In 1985,
Charles Kushner founded Kushner Companies along with his father,
Joseph Kushner. In 2005, Charles Kushner was convicted of
tax evasion and
witness tampering, and served time in federal prison. As a result, he handed over the management of the company to his eldest son,
Jared. Kushner Companies has received multiple loans from Israeli bank,
Bank Hapoalim. The firm "received a roughly $30 million investment from
Menora Mivtachim" in 2017. It was spent on "a
Maryland development". In 2017, Nicole Kushner Meyer joined her brother
Josh in Kushner Companies, serving as a principal. Meyer was criticized for mentioning her brother Jared's White House position during investor presentations that she gave in China when soliciting $150 million for
1 Journal Square in
Jersey City, New Jersey, causing her to cancel the rest of her roadshow appearances. In another dispute involving 1 Journal Square, the company is attempting to get $113,659 from the city to cover legal expenses. According to an August 2017 article in Bloomberg, the company was facing an increasingly "distressed situation" at the time. Over the previous few years, family members had sought substantial overseas investment to deal with "troubled finances". In the 2010s, developers such as the Kushner Companies widely used the
EB-5 visa to fuel a "high-end US residential boom". In May 2017, Trump renewed the visa program in his first major piece of legislation. That September, the
United States Attorney's office subpoenaed the Kushner Companies over the use of the EB-5 visa program to fund developments. In December 2017, the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York subpoenaed
Deutsche Bank records pertaining to Kushner Companies.
The New York Times reported in May 2019 that anti-money laundering specialists in the bank detected what appeared to be suspicious transactions involving entities controlled by Donald Trump and Jared Kushner, for which they recommended filing
suspicious activity reports with the
Financial Crimes Enforcement Network of the
Treasury Department, but bank executives rejected the recommendations. One specialist noted money moving from Kushner Companies to Russian individuals and flagged it in part because of the bank's previous involvement in a Russian money laundering scheme. In 2020,
ProPublica and
WNYC reported that Kushner Companies received "a near-record sum" from government-backed lender
Freddie Mac. The $786 million in loans helped Kushner Companies purchase thousands of apartments in Maryland and Virginia and appeared to come with "unusually good terms," raising conflict of interest questions due to Jared Kushner's role as Senior Advisor to the President of the United States. ==Acquisitions==