Donald Trump's longtime money man, Allen Weisselberg, quickly gets coveted cot in 'safest place' at Rikers
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Laura Italiano
Jan 12, 2023, 03:22 IST
A security fence surrounds Rikers Island correctional facility in New York, left. Allen Weisselberg, longtime CFO at former president Donald Trump's business, the Trump Organization, at his payroll tax-fraud sentencing in Manhattan on January 10, 2023, right.Jeenah Moon/AP, left. Curtis Means/DailyMail/AP, right.
Former Trump CFO Allen Weisselberg breezed through intake at NYC's infamous Rikers jail.
He is now in what one expert called the "safest and nicest" unit in Rikers.
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Donald Trump's former CFO has quickly snagged a coveted cot in what one expert calls the best unit in New York City's infamous Rikers Island jail complex.
Allen Weisselberg was sentenced Tuesday to five months at Rikers for running a complex and lengthy payroll-tax fraud scheme at the former president's company.
"He's in the safest and the nicest area to serve in Rikers," jail-reform advocate Five Mualimmak-Ak said of Weisselberg's new digs in the complex's West Facility.
The West Facility houses only Rikers inmates serving sentences of under one year, Mualimmak-Ak said.
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Weisselberg, 75, will have no contact with Rikers' more dangerous general jail population, which includes detainees awaiting trial for murder and other serious violent crimes.
Weisselberg, 75, will live at West Facility in either a small, individual cell or in a dorm, Mualimmak-Ak said. Its inmates are considered so trustworthy and non-violent, they are allowed to share a hot pot, used to heat water for coffee, tea, and soup mix from the commissary, he said.
"In any other unit that hot water would be a weapon," he explained.
The former Trump Organization executive breezed through intake and was assigned housing well within 24 hours of Tuesday's tax-dodge sentencing in state court in Manhattan, the correction website shows.
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Intake more typically takes days, and sometimes as long as a week, Mualimmak-Ak said.
A Department of Correction spokesperson declined to give any details of Weisselberg's admission process or housing assignment.
During intake on Tuesday, Weisselberg, 75, was fingerprinted, received a medical exam, and filled out paperwork at a separate facility, the Eric M. Taylor Center, according to a source familiar with Weisselberg's movements.
"He was processed relatively quickly," compared to other inmates and detainees, said the source, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about his case.
The West Facility is constructed of high-tech plastic fabric stretched over aluminum frames, according to the DOC website.
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Built in 1991, it's one of the newest buildings at the complex, the website says.
If he stays in that unit, Weisselberg will serve out his 5-month sentence — 100 days with good behavior — in what's known by inmates as "the bubbles—" modular buildings built by the Utah-based Sprung corporation.
Like all inmates there to serve a sentence, Weisselberg will be required to work, most likely in the West Facility's kitchen or bakery, said Mualimmak-Ak, who in 2021 helped advocate against long-term solitary confinement at city jails.
"It's a smart move for correction to place him there," said Mualimmak-Ak, who works as program director for LIFE Camp, a city-based nonprofit that helps young people and families impacted by violence.
"He won't be sleeping next to somebody who's facing 25-to-life for murder."
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