Tag Archives: fined

New York midwife is fined $300,000 after giving 1,500 children FAKE VACCINE records and dishing out homeopathi – Daily Mail

  1. New York midwife is fined $300,000 after giving 1,500 children FAKE VACCINE records and dishing out homeopathi Daily Mail
  2. NY midwife who gave kids homeopathic pellets instead of vaccines fined $300K for falsifying records NewsNation Now
  3. NY midwife fined $300,000 for giving 1,500 children homeopathic pellets instead of vaccinations for measles and polio TheBlaze
  4. Midwife falsified vaccine records for 1500 schoolchildren, NY health department says Gothamist
  5. N.Y. midwife administered 12.5K fake vaccines to children, including Staten Islanders SILive.com

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Nuggets’ Nikola Jokić fined $25,000, won’t be suspended for shoving Suns owner Mat Ishbia – The Athletic

  1. Nuggets’ Nikola Jokić fined $25,000, won’t be suspended for shoving Suns owner Mat Ishbia The Athletic
  2. Suns’ Mat Ishbia says Nikola Jokic suspension ‘would not be right’ – ESPN ESPN
  3. 05-08-23 – Suns Take Game 4 After Jokic Shoves Suns Owner Matt Ishbia – UFest Reset And Review w/John Near Killing Of A Small Girl In The Crowd – UFest Combined w/George Strait Fans Ending At Same Time – 98KUPD – Arizona’s Real Rock Upcoming Events – 98KUPD – Arizona’s Real Rock
  4. Was the Nikola Jokic technical foul UNCALLED FOR?! | KJM NBA on ESPN
  5. Nikola Jokic won’t be suspended for incident with Suns owner – ESPN ESPN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic avoids suspension, but fined $25K for Game 4 altercation with Suns owner Mat Ishbia – CBS Sports

  1. Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic avoids suspension, but fined $25K for Game 4 altercation with Suns owner Mat Ishbia CBS Sports
  2. Suns’ Mat Ishbia says Nikola Jokic suspension ‘would not be right’ – ESPN ESPN
  3. 05-08-23 – Suns Take Game 4 After Jokic Shoves Suns Owner Matt Ishbia – UFest Reset And Review w/John Near Killing Of A Small Girl In The Crowd – UFest Combined w/George Strait Fans Ending At Same Time – 98KUPD – Arizona’s Real Rock Upcoming Events – 98KUPD – Arizona’s Real Rock
  4. #1 NUGGETS at #4 SUNS | FULL GAME 4 HIGHLIGHTS | May 7, 2023 NBA
  5. Nikola Jokic T’d up after making contact with Suns’ Mat Ishbia – ESPN ESPN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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4 Florida restaurants fined $253K for not paying servers’ wages – Business Insider

  1. 4 Florida restaurants fined $253K for not paying servers’ wages Business Insider
  2. US Department of Labor recovers $3.1M in wages, benefits for 3100 workers employed by a federal subcontractor servicing BENEFEDS program US Department of Labor
  3. 5 Jacksonville-area Kazu Sushi Burritos violated labor laws, more than $200K in back wages recovered ActionNewsJax.com
  4. Restaurant chain paid workers below minimum wage and kept tips in Florida, feds say Miami Herald
  5. Millions in Worker Back Wages and Benefits Recovered by DOL Bloomberg Law
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Warriors’ Stephen Curry fined $25,000 for throwing mouthpiece into stands vs. Grizzlies

USATSI

The NBA announced that Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry has been fined $25,000 for throwing his mouthpiece into the stands during Wednesday night’s game against the Memphis Grizzlies. Curry was ejected for his act that occurred with just 74 seconds remaining in a close game, but the reason behind him throwing the mouthpiece stemmed from his team’s unproductive offensive possession that ended just a few seconds prior.

With 1:23 remaining in the fourth quarter and the Warriors leading by two, Klay Thompson missed a mid-range jumper that would’ve doubled the Warriors’ lead. Donte DiVincenzo grabbed the offensive board and quickly passed to Jordan Poole, and that’s where things got out of hand.

With Curry calling for the ball, Poole threw up a quick 3-pointer. He missed. Curry, out of apparent frustration with Poole, angrily tossed his mouthpiece into the stands. That led to the officials immediately ejecting him from the game.

