Trump’s Most Successful Business Venture
His office is bringing in money—at the expense of the American people.
By David A. Graham, The Atlantic
Paul Walczak didn’t have a plausible defense, but he did have a backup plan. As a Florida nursing-home executive, he’d defrauded taxpayers out of almost $11 million, using it to fund a lavish lifestyle. He pleaded guilty last fall, but applied for a pardon after Donald Trump retook office, claiming that he’d been prosecuted because of his mother Elizabeth Fago’s support for Trump. Only after she attended a $1 million-per-person April fundraiser, which promised face time with the president, did Trump grant Walczak a full pardon.


