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what was the name of trumps golf resort in puerto rico

by Rosalia Parisian Published 3 years ago Updated 2 years ago

What happened to Puerto Rico's Trump Golf Club?

Puerto Rico had been hard hit by a recession, and the club had taken on substantial debt and was suffering annual losses for years before Trump's company intervened.

Did Donald Trump set Coco Beach Golf and Country Club on course?

Donald Trump did not set Coco Beach Golf and Country Club on course for ruin, but he wasn’t able to save it from that fate. His role in the bankruptcy of the company, which ended up costing Puerto Rican taxpayers $32.6 million, was significant but limited.

How much did it cost to build the Puerto Rico golf resort?

In 2000 and 2004, Puerto Rico’s Industrial, Tourist, Educational, Medical and Environmental Control Facilities Financing Authority (AFICA) issued the owners of the club a total of $25,497,854 in bonds to help build and launch the resort.

How did Trump’s deal with the owners of Mar-a-Lago work?

Under the agreement, the future president’s company licensed the Trump name to the owners and took on a share of the resort’s day-to-day management in exchange for a fee.

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The Trump family distanced itself from the project’s failure, claiming that the real estate developer merely licensed his name to the property. But a review of hundreds of pages of corporate and legal filings, undertaken by BuzzFeed News, shows that Trump promised the club’s investors and the government of Puerto Rico something entirely different.

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The two courses of what was first named the Coco Beach Golf & Country Club cover a peninsula on the island’s northeast corner, near the El Yunque rainforest. The surrounding resort includes a luxury hotel, timeshares, and the Trump Founders Residences, condos whose buyers are required to join the golf club.

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In effect, Trump was guaranteed income even if the project lost money; by the end of 2012, he had claimed more than $600,000.

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To Craig McCann, of the Securities Litigation and Consulting Group, who has testified in cases involving Puerto Rico municipal bonds, Trump’s promise to put the club in the black was “ridiculous on its face.” McCann wondered “how this statement can be made repeatedly when the resort had huge negative cash flows every year from 2008 when Trump took over to 2012 and beyond.”.

Claim

Donald Trump "bankrupted" a golf course in Puerto Rico, leaving taxpayers there on the hook for $33 million worth of debt.

Rating

A Trump company was unable to save a floundering Puerto Rico golf club and resort from bankruptcy after entering into a management and brand licensing agreement with its owners in 2008. As a result of the episode, $32.6 million in government investment was not recouped.

Origin

In the aftermath of a series of hurricanes in September 2017 — particularly Maria, which devastated the United States territory of Puerto Rico — President Donald Trump reflected on the infrastructural damage caused by those storms in a 25 September 2017 tweet:

Premise

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Donald Trump \"bankrupted\" a golf course in Puerto Rico, leaving taxpayers there on the hook for $33 million worth of debt.
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Aftermath

  • In the aftermath of a series of hurricanes in September 2017  particularly Maria, which devastated the United States territory of Puerto Rico  President Donald Trump reflected on the infrastructural damage caused by those storms in a 25 September 2017 tweet:
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Reactions

  • In response, public relations and marketing executive Lainie Green issued a series of tweets that went viral, accusing President Trump of having added to Puerto Ricos debt by bankrupting a golf course there and defaulting on $33 million worth of government-issued bonds:
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Ownership

  • According to documents first detailed in a 2016 BuzzFeed investigation, in 2008 Trump International entered into an arrangement with the owners of Coco Beach Golf & Country Club, a foundering resort and golf course that had opened in 2004 on the northeast coast of Puerto Rico about 30 miles from San Juan. Under the agreement, the future presidents ...
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Controversies

  • By October 2011, Coco Beach had defaulted on $26 million in bonds and had to seek another round of financing. In 2015, the company filed for bankruptcy under its original name, Coco Beach Golf and Country Club, citing debts of more than $78 million but only $9 million in assets. Bankruptcy court records show that Puerto Ricos Tourism Development Fund made a claim of $…
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Analysis

  • The evidence shows that Coca Beach had consistently been operating at a loss and accumulating debts in the years before Trump International became involved with its management. And a significant portion of the financial assistance provided by the Puerto Rican government was given in 2000 and 2004, well before the future U.S. presidents company arrived on the scene.
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Funding

  • However, one could argue that Trump International received a good deal of money from the Coco Beach deal yet failed to turn the club around, or even stanch its financial bleeding. According to the March 2011 bond offering (which was itself required to cover losses on the Puerto Rican governments 2000 and 2004 bond investments), Trump International had given certain assuranc…
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Results

  • Whatever that plan was, it did not succeed. The 2012 financials show that the clubs average annual losses rose to $6.3 million during the period that Trumps company provided management services to the resort (2008-2012), $1 million more per year than the business had been losing before. Further, for this lack of success, Trump International garnered a total of $609,607 in man…
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Significance

  • Donald Trump did not set Coco Beach Golf and Country Club on course for ruin, but he wasnt able to save it from that fate. His role in the bankruptcy of the company, which ended up costing Puerto Rican taxpayers $32.6 million, was significant but limited. That $32.6 million loss constituted 0.03 percent of the territorys total $123 billion debt, which prompted the Puerto Rica…
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