Asbury Park Press

Super PAC helps with Trump legal bills

Transfers by MAGA Inc. helping keep fund afloat

- Erin Mansfield and Zac Anderson

A pro-Trump super PAC has been transferri­ng millions of dollars every month to the former president’s fund for paying his ballooning legal bills. The transfers have kept the fund, Save America, afloat as it bled tens of millions of dollars on legal bills in the year since a New York grand jury indicted former President Donald Trump, the first in a wave of criminal indictment­s and civil judgments against him.

Save America, launched days after Trump lost the 2020 election, is a type of fund called a “leadership PAC” that can only accept $5,000 per election cycle from each donor but has few restrictio­ns on how it spends money. It is being funded by Make America Great Again Inc., or MAGA Inc., a super PAC that started in 2022 and can raise unlimited amounts of money.

In the past, Save America’s highest spending involved audio-visual expenses for Trump’s public appearance­s and donations to other groups, including MAGA Inc. But the money Save America spent on legal bills, including to firms that represent Trump in civil and criminal cases, has skyrockete­d in the past two years.

So MAGA Inc. has stepped in to bail out Save America by paying it back. It sent $5 million at the beginning of every month from last July through February to Save America, totaling $40 million, in addition to $12.3 million that MAGA Inc. transferre­d in May and June, according to records from the Federal Election Commission.

It’s more money than MAGA Inc. has spent on independen­t expenditur­es, such as advertisem­ents for Trump and against opponents like former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, since it started in 2022. That totaled $50.5 million since the beginning of 2023, compared to $52.3 million in transfers to Save America since May.

“It’s hard for me to think of another example where this has happened,” said

Daniel Weiner, director of elections and government at the Brennan Center for Justice, an advocacy group on democracy law based at New York University.

MAGA Inc. is sending the money to Save America to refund the $60 million it donated to MAGA Inc. in 2022 while it was on a spending spree. It would be illegal for the super PAC to simply donate its unlimited contributi­ons to Save America, which has to follow federal contributi­on limits.

“This is certainly out of the ordinary,” Weiner said. “It was out of the ordinary for the leadership PAC to make a giant contributi­on to a super PAC, and now to do this kind of strange refund system, that is also something you would not normally see.”

Spending on civil, criminal cases

The transfer scheme has not provided a windfall for Save America, even though it raised more than $200 million since its creation. The PAC spent more than $64 million on legal bills through the end of report year 2023. Other money went to candidates during the 2022 election, outside organizati­ons tied to former White House aides, and paying staff, even the former first lady’s fashion

designer.

While public records can’t say what, specifical­ly, law firms are being paid to do, records show Save America has paid more than 70 different lawyers and law firms, and many are listed on court paperwork representi­ng Trump in his civil and criminal cases.

Most recently, three of the four firms that submitted a court document saying he couldn’t pay a $454 million judgment in a fraud case against the Trump Organizati­on – Habba Madaio & Associates LLP, Robert and Robert PLLC, and Continenta­l PLLC – are some of Save America’s highest-paid firms.

“He appears to be spending an incredible amount of campaign finance money on legal expenses that range well beyond what would be considered campaign related,” said Michael Kang, a law professor at Northweste­rn University. “I doubt, however, that we’ll get to the bottom of all this until much later on.”

PACs hire lawyers regularly, but generally for other purposes. Lawyers often file paperwork with the Federal Election Commission, help candidates get on the ballot in various states, or even help get a campaign through a recount.

The Jan. 6 committee dinged Trump for fundraisin­g for an “Official Election

Defense Fund” in the days after the 2020 election, when the fund didn’t exist and instead went to Save America. But Trump has more recently used his legal issues to ask his supporters for money, with the money going to a fundraisin­g vehicle that currently pours into his 2024 campaign and Save America. (Campaign money cannot be used for personal expenses.)

Since Wednesday, Trump’s main fundraisin­g arm has sent messages to supporters saying, “Democrats want to seize my properties,” referring to New York Attorney General Letitia James’ ability to seize his personal assets if he fails to pay the $454 million judgment in the Trump Organizati­on case.

To stave off collection while he appeals that verdict, Trump is required to put up the $454 million or a bond for it by Monday, which his lawyers described as a “practical impossibil­ity.” But help may be on the way: a just-announced deal to take his social media platform, Truth Social, and its parent company public could generate more than $3 billion for him.

Trump behind Biden in fundraisin­g

The enormous legal bills have caused Trump to fall behind in 2024 campaign fundraisin­g. President Joe Biden’s campaign raised $21.3 million in February and spent $6.3 million, increasing its cash on hand from $56 million at the end of January to $71 million at the end of February. In the same time period, Trump’s campaign collected $10.9 million and spent $7.8 million, increasing its cash on hand from $30.5 million in January to $33.5 million.

The numbers show that Biden’s campaign is sitting on $37.5 million more cash than Trump’s, meaning that if the former president hadn’t spent more than $64 million on legal bills, and had instead put the money in his campaign account, he would have more money in the bank than the current president.

“I think both sides are going to have a lot of money, but if Trump has to divert a lot of his resources to his legal problems that’s money that’s not going to be spent on getting out the vote,” said Republican consultant Alex Conant.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Enormous legal bills have caused former President Donald Trump to fall behind President Joe Biden in 2024 campaign fundraisin­g.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES Enormous legal bills have caused former President Donald Trump to fall behind President Joe Biden in 2024 campaign fundraisin­g.

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