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Did Donald Trump 'cash in' $150,000 after 9/11?
U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley, D-N.Y., made a serious charge on the second night of the Democratic National Convention about Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump making money off of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Crowley, who lost a cousin that day, (accurately) painted Hillary Clinton as someone who was there for the city and its first-responders. Trump, however, "saw a payday for his empire," Crowley said.
"Where was Donald Trump in the days and months and the years after 9/11? He didn’t stand at the pile, he didn’t lobby Congress for help, he didn’t fight for the first responders," he said. "Nope, he cashed in, collecting $150,000 in federal funds intended to help small businesses recover — even though days after the attack Trump said his properties were not affected."
Did Trump, a New Yorker, take taxpayer-funded money earmarked for small businesses and for losses he said he didn’t even suffer?
A spokeswoman for Crowley referred us to a 2006 New York Daily News investigation. The Daily News found that Trump did receive $150,000 for the Trump Building, which is less than a mile away from the World Trade Center.
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But Crowley’s charge is misleading as it suggests Trump took advantage of the program, when his property at 40 Wall Street did meet the criteria for the money.
Under the 9/11 business recovery grant program run by the Empire State Development, New York’s economic development agency, firms were eligible if they employed 500 employees or less, had been physically or economically damaged by the attacks, and located on or south of 14th Street in Lower Manhattan.
According to the Daily News, Trump’s "grant application describes the corporation through which Trump owns that building as having 28 employees and $26.8 million in annual revenues." (The newspaper notes that the federal definition of a small business is $6 million.)
Trump’s was among over 14,000 companies that received grants totalling $530 million. That includes other firms like the Rockefeller Group, Ford Motors, Dell Inc., Morgan Stanley and the Bank of China.
Was the Trump Building impacted by the 9/11? According to Trump, no, though he was likely referring to physical damages.
"I have a lot of property down there," he told a German TV reporter after the attack. "But it wasn’t, fortunately, affected by what happened to the World Trade Center."
Here’s how Trump responded when the New York Times asked him about the grant in May 2016:
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"The company received this small amount of money after qualifying, given the limited number of employees working at the property. For many months, I allowed people to stay in the building, use the building and store things in the building. I was happy to do it and to this day I am still being thanked for the many people I helped. The value of what I did was far greater than the money talked about."
Our ruling
Crowley said Trump "cashed in, collecting $150,000 in federal funds intended to help small businesses recover — even though days after the attack Trump said his properties were not affected."
Trump did receive a grant for his building at 40 Wall Street, which was less than a mile away from the Trade Center, but the property was eligible under the grant criteria.
He also did say in 2001 that his properties were not affected by the attack, although he likely meant physically. The grant also provided compensation for economic losses.
We rate Crowley’s claim Half True.
https://www.sharethefacts.co/share/cd779146-3dbe-4084-b84f-438f74cf1b82
Our Sources
Email interview with Courtney Gidner, spokeswoman for Joseph Crowley, July 26, 2016
New York Daily News, "FEDS GAVE DONALD A QUICK BUNDLE. He's among titans who got 9-11 funds set for small biz," Jan. 29, 2006
New York Times, "Congressman Rebukes Donald Trump, Saying He Received 9/11 Aid Intended for Small Businesses," May 28, 2016
Empire State Development, "World Trade Center Economic Recovery: Rebuilding the Economy of Lower Manhattan," Oct. 6, 2004
U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - HUD Exchange, "Recovery Snapshot: 9/11 Business Recovery Grant Program," 2002
Snopes, "Trump Unf-Air," May 26, 2016
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Did Donald Trump 'cash in' $150,000 after 9/11?
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