Trump under fire for alleged misuse of charity funds

22 Sep 2016

Michigan Democratic Representative Sander Levin called on the Internal Revenue Service on Wednesday to audit The Trump Foundation, following a report that the billionaire used charity money to pay off legal settlements.

"It is important that charitable funds be used for charitable purposes, rather than promote the business ventures of those affiliated with the charity. I therefore request an immediate audit of the Donald J Trump Foundation," Levin wrote in a letter to IRS Commissioner John Koskinen.

The Washington Post reported earlier this week that Trump used $258,000 from his charity to pay off settlements in a pair of lawsuits. The newspaper reported that Trump used the charity to pay for a $100,000 settlement with the city of Palm Beach in 2007 and used another $158,000 from his charity to settle a lawsuit filed in 2011 about a hole-in-one claim at a charity golf tournament.

The revelation immediately drew accusations from Democrats of Trump self-dealing. Messages left with the Trump campaign and the IRS by CNN and others were not immediately returned Wednesday.

But New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a top Trump surrogate, warned Hillary Clinton's campaign on Wednesday of using the allegations against the Trump Foundation for a political attack.

"Be careful what door you open, Mrs Clinton, because you're not going to want people to be talking about the Clinton Foundation and comparing it to anything that Donald Trump has done in his life, including giving away tens of millions of his own personal money," Christie, who is chairing Trump's transition efforts, told radio host Laura Ingraham.

Koskinen was on Capitol Hill on Wednesday fielding a barrage of questions from House Republicans at a hearing before the Judiciary Committee. House conservatives are pushing articles of impeachment to get rid of the commissioner over his handling of allegations that agency members targeted tea party groups, but it's unlikely any vote will happen before the fall election.

Trump, meanwhile, has broken with decades of modern presidential politics in refusing to release his personal tax returns, saying that he is being audited by the IRS.