Jennifer Weisselberg is cooperating with an investigation into Trump's finances, her lawyer says.- She's the former daughter-in-law of
Allen Weisselberg , the Trump Org CFO the DA wants to "flip." - "Jennifer refuses to be silenced any longer," her lawyer told Insider in a statement.
An attorney representing the former daughter-in-law of the Trump Organization's CFO, Allen Weisselberg, says she's cooperating with prosecutors conducting an inquiry into
Jennifer Weisselberg "is committed to speaking the truth, no matter how difficult that may be," her attorney, Duncan Levin, told Insider in a statement. "She will continue to cooperate fully with the various law-enforcement agencies that are investigating her ex-husband's family and the very powerful interests they represent."
"Jennifer refuses to be silenced any longer by those who are conspiring to prevent her from sharing what she has learned over the past 25 years," Levin added.
Levin's comments come in response to a request for comment Friday about a New Yorker story on
The Manhattan District Attorney's Office is conducting a wide-ranging inquiry into Trump and his company. Court filings suggest prosecutors are focusing on whether they illegally kept two sets of books - one that painted a rosy financial picture to obtain favorable loan terms, another featuring grim data to pay less in taxes.
A major subject of the investigation is Allen Weisselberg, who for decades has been the chief financial officer of the Trump Organization and the personal bookkeeper of the Trump family. The Washington Post has reported prosecutors are trying to "flip" Weisselberg into cooperating with the investigation.
Jennifer Weisselberg divorced Allen Weisselberg's son Barry in 2018. The couple received an apartment as a gift from Trump when they married in 2004, but
Vance appears to be approaching the final stages of his investigation into Trump. He will retire at the end of 2021, he announced Friday.
"I'm sure he is absolutely pressing to have a decision made on whether to prosecute anyone, whom to prosecute, and for what charges, by the end of the year," Daniel R. Alonso, a former top Vance deputy, told Insider on Friday.