New ‘Trump University’ papers out
Newly-unsealed court documents in a case against White House hopeful Donald Trump’s “university” reveal allegations that the now-defunct business preyed on the uneducated and misled consumers with aggressive marketing that amounted to fraud. Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton pounced on the news to argue that Mr Trump is a fraud who is “trying to scam America.”
The most damning revelations came from former staffers of the profit-driven operation that launched in 2004 and closed in 2010, triggering lawsuits that may well see the presumptive Republican presidential nominee dragged into court. “While Trump University claimed it wanted to help consumers make money in real estate, in fact Trump University was only interested in selling every person the most expensive seminars they possibly could,” former Trump University staffer Ronald Schnackenberg wrote in a statement unsealed on Tuesday. The business offered several courses in entrepreneurship, under the famous Trump brand.
But Mr Schnackenberg described how he quit his sales manager job in 2007 after coming to believe that “Trump University was engaging in misleading, fraudulent and dishonest conduct,” echoing arguments laid out by plaintiffs who are former “students” who claim they were scammed. Another former employee, Jason Nicholas, acknowledged that the seminars were taught by “unqualified people posing as Donald Trump’s ‘right-hand men.’”
“It was a facade, a total lie,” he testified. A Trump spokeswoman told AFP that the newly-released documents have “no bearing on the merits of Trump University’s case.” They instead demonstrate “the high level of satisfaction from students” who participated. The class action suit and fresh release of documents come as the 2016 presidential race shapes up to be a contest between Mr Trump and his likely Democratic opponent, Ms Clinton. “His own employees testified that Trump U — you can’t make this up — that Trump U was a fraudulent scheme where Donald Trump enriched
himself at the expense of hard-working people,” Ms Clinton told supporters at a rally in Newark, New Jersey. She noted that the marketers encouraged potential customers to “max out their credit cards, empty their retirement savings (and) destroy their financial futures.”
“This is just more evidence that Donald Trump himself is a fraud,” Ms Clinton said.
“He is trying to scam America.” In a tweet late Wednesday, Ms Clinton said: “Trump University students entrusted Trump with their futures, and he scammed them. He’d do the same to our country.”
Mr Trump has steadfastly defended the operation, claiming that thousands of students gave his courses and instructors “rave reviews.” And he has repeatedly attacked the judge handling the case, Gonzalo Curiel. “Very unfair. An Obama pick. Totally biased — hates Trump,” the real estate tycoon tweeted Tuesday, days after he described the judge as “Mexican.” Mr Curiel was born in the US state of Indiana.