Take a look:

The ejection was the third of Curry’s career, and the other two were memorable for similar reasons. Both involved Curry throwing his mouthpiece. One came against the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2016 NBA Finals. The other, coincidentally enough, came against these same Grizzlies in 2017.

“He knows he can’t make that mistake again,” coach Steve Kerr said after the game.

Fortunately for the Warriors, Curry’s absence didn’t cost them the game. Though the Grizzlies managed to tie the score twice, the Warriors were able to win on a thrilling layup by Poole off of an in-bounds pass with just one second left on the clock. 

Poole shared his annoyance with the decision to eject Curry after the game. “There’s no reason he should be thrown out in the last three minutes of the game,” he said on the ESPN broadcast. “He’s one of the greatest players of all time.” Regardless of the outcome, the officials will face quite a bit of scrutiny for their decision to eject Curry. In a nationally televised game between two Western Conference rivals, the fans want to stars like Curry on the floor, not ejected for brief displays of emotion. 

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UK PM Rishi Sunak Gets Fined By Police For Failing To Wear Seatbelt

British police issued PM Rishi Sunak with a fine for riding in a car without wearing his seat belt.

London:

British police issued Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with a fine on Friday for riding in a car without wearing his seat belt in order to film a clip for social media.

Sunak, who apologised on Thursday for what he called a “brief error of judgement”, filmed a video in the back seat of his car while travelling in the north of England, without wearing a seat belt.

“Following the circulation of a video on social media showing an individual failing to wear a seat belt while a passenger in a moving car in Lancashire we have today issued a 42-year-old man from London with a conditional offer of fixed penalty,” Lancashire Police said on Twitter.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Trump fined nearly $1M for ‘revenge’ lawsuit against Hillary Clinton, others

Comment

Former president Donald Trump and his lawyer, Alina Habba, have been fined almost $1 million by a federal judge in Florida for what was ruled a frivolous lawsuit brought against his 2016 presidential rival Hillary Clinton and others.

Trump is a “prolific and sophisticated litigant who is repeatedly using the courts to seek revenge on political adversaries,” wrote U.S. District Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks in his searing 46-page judgment published late Thursday.

“He is the mastermind of strategic abuse of the judicial process, and he cannot be seen as a litigant blindly following the advice of a lawyer. He knew full well the impact of his actions,” said Middlebrooks. “As such, I find that sanctions should be imposed upon Mr. Trump and his lead counsel, Ms. Habba.”

Trump — who has announced his bid for the presidency in 2024 — Habba and the Habba Madaio & Associates law firm are jointly liable for $937,989.39, the court found.

The suit was filed in March 2022, with Trump alleging that Clinton and others had orchestrated “a malicious conspiracy” to spread false information that his campaign had colluded with Russia during the 2016 presidential race that he won.

It was dismissed in September by Judge Middlebrooks, who said there were “substantive defects” in the case and grievances for which a court was “not the appropriate forum.” Despite this, the judge said in his Thursday ruling that Trump’s attorney Habba had been “undeterred” after the case’s dismissal and continued to advance the claims, leading to the fine.

“Here, we are confronted with a lawsuit that should never have been filed, which was completely frivolous, both factually and legally, and which was brought in bad faith for an improper purpose,” Middlebrooks wrote, decrying what he called “abusive litigation tactics.”

In a blistering judgment he said the case was “intended for a political purpose” and showed a “continuing pattern of misuse of the courts by Mr. Trump and his lawyers,” undermining the rule of law and diverting resources. “No reasonable lawyer would have filed it,” he added.

Representatives for Trump and Habba did not immediately respond to an overnight request for comment from The Washington Post.

Along with former secretary of state Clinton, Judge Middlebrooks said 30 individuals and entities were “needlessly harmed” by the case in a bid to “advance a political narrative.” Among them were former FBI director James B. Comey, the Democratic National Committee and Christopher Steele, a former British spy hired by an opposition research firm working for the Clinton campaign who compiled a now-infamous dossier alleging ties between Trump and Russia.

Middlebrooks described the legal complaint as “a hodgepodge of disconnected, often immaterial events, followed by an implausible conclusion.” One example he cited was the alleged collusion between Comey and Clinton, a claim he said not only lacked substance, but was “categorically absurd” given the impact Comey’s announcements about the investigation into Clinton’s emails had on her 2016 campaign.

