One of the more counterintuitive facts about how wealth works is that rich people don’t pay for things themselves if they can help it. For example, former President Donald Trump, whose net worth Forbes most recently estimated at $2.5 billion, is relying on other people to pay his spiraling legal fees in the midst of four criminal cases and several long-running civil suits.
Trump’s Save America PAC has spent more than $20 million in the first six months of 2023 just on legal fees — and $40 million in total going back to 2021. This enormous expenditure has benefited Trump directly, as well as a select number of associates, including his co-defendants in the Mar-a-Lago documents case. Trump’s approach has prompted questions from experts about whether the arrangement is meant to keep certain people from flipping on the former president.
With Monday’s sprawling indictment in Fulton County, Georgia, though, the number of allies who could cooperate with the government has grown. And based on recent reports, it seems like the famously stingy Trump isn’t helping several of his best-known co-defendants with their own legal bills. That decision may save Trump cash in the short term, but it could very well come back to bite him in the long run.
That decision may save Trump cash in the short term, but it could very well come back to bite him in the long run.
For prominent examples of Trump’s footing the bill for his underlings, look at Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira, who have been charged alongside him in the federal classified documents case. On Trump’s dime, the firm Brand Woodward Law is representing Nauta, as well as the likes of former Defense Department stooge Kash Patel and former chief poster Dan Scavino. Trump’s Save America PAC also is paying the firm representing De Oliveira’s lawyer, John Irving, who “has been reported to represent several others close to Trump, including Peter Navarro, Stephen Miller, [and] GOP Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania,” NBC News reported last month.
The Washington Post reported this month that the decision about who gets their legal fees covered mostly falls to Trump adviser Susie Wiles, head of the Save America PAC. “Wiles has decided that almost all legal bills incurred by Trump consultants, employees and others should be paid, according to people familiar with the discussions, because they were incurred as a result of their work for Trump,” according to the Post.
Those criteria apparently exclude a number of people in the Georgia case, most notably the lawyers associated with Trump’s efforts to overturn the election. Several are named among the 19 co-defendants, including Sidney Powell, Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman and Jenna Ellis. While attorney-client privilege may cover some of their actions, a federal judge has already determined in a civil case related to Eastman that the “crime-fraud exception” overrules that protection.
Some of those who are named in the indictment seem even less likely than others to receive help. Ellis has been a vocal supporter of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the GOP presidential primaries. That stance has made her a target for her former compatriots, including former Justice Department lawyer, and current co-defendant, Jeffrey Clarke. Ellis hasn’t been waiting around to see whether the reports that her support for DeSantis will get cut her off totally from Save America’s financial support are true; she has already begun fundraising to help pay her legal fees.
Ellis’ other co-defendants are also struggling to maintain legal support. Despite his mocking of Ellis, Clarke is also trying to raise cash to pay his legal bills. One of Powell’s representatives during her many post-2020 legal woes, Howard Kleinhendler, left her defense team last year, and it’s not clear who has stepped up in his place. Powell has been mostly cut adrift from Trump’s orbit, with Rolling Stone reporting that her former colleagues have thrown her under the bus in testimony to federal prosecutors.








