An obscure financial entity with connections to a Caribbean-island bank that bills itself as a top payment service for adult entertainment sites would gain a sizable stake in former president Donald Trump's media company if its merger deal proceeds, according to internal documents a company whistleblower has shared with federal investigators and the Washington Post.
Yet the role ES Family Trust would assume in Trump Media and Technology Group has never been officially disclosed to the Securities and Exchange Commission or to shareholders in Digital World Acquisition, the special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, that has proposed merging with Trump's company.
The companies also have not disclosed to shareholders or the SEC that Trump Media paid a $240,000 finder's fee for helping to arrange the $8 million loan deal with ES Family Trust — or that the recipient of that fee was an outside brokerage associated with Patrick Orlando, then Digital World's CEO.
Where ES Family Trust obtained the money, and who is behind the trust, remain publicly unknown, omissions that unnerved some of Trump Media's top executives when they first learned of the loan in late 2021, according to Will Wilkerson, a whistleblower who at the time was the company's executive vice president of operations.
Republican members of Congress and Trump supporters have complained for months that the SEC's year-long delay in approving the merger has been fueled by anti-Trump bias and a "woke political agenda." Trump Media's primary business is the social media site Truth Social.
But the financial tangle offers a possible explanation for why the SEC has yet to approve the deal, said Michael Ohlrogge, a New York University law professor who studies SPACs. He called the deal unusual and rife with questionable decisions and potential conflicts of interest.
"This is definitely something that could cause problems," he said. "At a minimum, if the SEC knew about this loan, it would insist that it be disclosed to [Digital World] shareholders. ... And the company didn't even do that."
Representatives for Trump Media and Digital World did not respond to requests for comment for this story.