The judge also said Trump’s suit misrepresented the 2019 report by former special counsel Robert S. Mueller III by saying it had exonerated him. Mueller said only that his team had made no determination on “collusion” with the Russian government, and that it had not found sufficient evidence to charge any member of Trump’s campaign with criminal conspiracy.

“The Plaintiff consistently misrepresented and cherry-picked portions of public reports and filings to support a false factual narrative,” Thursday’s judgment found. “It happened too often to be accidental; its purpose was political, not legal.”

Trump falsely claimed in deposition that Carroll spoke about enjoying rape

The September dismissal was a victory for Clinton, who in April had asked the judge to dismiss the case. David E. Kendall, an attorney for Clinton, issued a one-sentence statement at the time, noting “the court’s opinion meticulously and comprehensively devastates Trump’s allegations.”

Trump’s team had previously unsuccessfully filed a motion to dismiss Middlebrooks, who was appointed to the bench in 1997 by President Bill Clinton.

The status of key investigations involving Donald Trump

The judgment also referenced Trump’s other lawsuits, saying they demonstrated “a pattern of abuse of the courts.” Among them were legal complaints against Twitter, CNN, New York Attorney General Letitia James and the Pulitzer Prize board for a 2018 award given jointly to The Post and the New York Times for coverage of alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Azi Paybarah contributed to this report.

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Trump news today: Deposition unsealed in rape accuser lawsuit as Trump Organization fined

Joe Rogan says ‘morons’ had a ‘king’ in Donald Trump

A judge has unsealed portions of a transcript from Donald Trump’s filmed deposition stemming from E Jean Carroll’s lawsuit against him.

In his testimony, he repeatedly denied allegations against him and claimed to not know the woman who accused him of raping her in the 1990s, calling her a “wack job” while threatening to sue her and her attorneys.

Earlier on Friday, the former president’s eponymous company was fined $1.6m after its subsidiaries were convicted of a years-long tax fraud scheme. The sentence in New York City omes days after the Trump Organization’s longtime chief financial officer was sentenced to four months in jail in connection with a sweeping investigation into the former president’s business empire.

The latest developments follow the discovery of classified documents from President Joe Biden’s time as vice president and ongoing investigations into classified documents recovered from Mr Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property. Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed Robert Hur as special counsel to oversee an investigation into Mr Biden’s case, while House Republicans are mulling plans to launch their own investigation into the president.

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Cigar smoke, dogs and no metal detectors: The bizarre first two weeks of a Republican-controlled House

The Independent’s Eric Garcia says he knows a “weird energy” when he feels one. There was definitely a vibe shift within the last two weeks of the newly GOP-controlled House, he writes.



Unsurprisingly, the House felt pretty much like a free-for-all most of the time during the past couple weeks — even after a speaker was elected. The fact that the more subdued Senate high-tailed it immediately after the swearing-in of new Senators very much gave the House a feeling of a dad giving the teenager the keys to the convertible for the weekend. Without any consequential votes for must-pass legislation, they let the good times roll.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 13:00

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ICYMI: Trump repeatedly insulted woman who accuses him of rape in newly unsealed deposition

Donald Trump repeatedly attacked a woman who accused him of rape, according to a transcript from a newly unsealed deposition.

The former president described writer E Jean Carroll as a “nut job” and rejected claims that he assaulted her in the dressing room of a luxury department store in New York City in in the mid-1990s.

“She said that I did something to her that never took place,” Mr Trump said in testimony taken under oath that was made public on Friday.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 11:00

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ICYMI: Scathing CNN compilation highlights GOP hypocrisy over Biden documents

A CNN supercut shows that Republican officials were very concerned about classified documents found at Joe Biden’s properties, but were notably less concerned when classified documents were found during the raid on Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, months after federal agents had tried and failed to get the former president to return them.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 10:00

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Why Trump, not Biden, faces more peril from the new special counsel probe

Republicans who called for Attorney General Merrick Garland to name a special prosecutor to oversee a Department of Justice probe into how classified Obama-era documents ended up at Joe Biden’s Delaware home and his former office didn’t have to wait long to see their concerns addressed.

But Trump’s allies who are demanding “equal treatment” for Mr Biden and the twice-impeached ex-president — who is himself facing an ongoing investigation into his alleged unlawful retention of national defence information at his Florida beach club and alleged obstruction of that investigation — are likely to be extremely disappointed.

