Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
d-31529House OversightFinancial Record

Kushner Warns Trump of Mueller Shifting Probe to Southern District, Potential RICO Forfeiture of Trump Assets

The passage outlines a specific strategy by Mueller to move parts of the investigation to the Southern District of New York, cites internal warnings from Jared Kushner to Donald Trump, and mentions po Kushner told Trump that Mueller planned to shift investigation beyond the Russia probe to the Southe Mueller allegedly divided evidence and sent portions to other jurisdictions to keep the probe aliv

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #021133
Pages
2
Persons
2
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage outlines a specific strategy by Mueller to move parts of the investigation to the Southern District of New York, cites internal warnings from Jared Kushner to Donald Trump, and mentions po Kushner told Trump that Mueller planned to shift investigation beyond the Russia probe to the Southe Mueller allegedly divided evidence and sent portions to other jurisdictions to keep the probe aliv

Tags

asset-forfeiturericotrump-organizationmueller-investigationfinancial-flowforeign-influence-trump-tower-jared-kushnergovernment-prosecution-strategsouthern-district-of-new-yorklegal-exposuremoderate-importancehouse-oversightpreet-bharararudy-giuliani

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
for the Trump Organization records: it was a deep and encompassing order, reaching many years back. Kushner also warned his father-in-law that the investigation was about to spill over from the Mueller team, with its narrow focus on Russian collu- sion, to the Southern District of New York—that is, the federal prosecutor's office in Manhattan—which would not be restricted to the Russia probe. This was a work-around intended to circumvent the special counsel's restriction to Russia-related matters, but also an effort by the Mueller team to short- circuit any attempt by the president to disband or curtail its investiga- tion. By moving parts of the investigation to the Southern District, Mueller, as Kushner explained to Trump, was ensuring that the investigation of the president would continue even without the special counsel. Mueller was playing a canny, or ass-protecting, game, while also following precise pro- cedures: even as he focused on the limited area of his investigation, he was divvying up evidence of other possible crimes and sending it out to other jurisdictions, all of which were eager to be part of the hunt. It gets worse, Kushner told Trump. The Southern District was once run by Trump's friend Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York. In the 1980s, when Giuliani was the federal prosecutor—and when, curiously, James Comey had worked for him— the Southern District became the premier prosecutor of the Mafia and of Wall Street. Giuliani had pioneered using a draconian, and many believed unconstitutional, interpretation of the RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) Act against the Mob. He used the same interpre- tation against big finance, and in 1990 the threat of a RICO indictment, under which the government could almost indiscriminately seize assets, brought down the investment bank Drexel Burnham Lambert. The Southern District had long been worrisome to Trump. After his election, he had an unseemly meeting with Preet Bharara, the federal pros- ecutor there, a move whose optics were alarming to all of his advisers, including Don McGahn and the incoming attorney general, Jeff Sessions. (The meeting foreshadowed the one Trump would shortly have with Comey, during which he sought a pledge of loyalty in return for job secu- rity.) His meeting with Bharara was unsatisfactory: Bharara was unwill- SIEGE : 19 ing to humor him—or, shortly, even to return his calls. In March 2017, Trump fired him. Now, said Kushner, even without Bharara, the Southern District was looking to treat the Trump Organization as a Mob-like enterprise; its law- yers would use the RICO laws against it and go after the president as if he were a drug lord or Mob don. Kushner pointed out that corporations had no Fifth Amendment privilege, and that you couldn't pardon a corpora- tion. As well, assets used in or derived from the commission of a crime could be seized by the government. In other words, of the more than five hundred companies and separate entities in which Donald Trump had been an officer, up until he became president, many might be subject to forfeiture. One potential casualty of a successful forfeiture action was the president's signature piece of real estate: the government could seize Trump Tower. +t 4 In mid-March, a witness with considerable knowledge of the Trump Organization's operations traveled by train to Washington to appear before the Mueller grand jury. Picked up at Union Station by the FBI, the wit- ness was driven to the federal district court. From 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., two prosecutors on the Mueller team, Aaron Zelinsky and Jeannie Rhee, reviewed with the witness, among other issues, the structure of the Trump Organization. The prosecutors asked the witness about the people who regularly talked to Trump, how often they met with him, and for what purposes. They also asked how meetings with Trump were arranged and where they took place. The witness’s testimony yielded, among other useful pieces of information, a signal fact: all checks issued by the Trump Organization were personally signed by Donald Trump himself. The Trump Organization's activities in Atlantic City were a particular subject of interest that day. The witness was asked about Trump’s rela- tionship with known Mafia members—not if he had such relationships, but the nature of the relationships prosecutors already knew existed. The prosecutors also wanted to know about Trump Tower Moscow, a project

