Ivanka and Don Jr
Win McNamee/Associated Press
  • New York AG Tish James subpoenaed Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr., NYT reported.
  • James' office is conducting a wide-ranging civil probe into the Trump Organization's business dealings.
  • The AG is investigating whether the company fraudulently valued its properties for tax and loan purposes.

New York attorney general Tish James has subpoenaed former President Donald Trump's eldest children as part of an ongoing civil fraud investigation, The New York Times reported.

Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump were subpoenaed on December 1, the report said, citing a person with knowledge of the matter. Eric Trump was questioned in late 2020.

James' office is conducting a wide-ranging investigation into whether the Trump Organization engaged in financial fraud when valuing its properties. A person familiar with the investigation previously told The Washington Post that James is looking into whether rampant fraud "permeated the Trump Organization."

The Times reported last month that James wants the former president to sit for a deposition on January 7.

James' inquiry is separate from an ongoing criminal probe conducted by the Manhattan district attorney's office, which the attorney general's office is collaborating with.

Most of the charges stemming from the DA's investigation so far have focused on tax-related schemes. But in recent months, the civil probe and the criminal investigation have zeroed in on whether Trump Organization officials artificially inflated or deflated the value of properties for loan and tax purposes, respectively.

Prosecutors from the DA's office in November issued new subpoenas for records of Trump Organization properties, including golf clubs, offices, and hotels.

The Post reported that among other things, prosecutors are scrutinizing a Trump-owned building located at 40 Wall Street in Manhattan. Property records reviewed by The Post showed that the Trump Organization told lenders in 2012 that the building was worth $527 million, but a few months later told tax officials that it was worth just $16.7 million.

Tax experts have previously said the discrepancy could point to a ploy to pay lower property taxes.

Trump last month filed a lawsuit accusing James of trying to "harass" him with investigations. James' office is "guided solely by political animus and a desire to harass, intimidate, and retaliate against a private citizen who she views as a political opponent," the lawsuit said.

The attorney general's office released a subsequent statement dismissing the suit as "an attempted collateral attack on that investigation."

"To be clear, neither Mr. Trump nor the Trump Organization get to dictate if and where they will answer for their actions. Our investigation will continue undeterred because no one is above the law, not even someone with the name Trump," the statement said.

This story is developing. Check back for updates.

Read the original article on Business Insider