Donald Trump was already facing a criminal inquiry, multiple civil suits, and criminal charges against his private business when the former president confronted another unwelcome headline yesterday about the probe into the Trump Organization. NBC News reported:
A second grand jury has been empaneled in New York in an investigation about former President Donald Trump and his business, two people familiar with the matter told NBC News…. Trump has not been charged with any crime.
To contextualize this a bit, when prosecutors in Manhattan empaneled their first grand jury, it was roughly five weeks later when the probe led to criminal tax-fraud charges against the former president’s business and its chief financial officer.
Members of that grand jury served their six-month term, and as NBC News’ report added, a new group of grand jurors will sit and hear evidence. In fact, by all accounts, their service is already underway.
But what makes this development notable is not just the existence of a new grand jury, it’s also the area of scrutiny the grand jury appears to be examining. The Washington Post reported yesterday that a source familiar with the matter “said the second grand jury was expected to examine how former president Donald Trump’s company valued its assets.”
In other words, while the first grand jury in Manhattan heard evidence related to taxes and schemes to evade IRS scrutiny, this new grand jury, if the Post’s reporting is correct, is examining a separate area of inquiry.