Related Documents (6)

DOJ Data Set 9OtherUnknown

DS9 Document EFTA00316512

25p
DOJ Data Set 9OtherUnknown

SDNY News Clips, February 22, 2019

SDNY News Clips, February 22, 2019 SDNY News Clips Friday, February 22, 2019 Contents Public Corruption 2 Ulrich 2 Manafort 4 Mueller 7 Inauguration Committee 14 R. Kelly 16 General Crimes 22 Okoumou 22 Civil Division 24 NYCHA 24 Civil Frauds 27 FEMA 27 Matters of Interest 32 Judge rules DOJ violated the law by failing to confer with victims of Jeffrey Epstein 32 The Lawyers Who Did Not Break 34 New Attorney General in Hot Seat as Mueller Report Nears 36 1 EFTA00065022 SDNY News Clips, February 22, 2019 Public Corruption Ulrich Teamsters ex-vice president took bribes from health plan administrator: feds Daily News By Stephen Rex Brown 2/21/19 His future's on the rocks. The ex-vice president of a Teamsters union that reps beverage industry workers took tens of thousands of dollars in bribes from a health plan administrator, federal prosecutors charged Thursday. John Ulrich, who served as the vice president of International Brotherhood of T

37p
House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Manuscript excerpts alleging internal chaos, legal pressure, and possible financial improprieties in the Trump White House

The passage provides a narrative of alleged internal conflicts, lawyer‑client dynamics, and speculative financial schemes (e.g., the Trump‑Epstein Palm Beach house deal, Kushner‑Apollo financing) that Alleged $55 million profit for Trump on a Palm Beach house purchased via Deutsche Bank financing and Kushner’s $184 million financing from Apollo Global Management and the suggestion that the Souther

47p
DOJ Data Set 9OtherUnknown

Subject: SDNY News Clips Thursday, Feb. 22, 2019

From: To: Cc: Bee: Subject: SDNY News Clips Thursday, Feb. 22, 2019 Date: Fri, 22 Feb 2019 21:38:37 +0000 Importance: Normal Attachments: 2019_2-22_NewsClips.pdf SDNY News Clips Friday, February 22, 2019 EFTA00064994 Contents Public Corrupt) Ulrich Manafort Mueller Inauguration Committee R. Kelly General Crimes Okoumou Civil Division NYCHA Civil Frauds FEMA Matters of Interest Judge rules DOJ violated the law by failing to confer with victims of Jeffrey Epstein The Lawyers Who Did Not Break New Attorney General in Hot Seat as Mueller Report Nears Public Corruption Ulrich Teamsters ex-vice president took bribes from health plan administrator: feds Daily News By Stephen Rex Brown 2/21/19 His future's on the rocks. The ex-vice president of a Teamsters union that reps beverage industry workers took tens of thousands of dollars in bribes from a health plan administrator, federal prosecutors charged Thursday. John Ulrich, who served as the vice president

28p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Alleged Internal Memo Suggests Mueller Team Drafted Obstruction Indictment Against President Trump

The passage claims insider knowledge that the Special Counsel’s office prepared a concrete obstruction‑of‑justice indictment against President Trump, requiring Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s Alleged draft obstruction indictment prepared by Mueller team. Requires approval from Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. Mentions potential conflict with President’s pardon authority over Michae

5p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Bannon discusses firing Mueller, protecting Trump and family finances

The passage contains speculative, unverified statements about internal White House discussions, naming senior officials and suggesting political maneuvering, but offers no concrete evidence, dates, tr Steve Bannon allegedly advises Trump on firing Mueller, Sessions, and Rosenstein. Mentions potential replacement of DOJ leadership with loyalists like Rudy Giuliani or Chris Christie References a pos

1p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.