New York
state has asked three banks to supply information about their relationships
with the real estate business of Jared Kushner, a senior White House advisor
and President Donald Trump's son-in-law, a source said Wednesday.
Maria
Vullo, Superintendent of the Department of Financial Services (DFS), sent
letters last week to Deutsche Bank, Signature Bank and New York Community Bank
asking for details on their financial arrangements as well as loans made to or
sought by Kushner Companies, the source told AFP.
The lenders
were given until March 5 to respond.
The DFS has
refused to comment on the matter, as has Deutsche Bank.
But Kushner
Companies said the inquiries were politically motivated and amounted to
harassment.
"We
have not received a copy of any letter from the New York State Department of
Financial Services," a spokesman said.
"Our
company is a multi-billion enterprise that is extremely financially strong.
Prior to our CEO voluntarily resigning to serve our country, we never had any
type of inquiries.
"These
type of inquiries appear to be harassment solely for political reasons."
Conflicts
of interest?
Also on
Wednesday, The New York Times reported Kushner Companies received major loans
from Apollo Global Management, one of the world's largest private equity firms,
and Citigroup, shortly after Kushner held White House meetings with
representatives from the two companies.
The paper
quoted Don Fox, the former acting director of the Office of Government Ethics
during the Obama administration, as saying the loans raised questions about the
appearance of conflicts of interest.
Kusher met
Joshua Harris, a founder of Apollo, multiple times over the course of 2017 and
even discussed a potential White House position which never materialized, the paper
said.
In November
2017, the firm loaned Kushner Companies $184 million -- triple the size of its
average property loan.
He also met
Citigroup's chief executive in the spring of 2017, Michael L. Corbat, shortly
before Kushner Companies received a $325 million loan from the firm, the Times
reported.
The White
House referred questions to Mr. Kushner's lawyer, Abbe Lowell, whom the paper
said did not dispute that the meetings took place, but denied any impropriety.
Kushner,
who is married to the president's daughter Ivanka Trump, has been a key figure
in the administration of his father-in-law, entrusted among other things with
finding a peace deal between Israelis and Palestinians.
A Harvard
graduate with a law degree from New York University, Kushner took the reins of
his family business before announcing in January 2017 -- just ahead of his
appointment to the Trump administration -- that he was stepping down from his
management role.
While Jared
Kushner voluntarily left high-level positions in more than 200 entities related
to his family's real estate empire, he still retains shares in most of these
companies from which he is likely able to derive income, according to documents
published by the White House in April 2017.
It is not
the first time Kushner's business interests, which include real estate assets
in the states of New York and New Jersey, have been in the spotlight.
In May
2017, the company was forced to apologize for mentioning Jared Kushner during a
presentation of one of its projects to a group of Chinese investors, in a
possible breach of conflict of interest rules.

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