The Independent’s Andrew Feinberg reports:

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 09:00

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ICYMI: Donald Trump’s company fined $1.6m for years-long tax fraud scheme

ponymous company has been fined $1.6m after a New York City jury convicted two Trump Organization subsidiaries on charges stemming from what prosecutors described as a years-long scheme to avoid paying payroll taxes by compensating top executives with lavish untaxed perks.

The December verdict on 17 felony crimes followed an indictment filed last year against the Trump Corporation, the Trump Payroll Corporation, and the Trump Organization’s long-time chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, who was sentenced to five months in jail this week.

The former longtime chief financial officer of the Trump Organization had pleaded guilty to several tax crimes stemming from the criminal investigation into the former president’s business empire.

While the resulting fines amount to less than $2m, the convictions could be used as leverage for a blockbuster $250m lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James, who accused the former president of “grossly” inflating the value of his net worth by billions of dollars in an effort to fraudulently gain tax benefits and other benefits from insurers and financial institutions.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 08:00

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Proud Boys rallied to ‘take the f****** Capitol’ before Trump’s January 6 speech, prosecutors say

Members of the far-right nationalist gang the Proud Boys rallied a crowd to “take the f****** Capitol” as a joint session of Congress convened to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election on January 6, 2021.

In opening arguments in a trial for five members of the group charged with seditious conspiracy for their actions leading up to and during the attack, federal prosecutors showed video taken roughly 20 minutes before then-President Donald Trump addressed his supporters at a nearby rally.

Assistant US Attorney Jason McCullough said the group did not intend to listen to the president’s speech; they had always planned to lead a crowd to the Capitol to forcibly stop the transfer of presidential power.

“They hoped the ‘normies’ – that is, the civilians – would burn the city to ash,” he told jurors on 12 January.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 06:00

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ICYMI: Proud Boys leader’s attorney blames Trump for ‘unleashing the mob’ on January 6 at sedition trial

A defence attorney for former longtime Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio blamed former president Donald Trump for “unleashing that mob” on 6 January, 2021, as a crowd of his supporters stormed the US Capitol.

Sabino Jauregui – whose client is charged with seditious conspiracy along with four other members of the far-right nationalist gang – said it was Mr Trump who told his supporters to march to the Capitol and “fight like hell,” not Tarrio or members of his group.

“Enrique didn’t say that. He didn’t say anything to anybody on the grounds of the Capitol. He just happens to be the leader of the Proud Boys,” Mr Jauregui said in his opening arguments in US District Court on 12 January.

Five men, including Tarrio, are charged with seditious conspiracy for their roles in the Capitol riots.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 05:00

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ICYMI: Kellyanne Conway pens op-ed on Trump’s political ‘assets’ and ‘baggage’

Trump’s former top aide Kellyanne Conway wrote a column for The New York Times (”The Cases For and Against Trump”) arguing that it would be “foolish” to assume that the former president has a “smooth and secure” path to 2024.

“This is not 2016, when he and his team had the hunger, swagger and scrappiness of an insurgent’s campaign and the ‘history be damned’ happy warrior resolve of an underestimated, understaffed, underresourced effort,” she wrote.

“It’s tough to be new twice,” she said.

Ms Conway says Trump has both “political assets to carry him forward and political baggage holding him back” and will need to rely on “fewer insults and more insights” rather than endless grievances.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 04:00

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ICYMI: McCarthy says he will ‘look at’ GOP calls to expunge Trump impeachments

Newly elected House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said he will take a look at his members’ requests to expunge one or both of Trump’s impeachments.

“I would understand why members would want to bring that forward,” he said during a press conference on Thursday. “We’d look at it.”

The former president was impeached twice while in office in the House but acquitted both times in the Senate. The House adopted two articles against him in his first impeachment – abuse of power and obstruction of Congress – following his attempts to withhold military aid to Ukraine in exchange for politically damaging information about his then-opponent Joe Biden. A second impeachment on a charge of incitement of insurrection involved his rhetoric and actions that fuelled the attack on the US Capitol.

In the last Congress, a group of more than 30 House Republicans attempted a resolution to expunge Trump’s impeachment, a measure supported by high-ranking Republican Elise Stefanik.

Alex Woodward14 January 2023 03:00

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What we know about E Jean Carroll’s rape allegations against Donald Trump

Journalist, author and columnist alleges former president raped her in a department store dressing room in the 1990s.

