Trump Casino A Money Tree

  1. Casinos Owned By Donald Trump

Declaring that it's payback time for those who kicked him when he was down, Donald Trump filed a $500 million lawsuit Wednesday against the Pritzker family of Chicago and their Hyatt hotel chain.

Trump's action, filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, charges the Pritzkers used 'fraud, extortion and money laundering' in a bid to force him out of his 50 percent ownership in the New York Grand Hyatt.

Trump had started building his Atlantic City casino empire by borrowing money at high interest rates, and when he opened another casino and started pouring money into the new Trump Taj Mahal. ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino was fined $200,000 on Wednesday for shuffling black and female dealers to accommodate the perceived preferences of a big- betting craps player. ″The violations are gravely serious,″ Casino Control Commissioner Valerie Armstrong said. Investigation Reveals that Trump Made Millions from Drug Money Laundering in Panama. President Donald Trump made millions of dollars in profits by allowing Colombian drug cartels and other groups to launder money through a Trump-affiliated hotel in Panama, according to an investigation by the organization Global Witness.

Trump says the Pritzkers wanted him out because of an exclusivity clause in his contract blocking any further hotel expansion by Hyatt in the New York metropolitan area. His suit demands a jury trial and exclusive ownership of the hotel.

Trump Casino A Money Tree

His battle with the Pritzkers-Jay, Thomas, Nicholas and Robert-began in 1975. That was just before Trump, then 28, built the Grand Hyatt after first buying the decrepit Commodore Hotel at Grand Central Station from the bankrupt Penn Central Railroad for $10 million.

Trump wheedled a $120 million tax abatement from the city and persuaded bankers to lend him $80 million more for a project that wound up revitalizing the entire area. With both his fortune and his celebrity made, Trump went on to build a series of other projects, prominently bearing his name.

The collapse of the real estate and junk-bond markets knocked Trump down, but-despite the hopes of his many enemies-not out. Today he owns three casinos and a hotel on Atlantic City's famed boardwalk.

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Before the Grand Hyatt opened in 1980, Trump sold 50 percent of it, along with a management contract, to the Pritzkers. In return, he demanded and received an exclusivity clause under which the Pritzkers were forbidden to open, own or manage any other large-scale hotel in Manhattan or the city's other four boroughs, including at Kennedy or LaGuardia airports, without Trump's approval.

Trump said Wednesday that the Pritzkers wanted to build more hotels in New York and were willing to wreck the Hyatt if necessary to achieve their goal.

'What they wanted to do is make the hotel so unprofitable that I would sell them my interest for nothing and they could get out of the restrictive covenant,' he said.

To that end, Trump's suit charges that the Pritzkers extracted $60 million in unearned management fees, transacted business with other Pritzker-owned corporations to bilk the hotel of additional money and netted even more funds through 'improper bookkeeping.' His suit further alleges that the Pritzkers gave free hotel accommodations to Hyatt executives and that a high-ranking Hyatt officer used hotel funds to renovate a private residence.

'Hyatt hired Marriott for $75,000 to teach them how to do the laundry in the Grand Hyatt,' Trump said. 'Hyatt spent $250,000 in consultant fees to study the roof for leaks. They would order a chair in New York, then ship it to Chicago. They would get a design fee for a chair that is already designed, then take a shipping fee and a storage fee after storing it for a couple of months before sending it back to New York.

'One of the top Hyatt officers in the hotel was caught-by me, not by them-writing checks in excess of $100,000 on the hotel account to fix up an apartment in Port Chester, N.Y. Despite my reporting it, they haven't even let him go. He spent thousands of dollars for marble, paintings-you have no idea. What they've done is disgraceful, and I'm going to stop them.'

In a statement, Richard Schulze, a spokesman for Hyatt, called Trump's suit 'totally without merit. It is just another lawsuit filed by Trump as a diversionary tactic, attempting to intimidate and to substitute publicity for substance.'

Schulze said Trump has refused to make required payments on Grand Hyatt obligations, and that Hyatt has begun two arbitration proceedings to force him to do so. 'In the meantime,' Schulze's statement said, 'Trump's new lawsuit will be dealt with in court, which is the appropriate forum.'

Trump said Hyatt's cruelest blow of all came in 1991 when, overextended by the junk bond-financed construction of his Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, he found himself hundreds of millions of dollars in debt.

