KEY POINTS
  • The Trump Organization and Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg pleaded not guilty Thursday to crimes related to what prosecutors called a "sweeping and audacious" scheme to avoid taxes on compensation for the CFO and other executives.
  • The company is owned by former President Donald Trump, who was not charged.
  • A 15-count indictment says the Trump Organization and Weisselberg devised a scheme to compensate Weisselberg and other company executives in an "off the books" manner, in which they "received substantial portions of their income through indirect and disguised means."
  • A prosecutor in court said that the "the former CEO" of the Trump Organization — ex-President Trump — "signed, himself, many of the illegal compensation checks" to executives.

The Trump Organization and its Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg pleaded not guilty Thursday to crimes related to what prosecutors called a "sweeping and audacious" scheme since 2005 to avoid taxes on compensation for the CFO and other executives of the company owned by ex-President Donald Trump.

The 15-count indictment, which was broader in scope than many legal observers expected, is the first set of criminal charges to emerge from probes of Trump and his company by the Manhattan District Attorney's office and the New York state Attorney General's office. Those investigations are continuing.