Major Abuse of Power

Decades of Stiffing Contractors: Trump's Documented Pattern of Refusing to Pay

USA Today's 2016 investigation found that Trump and his companies had been sued more than 3,500 times in U.S. federal and state courts over the previous three decades, with a significant portion related to nonpayment claims by contractors, vendors, and employees. Among those who reported not being paid: drapery installers, piano players, porters, waiters, dishwashers, real estate brokers, plumbers, and hundreds of hourly workers. Trump's standard response was to challenge the quality of work — often leaving small contractors to choose between expensive litigation or accepting partial payment.

Overview

Paying contractors is not complicated. You hire someone. They perform work. You pay them the agreed amount. For Donald Trump, across four decades and hundreds of documented cases, this standard transaction was turned into a negotiating lever: complete the work, then dispute payment and force the contractor to choose between accepting less than owed or suing a billionaire.

The Structure of the Practice

The mechanism was consistent. A contractor would perform work — install carpet, lay tile, pour concrete, install drapery, provide legal services. Upon invoicing, Trump's organization would dispute the quality of the work, offer a reduced payment, and let the contractor decide whether to accept or litigate.

For a small business — a plumbing company, a carpentry outfit, an individual tradesperson — the calculation was asymmetric. Suing Trump meant years of litigation against a large legal department, uncertain recovery, and the risk of a counterclaim. Most accepted partial payment. Trump's legal costs on successfully deterred claims were near zero.

The Scale

USA Today documented more than 3,500 lawsuits involving Trump companies over 30 years. The Washington Post and New York Times reported on individual cases — the drapery installer who received sixty cents on the dollar, the glass company that never recovered what it was owed for Trump Tower windows, the dishwashers at Mar-a-Lago who reported wage theft.

These were not isolated disputes. They were a documented pattern across every business category Trump operated: casinos, hotels, golf courses, real estate construction, service contracts.

Who Was Hurt

The people who most frequently absorbed the losses were the least able to absorb them: small business owners, tradespeople, hourly workers. A law firm that wasn't paid could sue and likely recover. A sole-proprietor drapery installer who received sixty cents on a $100,000 contract faced a different calculation.

Trump described it as negotiation. The contractors described it as fraud.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Pattern begins with Atlantic City casino construction

    Contractors on Trump's Atlantic City casino projects begin reporting nonpayment. The pattern continues across subsequent projects. Mechanics liens are filed against Trump properties in New Jersey and New York.

  2. Atlantic City casino bankruptcies leave contractors unpaid

    As Trump's Atlantic City casinos enter bankruptcy proceedings in the early 1990s, contractors and vendors holding unpaid invoices become unsecured creditors with little prospect of recovery. Many receive cents on the dollar or nothing.

  3. USA Today investigation published

    USA Today publishes an investigation documenting more than 200 mechanics liens, hundreds of lawsuits, and thousands of complaints from contractors, tradespeople, and employees who said Trump companies had not paid them. Trump denies wrongdoing.

Sources

  1. Hundreds allege Donald Trump doesn't pay his bills — USA Today archived ✓
  2. For Trump, a pattern of not paying — The Washington Post
  3. Unpaid Bills a Signature of Trump's Ventures — The New York Times
  4. Trump's Three-Decade Pattern of Not Paying Workers — NBC News archived ✓

Verification

Publication provenance

Related records

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