

Or his former fixer and lawyer, Michael Cohen. That the Trump family throws people under the bus when they become inconvenient is not news. New York Times: Former Trump inauguration official says she was 'thrown under the bus' AFP / Kena Betancur (Photo credit should read KENA BETANCUR/AFP/Getty Images) KENA BETANCUR/AFP/Getty Images Wolkoff reportedly will be working on the inauguration of US President-elect Donald Trump. Futerfas, told the New York Times that Underwood was making a “misleading statement” and trying “to politicize this matter.”)įormer Vogue special event planner Stephanie Winston Wolkoff stops for a photo in front of the media at Trump Tower in New York on December 5, 2016. Trump’s business and political interests,” and of engaging in “a shocking pattern of illegality.” (A lawyer for the Trump Foundation, Alan S. Trump Foundation was a do-gooder façade, existing, as New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood said last December, “as little more than a checkbook to serve Mr. It’s tough to have sympathy for someone who voluntarily worked for a notoriously disloyal and self-dealing family, with a long-standing reputation of allegedly refusing to pay workers and doing whatever necessary to maintain power and status. No, she was “thrown under the bus” amid negative publicity over inaugural spending. Now, she wants to set the record straight: She wasn’t fired, she says. Winston Wolkoff, described in the New York Times as “a New York socialite who is best known for her role in producing the Met Gala,” left the White House last year under a cloud of rumors that her company profited handsomely (to the tune of more than $1 million) from her inauguration work. Jill Filipovic Courtesy of Jill Filipovicīut that’s the complaint from Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, who worked as a contractor for President Donald Trump’s 2016 inauguration and an adviser for First Lady Melania Trump.