The burden forced him to swap mortgage debt for equity by selling his yacht, the Trump Shuttle and his stake in the Plaza Hotel, which he continued to control. That, he said, is when the Pritzkers tried to finish him off.

'I was a great partner,' Trump said. 'I built this hotel, and I did it quickly, efficiently and effectively. Then I turned it over to them and left them alone. I trusted them, but when I was in trouble two and a half years ago, and in the middle of a horrendous divorce, rather than say, `You've been a great partner; what can we do to help?' they made a capital call for almost $40 million to fix up the Grand Hyatt. In addition, they called for $62 million to cover various shortfalls in operating accounts.'

Trump's version of the arbitration cases in which he and Hyatt are pitted is that in one, the $62 million amount was reduced to less than $1 million, and that the other, involving $40 million, is pending.

'They attacked me when I was down,' Trump said. 'Now I'm doing great again and it's my turn. I always said, the first time I got back on my feet, the Pritzkers would be the first people I'd go after.'

The Pritzkers and Hyatt are no strangers to litigation. In 1978 the Securities and Exchange Commission found that the Pritzkers had used Hyatt to engage in 'self-dealing' to the detriment of shareholders.

In a 1988 suit Jay Pritzker was assessed a $150 million judgment after a jury found in favor of Paul S. Dopp, a New Jersey businessman who accused Pritzker of using 'deceit or duress' to breach a 1984 contract to join him in buying the Dorado Beach and Cerromar casino hotels in Puerto Rico. That judgment remains under appeal.

Additional material published Aug. 4, 1993:Corrections and clarifications.A Page 1 story in the July 29 Tribune about a lawsuit filed by Donald Trump against Hyatt Hotels and its owners, the Pritzker family of Chicago, reported that a judgment against the Pritzkers as the result of a suit filed by New Jersey businessman Paul S. Dopp remains under appeal. A second jury has found for Dopp, and the case is no longer under appeal. The Tribune regrets the error.

Well, it had to happen. Today was the day the Jews got their turn with The Donald.

Republican frontrunner Donald Trump, a self-proclaimed BFF of Israel, came off as anything but mishpocheh when he started talking about the chosen people, money and the art the deal at the Republican Jewish Coalition conference Thursday in Washington.

As soon as Trump started talking, social media exploded with accusations of stereotyping.

RELATED: Donald Trump Stumbles in Pitch to Republican Jews With Stereotype-Filled Spiel

Here’s what he said today, plus four other cringeworthy comments about the Tribe from the past.


1) Jews are Hagglers

“I know why you’re not going to support me. You’re not going to support me because I don’t want your money …Look, I’m a negotiator like you folks, we’re negotiators.” (Today at the RJC.)



2) One of My Favorite Daughters is Jewish

“I want to thank my Jewish daughter. I have a Jewish daughter…This wasn’t in the plan but I’m very glad it happened.” (The Algemeiner’s ‘Jewish 100′ at Capitale. Feb. 2015.)


3) How ‘Bout That Jon Leibowitz — I Mean Stewart

“I promise you that I’m much smarter than Jonathan Leibowitz - I mean Jon Stewart @TheDailyShow. Who, by the way, is totally overrated.” (A tweet about Jon Stewart in April 2013.)



4) Debbie Wasserman Schultz is “Neurotic” (Read: Jewish Woman)

“This is a woman that is a terrible person,” Trump said of Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz after calling her “crazy” and a “highly neurotic woman.”(Last month on Breitbart News show on Sirius XM Radio.)



5) Not That I’ve Actually Read Hitler…

“If I had these speeches, and I am not saying that I do, I would never read them… My friend Marty Davis from Paramount gave me a copy of Mein Kampf, and he’s a Jew.” (Trump’s response in a 1990 profile on whether he read Hitler’s writings.)

(Marty Davis is not Jewish)

You have to give plaudits to Donald Trump for chutzpah. Who else gives a border line anti-Semitic speech at the Republican Jewish Coalition?— Ben Jacobs (@Bencjacobs) December 3, 2015

Casinos Owned By Donald Trump

“I’m a negotiator, like you folks” — Trump. You know, because Jews love to haggle.— John Podhoretz (@jpodhoretz) December 3, 2015