Trump Organization controller grilled about assets
Testifying about his responsibilities as the Trump Organization's longtime controller, co-defendant Jeffrey McConney was grilled on the stand by special counsel Andrew Amer of the New York attorney general's office.
Amer pressed McConney about alleged issues with Trump's financial documents.
Asked about why he listed assets from Vornado Trust -- which Trump did not control -- as being under Trump's control, McConney suggested it came down to accounting convenience.
"We couldn't keep adding columns for every bank or brokerage account," McConney said, later adding that the money was held in a Capital One account like the other assets, even if Trump could not access that account.
McConney testified that the individuals who accessed the spreadsheet would understand who controlled that money.
"People can make assumptions in any way they want to. The users looking at this spreadsheet would know it's not one bank account," McConney said.
McConney appeared to struggle to answer questions about the value of Trump's triplex apartment in Trump Tower, which, according to the Trump Organization, ballooned in value from $80 million in 2011 to $327 million in 2016.
The controller testified that he relied on data from the StreetEasy website, adopted cost-per-square-foot estimates from newer properties, and took other Trump Organization executives' claims about the apartment at face value.
McConney is scheduled to continue his testimony tomorrow as the day's only witness.