Trump Organization might be forced out of two New York golf courses

Yet to be decided is whether the Trump Organization will continue to own and operate three major holdings in the region.

The $250 million civil fraud trial of the Trump Organization, which began with great acclaim this week in a Manhattan courtroom, will bring Trump’s Hudson Valley holdings back to public prominence.

Yet to be decided is whether the Trump Organization will continue to own and operate three major holdings in the region: Trump National Golf Club in Briarcliff Manor; Trump National Golf Club Hudson Valley in Hopewell Junction; and the historic Seven Springs estate in Bedford, North Castle and New Castle.

These three facilities were part of the case brought by state Attorney General Letitia James, who alleged that the Trump Organization had wildly exaggerated the value of its holdings in its statements of financial condition that are used by lending institutions when determining whether to approve loans.

Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron in late September ruled that Trump committed fraud with his exaggerated valuations of Trump Tower in Manhattan, Mar-a-Lago in Florida, Seven Springs, as well as his golf courses, including those in the Hudson Valley.

More: Take a look at the golf courses owned by Donald Trump

The non-jury trial, which is expected to grind on until sometime in December, concerns six remaining claims, which include how much the Trump Organization will owe in penalties to New York state. James is seeking $250 million and a ban on Trump doing business in New York.

That could impact Trump’s golf courses in Briarcliff and Hopewell Junction. It could also determine the fate of Seven Springs, the sprawling estate that covers more than 200 acres where Trump first proposed a world-class golf course and luxury housing development. Rebuffed on his golf course plan, Trump scaled back to a much smaller luxury home development.

That too failed to get off the ground in several iterations, with approvals for the final seven-lot subdivision in Bedford never finalized. That led Trump’s decision to put much of the land under a conservation easement in 2016.

2023 LIV Golf DC
Former President Donald Trump (right) jokes with golfer Patrick Reed (left) at the first tee during the Pro-Am tournament at LIV Golf. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

Trump, the leading candidate for the Republican nomination for president in 2024 who faces four indictments on state and federal charges, appeared in court on the first two days of the trial. There, he has engaged in his trademark political theatre outside of the courtroom, assailing the judge and the entire legal process.

“This is a judge that should be disbarred,” Trump said on Monday. “This is a judge that should be out of office. This is a judge that some people say could be charged criminally for what he’s doing. He’s interfering with an election, and it’s a disgrace.”

In Briarcliff Manor, Mayor Steve Vescio said he’s concerned if Trump loses control of the course, which the former president bought from the struggling Briar Hall Golf and Country Club for $7.5 million in 1996. After the investment of a reported $45 million in redesigning the course and building a new clubhouse, the new Trump National was unveiled in 2002.

Vescio, whose father, William, clashed with the Trump Organization while village mayor from 2004 to 2015, said he’s concerned that another entity might not maintain the course at the same high standard as the Trump Organization.

“There was a long approval process for the new course, and Trump reactivated a site that had been neglected,” Vescio said. “They have taken good care of the property, and have worked well with the village. They’ve been a good neighbor.”

Engoron found that from 2013 to 2020, Trump’s financial condition reports included a premium of 15% or 30% premium on value, based on the Trump brand, on seven golf courses, including Trump National Hudson Valley in Hopewell Junction.

At Trump National in Briarcliff Manor, Trump in 2014 valued the golf club portion at $16.5 million when it was considering donating a conservation easement. Yet that same year, the club’s value more than tripled to $73 million in his financial condition report.

Trump’s legal team had argued that his appraisers had used a “fixed assets” approach to valuation in the higher value, which included what Trump spent to acquire and maintain the property. But Engoron found such a valuation was “false and misleading.”

“The price for which you purchase property is not necessarily the price for which you can sell it,” he wrote.

The lawsuit also alleges that Trump inflated the value of Trump National Hudson Valley because the financial statement did not disclose that Trump has a lease for the property, and did not account for the rent the company paid to the landlord.

David McKay Wilson writes about tax issues and government accountability. Follow him on Twitter @davidmckay415 or email him at dwilson3@lohud.com

[lawrence-related id=778398245,778395076,778391997,778377130]

Take a look at the golf courses owned by Donald Trump

There are 12 Trump Golf-owned properties in the U.S., two in Scotland, one in Ireland and one in the United Arab Emirates.

Before Donald Trump was elected President of the United States, he was well known in the golf community as the namesake of the courses and grounds that share his name.

There are 12 Trump Golf-owned properties in the United States, two in Scotland, one in Ireland and one in the United Arab Emirates. The Trump Organization manages Trump Golf Links at Ferry Point in New York, though for a short period of time it lost control until winning a legal battle. It also has three golf properties opening soon: two in Indonesia and one in Dubai.

