Since at least 2004, Trump has issued financial statements boasting of his billions in assets. The most recent was sent out in 2021, just as NY officials began publicly calling them fraudulent. A fraud monitor now says Trump "does not intend to develop any estimations of value" going forward.

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You can opt-out at any time by visiting our Preferences page or by clicking "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the email. Advertisement It's the end of an error. Or, by New York Attorney General Letitia James' count, it's the end of at least 200 errors .

According to the latest report from his court-mandated fraud monitor, Donald Trump is officially through with boasting about his wealth in those wildly exaggerated net-worth statements he used to send out each year. In fact, Trump is calling it quits on officially stating the value of even his individual properties, the report says. He is finished, in other words, with saying "I'm rich" in any financial document that could come back to bite him.

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Trump's fraud monitor, Bar.