot but help think that so much of all of this anti corruption legislation is but a sham to be used as a political weapon for those not in the magic circle. A weapon to be used against the small time crooks or political opponents whilst the big beasts run free.

    Carillion, BHS are the recent corporate examples of crime unpunished whilst pensions perish. and livelihoods lost. But what of the Starbucks, the Amazons who pay no tax. These examples are however only a small tip of the iceberg as the Panama papers tantalisingly revealed.

    Alf Baird is absolutely bang on when he complains about Scottish land and assets being hived off, stripped and sold from under our noses. It is the way that it is. Graeme is also bang on when he says that diligence could have been undertaken on Trumps purchases, but wasn’t.

    Financial crime is at the heart of how this country runs. Riches for the few, rations for the many. The dogs is the street know it, but then again, do the dogs deserve anything else. They did after all, to their universal credit, choose to remain in a paternalistic union where their every welfare is looked after by their caring masters.

    A lifestyle choice really. Let them eat cake.

  6. Richard Easson says:

    How do you report these type of concerns? Locally there is a golf course plan (thin end of the wedge) called in having been passed bt the loacl councillors (thick end of the wedge), and there is also a huge “distillery” venture near here with perhaps dubious finance, of course all proclaim jobs, council tax and business rates etc…

  7. Wul says:

    I see this new Unexplained Wealth Order as part whitewash ( “…you see…we are tough on dodgy oligarchs” ) and part weapon, used to attack any rich person who is no longer wanted, is good publicity, is a threat, or is otherwise “off message”.

    Let’s face it, the UK Gov. could produce a list a mile long, right now, of people it deals with who are thieves, murderers, warlords & criminals owning property here.

    How is this UWO triggered? Who decides when it will be used and on whom?

    My local cop-shop has an anonymous hotline to report drug dealers and the DWP is keen to hear about benefit fraud. I don’t see a public UWO hot-line appearing anytime soon.

  8. Gaston Detherage says:

    In the Despair of the Government Close down, Small Business Business Leader Requests, ‘Does US President Donald Trump Hate Miniature Company?’

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