Seven of the current Trump Golf-owned/managed properties are open to the public for tee times and nine of the clubs are private.

Here’s a look at the 16 current Trump Golf properties around the world.

Opinion: Annika Sorenstam and much of golf world refuse to break from Donald Trump

Annika Sorenstam, speaking to the news media for the first time since accepting the Medal of Freedom, said she’s “not one to second guess.”

Annika Sorenstam, the Hall of Fame golfer who flew to Washington, D.C., to stand next to outgoing President Donald Trump less than 24 hours after he incited the deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, was given a chance Tuesday to repudiate Trump, to apologize for her actions and to admit she made a mistake.

She did none of that. Failing miserably to comprehend the gravity of her association with one of the darkest days in American history, she instead fell back on embarrassing, insipid clichés.

“I’m not one to look back,” she told Golfweek.

“I’m not one to second guess,” she told Golf Channel.

Sorenstam is not one to say much of anything because she, like so many in the staid, elitist game of golf, has sold her soul for Donald Trump.

For every step golf takes to try to enter the 20th century before too much more of the 21st goes by, it takes a step backward and reminds us exactly what it is:

A Trump-loving, rich white man’s game, mostly; a sport almost completely out of touch with what’s happening in this diverse land outside the walls of its exclusive country clubs and the windows of its private jets.

At noon ET Wednesday, as Trump departs in disgrace, his presidency in shambles, the United States will be led by President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. But there will be many in golf who will maintain an allegiance to Trump no matter what, including corporate leaders who run the game, and the men’s and women’s Tour players who have strongly and openly supported him.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Golf could change if it really wanted to. We’ve seen examples already. Little more than a week ago, the PGA of America moved at lightning speed (for golf) to strip Trump and his beloved Bedminster of the 2022 PGA Championship. A few days after that, Ralph Lauren dumped PGA Tour star Justin Thomas after he was caught using a homophobic slur at a tournament.

Was the real world finally closing in on golf? Was the game finally getting its head out of the sand trap?

Then came Tuesday, and Sorenstam’s pitiful performance with the golf media when asked about showing up to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Trump on Jan. 7 with fellow golfer Gary Player. It should be noted that New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick, hardly one to bow to political pressure of any kind, canceled on Trump a few days later rather than be seen with him accepting the same award.

So here was Sorenstam’s chance to right a wrong, to correct the record, to make her break from Trump. She’s a trailblazing women’s sports icon, a description rarely attached to a Trump fan. This was her moment.

She blew it. Not once did she mention Trump by name. After retweeting Jack Nicklaus’ long endorsement of Trump before the election, does she still support him? We have no idea. Her husband, Mike McGee, a very public Trump supporter, has deleted his Twitter account. She has not said why. She has not posted any photos of the Medal of Freedom ceremony. Why not?

This matters because Sorenstam is much more than a 50-year-old retired LPGA legend. She is the new president of the International Golf Federation. She has made herself the preeminent golf role model for girls, with a brand known around the world. As she stood for her Golf Channel interview, she was a human salesperson, with logos for Lexus, Mastercard, Cutter & Buck and Callaway visible on her shirt and hat.

What have those corporations said about the appearance with Trump? Not a peep.

Silence has gripped all kinds of people who should have an opinion on a golf superstar’s visit with the man who incited the deadly assault on our democracy. LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan never replied to a Jan. 7 text message seeking comment on the issue, while U.S. Golf Association president J. Stuart Francis replied to an email saying, “On the topic you asked about, I am not in a position to comment on it.”

Isn’t the game of golf bigger and better than Donald Trump? Isn’t our nation more important than one powerful golf course owner? Isn’t golf supposed to be about honor and ethics and decency? What in the world are these people so afraid of?

Forward Press podcast: Golf’s reaction to President Donald Trump, Justin Thomas’ homophobic slur

How should golf distance itself from President Donald Trump and where should the PGA Championship be played, Golfweek’s Forward Press asks.

Welcome to episode 76 of Forward Press, a weekly podcast from your friends at Golfweek.

In this edition of Forward Press, Golfweek’s David Dusek chats with Adam Schupak about golf’s relationship with President Donald Trump, where the 2022 PGA Championship will likely be played, how the public view of Justin Thomas could change after his poor word choice at Kapalua and more.

You can download the Forward Press podcast and listen on all of your favorite platforms, including: iTunesStitcherSpotifyCastbox and Radio Public.

Did you like what you heard? You can catch up on previous episodes of the Forward Press podcast here.

[lawrence-related id=778082597,778082108,778081676,778080692]

Projecting normalcy, Trump leaves the White House to go golfing in Virginia

President Donald Trump left the White House Saturday to play golf amid the country’s reopening from the COVID-19 pandemic.

