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Interesting... So you're saying that its possible Mar Largo isn't worth $18 million and is likely worth several hundred million because that's what someone would pay for it?
lol...
no. i didn't say anything about mar-a-lago anywhere in my posts. perhaps you are quoting the wrong guy. whatabout the mar-a-lago?
was the mar-a-lago appraised by the government at hundreds of millions of dollars? i dont think it was otherwise the fraudy orange election-losing rapist be paying alot more in property taxes. but that's not to say that he couldn't list the mar-a-lardo on the market for hundreds of millions of dollars.
it wouldn't be illegal for the fraudy orange sexual predator to sell the mar-a-lago for hundreds of millions of dollars either, assuming he didn't lie to anybody about the the property, he reports the sale and pays his taxes on it, and the buyer of the property didn't lie to the banks to obtain a loan to buy it or use any other kind of dirty money.
it doesn't matter if youre selling a new york apartment, your florida golf resort where you store your classified documents, or you're selling a banana or a piece of toast. if you do it by the books its all fair game. shit gets sold for well over appraised value or market price, every. single. day. just most of the time people don't lie to the banks and commit fraud just to obtain it.
that's the beauty of capitalism baby. you know this one time a piece of toast sold on ebay for $28,000. well i'm pretty sure it doesnt cost anywhere near that much money to buy a loaf of bread and toast it. but somebody once paid $28,0000 for a piece of toast. and i'd like to have them charged because donald trump once defrauded new york and my feelings are hurt and i need vindication.
so anyways, assuming that the person used honest money to buy the bread, the toaster, and pay their power bill, and the buyer used honest money to purchase that overvalued piece of toast, and the seller listed that piece of toast as income and paid his fair share of tax on it, then where's the crime? name the charges and define how those statutes would apply to selling something that you own for more than it's appraised market value?