Graeme Massie14 January 2023 01:53

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2 SF Burger King owners fined by the state of California

The state of California Labor Commissioner’s Office has fined two San Francisco Burger King franchise owners $2.2 million in wage theft citations, which is to be paid out to 230 former employees.

This decision comes after Golden Gate Restaurant Group’s Monu Singh and Harkiran Randhawa lost an appeal of the $1.9 million fine issued in June of 2020 by the Labor Commissioner’s Office. The citation is now set at $2.2 million, which includes accrued interest.

The case originally started in 2019 when a group of Burger King employees at the infamous 1200 Market St. location, in downtown San Francisco, “basically walked off the job,” according to Alexx Campbell, a senior staff attorney at nonprofit law office Legal Aid at Work. Campbell has worked on this case since the beginning.

Through their lawyer, Colin Calvert of law firm Fisher Phillips, Singh and Randhawa denied any wrongdoing in an email to SFGATE.

“We intend to appeal and believe the ruling is unsupported by the testimony and evidence secured,” Calvert wrote.

Former employees allege Singh and Randhawa knowingly understaffed at least six San Francisco Burger King restaurants under Golden Gate Restaurant Group ownership in an effort to cut costs. The practices allegedly created unsustainable working conditions for employees, according to the labor commissioner’s investigation, which was reviewed by SFGATE.

This type of cost-cutting maneuver was not unique to the 1200 Market St. location, the investigation found.

“The violations at issue were not isolated instances that were the fault of rogue supervisors, but, based on the evidence, part and parcel of a way of operations initiated and/or known by both [owners],” read the decision by the Labor Commissioner’s Office.

Employees working at Burger King locations owned by Golden Gate Restaurant Group said they worked unpaid overtime and worked through mandatory breaks as governed by California law. They also alleged that they often doubled as cashiers, cleaners and other positions that were not their own, according to the investigation’s report.

One cook said that she worked overtime because there was no one on staff qualified to make food safely. Other employees, such as Sonia Crisostomo, were reportedly asked to arrive early and perform duties such as depositing money at the bank even after clocking out.

Managers also stated they were under intense pressure from the restaurant owners to deliver high sales numbers while keeping labor costs low, according to the Labor Commissioner’s Office. Former manager Sandra Gutierrez told investigators that she had a regular shift from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., but often showed up earlier and worked later “because there were not enough people to run the store,” the investigation report said.

She reportedly did not clock those extra hours, though, due to pressures to keep labor costs low.

The investigation also concluded that employees were often paid “10 days after the end of the biweekly pay period.”

The California Labor Commissioner’s Office alleged that Singh and Randhawa were aware of several complaints about labor shortages stemming from employees and management, but wouldn’t increase the staffing levels “unless sales were higher.”

The investigation found that the owners would consistently alter employee time cards after the fact and attributed the changes to computer “system errors” or would label it “forgot to clock in.”

Other changes by Golden Gate Restaurant Group included falsifying meal break forms to show that staff had taken a break when they hadn’t, and that the time recording software was set up in a way so that it would not allow “too many” employees to work at the same time.

Campbell, the senior staff attorney at Legal Aid at Work, said there have been two investigations by government agencies looking into Singh and Randhawa. Along with the investigation by the California Labor Commissioner’s Office, the city of San Francisco is reportedly investigating Golden Gate Restaurant Group, though any conclusions from that investigation have yet to be made public, Campbell said.

For now, the former Burger King employees will not receive any of the citation money. Because Singh and Randhawa plan to appeal this current decision, the next step in the process involves a higher court determining a final outcome. Singh and Randhawa can appeal each decision until it reaches the California Supreme Court, potentially.

“This could take a while before it gets totally resolved,” Campbell said.



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Trump Org. fined $1.6 million after conviction for 17 felonies, including tax fraud


New York
CNN
 — 

The Trump Organization was fined $1.6 million – the maximum possible penalty – by a New York judge Friday for running a decade-long tax fraud scheme, a symbolic moment because it is the only judgment for a criminal conviction that has come close to former President Donald Trump.

Two Trump entities, The Trump Corp. and Trump Payroll Corp., were convicted last month of 17 felonies, including tax fraud and falsifying business records.

Under New York law, the most the companies can be fined is about $1.6 million, a penalty the Trump Organization can easily afford.