WASHINGTON — In what is perhaps the latest sign that the White House is eager to project a sense of normalcy during the coronavirus pandemic, President Donald Trump returned to the golf course Saturday.

The president arrived at his Trump National golf club in Northern Virginia wearing a white baseball cap and polo shirt. It marked the president’s first trip to the course — a favorite of his —since the pandemic began.

As much of the nation remained indoors under stay-at-home orders, Trump stayed in the White House for most of April. Trump left the White House at the end of the month to travel to the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland, and has traveled to several states to tour coronavirus response efforts.

Golf courses in Virginia remained open under Governor Ralph Northam’s stay-at-home orders.

[jwplayer WUpytwSc-vgFm21H3]

He last visited his Virginia golf course in October of 2019, though he also visited his course in Florida in March.

The White House did not respond to a request for information about the president’s activities. The Trump White House rarely confirms that the president is playing golf.

Trump’s trip came a day after Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus coordinator, said that the Washington, D.C., metro area has the highest positive COVID rate of any city in the country. Birx suggested that Americans could “potentially” play golf if they are “very careful and you don’t touch the flags, and all of those issues.”

The president’s decision to visit his golf course drew fire from critics on social media, many of whom noted that the nation is inching toward 100,000 deaths from the virus.

“And where, this Memorial Day weekend, is Trump? Working hard to avoid the next 100,000 deaths?” tweeted John Weaver, a GOP consultant and frequent Trump critic. “No. He’s golfing, which is Lazy Caligula’s form of fiddling.”

Trump Golf properties have reopened in Los Angeles, Miami

Eric Trump, executive vice president of the Trump Organization, made the announcement on Monday.

Trump Golf properties in Los Angeles and Miami are open after previously closing due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Eric Trump, son of President Donald Trump and executive vice president of the Trump Organization, announced on Monday that Trump National Golf Club in Los Angeles and Trump National Doral in Miami have both re-opened.

Trump National in Los Angeles re-opened Saturday, according to the club’s Twitter account.

“The courses are absolutely impeccable and our teams are waiting for you!” Eric wrote in part in a tweet.

Trump Doral temporarily laid off 560 workers in April after shutting down operations mid-March due to the threat of COVID-19. As of Tuesday morning, there were 41,923 confirmed cases and 1,779 deaths associated with the virus in the state of Florida, according to the USA TODAY.

Trump Doral is also the site the President once planned to host the 2020 Group of Seven Summit in June.

[lawrence-related id=778042628,778037331,778036241,778007241]

John Daly urges people to drink vodka to cure coronavirus

In a video posted by The Trump Organization, golfer John Daly claims he has a cure for COVID-19 that will help golfers play sooner.

In a recent video posted to YouTube, John Daly comes across as either drunk or just ignorant to the facts of the coronavirus pandemic. Or maybe he’s making a lame attempt at humor. It’s hard to tell.

Daly claims he has a cure for COVID-19 that will help us “get over this thing pretty soon and we’ll get back out playing a lot more golf” in a 50-second video shared by The Trump Organization on April 9.

“I only drink one drink a day, it just happens to be a bottle of good old Belvedere,” Daly said while holding the clear bottle of vodka up toward the camera. “Just drink one of these a day. You know, sippy, sippy on a McDonald’s diet Coke ya know, wash it down pretty good. Never have a hangover.

“And that’s the way you kill this coronavirus I believe. But ya’ll be safe, take care and hopefully we’ll be getting back to the things we do best pretty soon.”

Actually, the World Health Organization says alcohol may put people at increased risk of contracting the coronavirus.

The 53-year-old is a two-time major champion who competes on the PGA Tour Champions. He has struggled with health issues and alcohol addiction throughout his career.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADpkIYLYoOg]

Last year he applied and was approved to use a cart at the PGA Championship through the Americans with Disabilities Act, citing arthritis in his right knee. Five years ago Daly suffered from a collapsed lung and was hospitalized, later quipping that doctors thought he had a heart attack. “But I only smoke two packs of cigarettes a day, not three.”

The video posted by The Trump Organization, which says it’s the “most globally recognized business brand in luxury real estate, golf, hospitality & entertainment founded by Donald J. Trump,” appears at first to be Daly’s pitch for the president’s golf clubs. Daly has played golf with him while Trump has been in office, calling last year’s outing at the president’s Bedminster club in New Jersey, “one of the greatest days of my life.”

In his message, Daly tells people to “be healthy, be smart, and hopefully we’ll get over this thing pretty soon and we’ll get back out playing a lot more golf and everybody go back to work.”

[lawrence-related id=777997413,777992350,777990457,777990151]