Part of Allen Weisselberg's legal troubles began when his former daughter-in-law couldn't get the numbers in her divorce proceedings to add up.
Jennifer Weisselberg says she was befuddled. The lifestyle she'd shared with her ex-husband, Barry Weisselberg — including an apartment overlooking Central Park and tuition for two children at Manhattan's Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School, currently listed at more than $50,000 a year per student — appeared to far outstrip his pay as a manager at the Trump Organization-run Wollman Rink in Central Park. In 2016, for example, he made $211,000, tax returns show.
As the couple set about dividing their financial lives, she feared she wasn't getting a proper accounting. "How was I going to live in the city and keep up without depriving the kids into a life of, like, living in a studio?" she said in a June 29 interview. "They were offering me nothing." Peter Stambleck, who has represented Barry Weisselberg in the divorce, didn't respond to a detailed request for comment.
Although she was wary of her ex-husband's family — and particularly Allen Weisselberg, 73, the chief financial officer of the Trump Organization and a close business adviser to then-President Donald Trump — Jennifer Weisselberg shared joint tax records and court transcripts with Bloomberg News. For a November 2020 story that highlighted the potential tax implications of some benefits her ex-husband received from Trump's companies, she openly provided key documents. Soon, prosecutors with the New York Attorney General and the Manhattan District Attorney were calling her and asking for records, she said.
On Thursday, Allen Weisselberg pleaded not guilty to participating in an alleged tax fraud scheme that prosecutors said was designed to compensate Trump Organization employees with benefits that weren't disclosed to tax authorities. The indictment included the now-divorced couple's use of two company apartments, and tuition for their children. After years' worth of investigations into the Trump Organization's business partnerships, lending arrangements and potential conflicts of interest that have so far generated little more than headlines, the comparatively prosaic tax matters that Jennifer Weisselberg flagged have become part of the criminal charges brought against the company and her former father-in-law. Neither Jennifer nor Barry Weisselberg has been charged with any wrongdoing.
"I was fighting to provide for my kids," she said, explaining her decision to work with prosecutors. "They wanted to set up a situation where, whenever they were with Barry and the Weisselbergs, they have this life and they were going to Miami, Doral, and Vancouver, skiing, and everything was great. And they felt comfortable and safe because their grandfather pays for school and their grandfather pays for camp. But when it came to me, they wanted to act like it was going to be miserable and scary and 'good luck if you can eat.'"
For months, Weisselberg said, her life has been peppered with video conference calls with prosecutors. She has also become a frequent guest on cable television news shows, playing a similar role to others who turned against Trump's interests: Michael Cohen, the former president's one-time fixer and personal lawyer, and Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, who helped plan Trump's 2017 inaugural celebrations before aiding investigators in probes of them.
The records that Jennifer Weisselberg provided to Manhattan prosecutors include joint tax records, bank statements, and documents pertaining to apartments and other assets, her attorney, Duncan Levin, said.