Prosecutor Joshua Steinglass asked Judge Juan Merchan to make the Trump Org. pay the maximum fine, though he admitted that it will have a “minimal impact” on a multibillion-dollar company.

“We all know that these corporations cannot go to jail as Allen Weisselberg has,” Steinglass said Friday, referring to the Trump Organization’s long-time chief financial officer who was sentenced to five months in jail earlier this week as part of a deal he reached with prosecutors. “The only way to effectively deter such conduct is to make it as expensive as possible.”

New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg, a Democrat, told CNN that the fine against the Trump Org. is important but he also wants lawmakers to raise the fines for companies that break the law.

“It’s important regardless of who the defendant is, because it’s cheating and greed and cheating the taxpayers,” Bragg said. “It obviously becomes more consequential given that it involved the former president’s corporation and CFO. It sends a message – I hope it sends a message to New Yorkers that you know we’re one system of justice and that this kind of conduct, regardless of who you are, won’t be countenanced in Manhattan.”

But, Bragg said, the fine isn’t enough of a penalty.

“It isn’t sufficient. Plain and simple,” Bragg said, saying the law should “reflect what I think many of us see, particularly those who sat through the trial and saw the 13 year you know pattern of deep greed and misconduct laid bare, we should have stiffer penalties for conduct like that.”

The Trump Org. entities have 14 days to pay the fine.

The real estate business is not at risk of being dismantled because there is no mechanism under the law to dissolve the company. No individual will go to jail based on the jury’s verdict. However, a felony conviction could impact the Trump Organization’s reputation and ability to do business or obtain loans or contracts.

Trump and his family were not charged in this case, but the former president was mentioned repeatedly during the trial by prosecutors about his connection to the un-taxed benefits doled out to certain executives, including company-funded apartments, car leases and personal expenses. One prosecutor said Trump “explicitly sanctioned” tax fraud.

One of the jurors told CNN that the jury saw a “culture of fraud,” at the Trump Organization, but referred to Trump as a nondescript “Bob Smith” at times when talking about the company owner’s awareness of the crimes in relation to the charges.

Weisselberg last year pleaded guilty to 15 felonies related to the tax fraud scheme and agreed to testify truthfully against the company at trial.

He remained on paid leave at the Trump Organization, where he was compensated a little more than $1 million a year, until Tuesday when he was sentenced. Weisselberg received a severance package that one person familiar with the deal called “generous.”

Merchan, who sentenced Weisselberg, said at the time that but for the deal he would have given Weisselberg more time in jail after listening to the evidence at trial.

Merchan said he found most “offensive” a $6,000 payroll check Weisselberg had made out to his wife, who never worked for Trump, so she could become eligible for Social Security benefits.

A Trump Org. spokesperson said that Weisselberg “is a victim,” as is the company and former president.

“New York has become the crime and murder capital of the world, yet these politically motivated prosecutors will stop at nothing to get President Trump and continue the never ending witch-hunt which began the day he announced his presidency,” the spokesperson said. “We did nothing wrong and we will appeal this verdict.”

The Manhattan district attorney’s office continues to investigate the company’s business practices.

Prosecutors are conducting a wide-ranging investigation and in recent months their focus has returned to the company’s involvement in hush-money payments made to silence adult film star Stormy Daniels from going public with an affair with Trump just before the 2016 election, people familiar with the matter said. Trump has denied the affair.

Prosecutors are also looking into potential insurance fraud after new material came to light from the New York attorney general’s civil investigation into the accuracy of the Trump Organization’s financial statements, the people said.

The biggest threat currently facing the company could be New York Attorney General Letitia James’ $250 million civil lawsuit, which has alleged Trump, his three eldest children, Weisselberg and others defrauded lenders, insurers and tax authorities by inflating the value of multiple Trump Org. properties for more than a decade.

In addition to money, James, a Democrat, is seeking to permanently bar Trump and the children named in the lawsuit from serving as a director of a business registered in New York state. She is also seeking to cancel the Trump Organization’s corporate certificate, which if granted by a judge, could effectively force the company to cease operations in New York state.

The judge overseeing the lawsuit put an independent monitor in place to review the Trump Organization’s financial statements and business decisions. He recently denied motions to dismiss the case and said he considered sanctioning Trump’s attorneys. The trial is set for October.

Trump has denied wrongdoing and said the lawsuit is politically motivated.

This story has been updated with additional details.

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