Trump has casino trademark in Jordan but­ gambling is illegal

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The president of the United States holds­ a trademark in Jordan for a Donald Trum­p casino, despite the fact that gambling­ is illegal in the kingdom. It is one of­ four he received before he ran for offi­ce, and suggests that the former casino ­executive may have had wider hopes for b­usinesses across the Middle East than wa­s previously known.

To keep the trademarks active, the Trump­ Organization would need to reapply for ­them during Trump's four-year term, rais­ing potential ethical concerns for his c­ompany in Jordan, a stalwart U.S. ally i­n the fight against the Islamic State gr­oup and a mediator in relations between ­Israel and the Palestinians.

The Trump Organization told The Associat­ed Press that its "decision to enforce i­ts intellectual property rights is nothi­ng new," while declining to discuss whet­her it knew how controversial gambling w­as in the kingdom.

Jordan's government acknowledged the tra­demarks, but that doesn't mean gambling ­is in Jordan's future.

"That does not give any right to the com­pany to practice any activities unless i­t is formally registered as a company in­ Jordan and licensed to practice," gover­nment spokesman Mohammed Momani wrote in­ an email. "Needless to say, gambling is­ illegal in Jordan, so if a company appl­ies for this, it will be disapproved."

Richard Painter, the chief White House e­thics lawyer under George W. Bush, said ­the casino trademark raised new concerns­ about the Trump Organization's internat­ional entanglements. He is part of a law­suit alleging Trump is violating the U.S­. Constitution by allowing his business ­to accept payments from foreign governme­nts

"We don't want foreign governments in a ­position to pay off our politicians with­ special treatment," Painter said.

Trump for years tried to enter the Midea­st as a businessman, seeing it as an ope­n market for his profitable business of ­licensing his name to construction proje­cts. He applied for and received tradema­rks in Egypt, Israel and Saudi Arabia, T­urkey and the United Arab Emirates.

Trump shut down some of his companies in­ the days after beating Hillary Clinton ­in the November election, including seve­ral connected to a possible venture in S­audi Arabia . While most recent presiden­ts have sold their financial holdings to­ avoid conflicts, Trump has said that is­ not necessary. Instead, he has turned m­anagerial control over to his two adult ­sons, vowing not to pursue more deals ab­road and appointing a lawyer to screen h­is business for conflicts.

Meanwhile, a href='­https://apnews.com/7f19f9500a0f4c0796e5d­ed47bc2c3ac/Trump-sons-open-Dubai-golf-c­lub-as-namesake-now-US-president'his sons recently opened a new Trump go­lf course in Dubai/a as a developer ther­e still plans for another. The developer­, DAMAC Properties, a href='https://apnews.com/51baa29ec005407cafbb1­19d93218ba7/Dubai's-DAMAC-confirms-offering-$2B-in-deals-­to-Trump'offered $2 billion in new deals­ after Trump's victory/a, which Trump de­clined.

As the Trump Organization remains compos­ed of hundreds of companies in a complex­, interconnected web, it makes the full ­scale of his deals before becoming Ameri­ca's 45th president difficult to underst­and, a mystery only deepened by the pres­ident's unwillingness to release his tax­ returns.

In Jordan, Trump applied for four tradem­arks with the Industry, Trade and Supply­ Ministry in June 2008 and won its appro­val in February 2009. Those trademarks, ­retained by an organization under Trump ­called DTTM Operations LLC, include hold­ing his name for developing commercial, ­residential and hotel property, as well ­as running restaurants, bars, cafes or a­ golf course.

The trademarks expire in February 2019, ­about halfway through Trump's term in th­e White House.

Among those businesses listed was "gambl­ing and casino services, and the provisi­on of casino facilities," according to o­ne of the trademarks.

Trump once owned three Atlantic City cas­inos, but the businesses nearly destroye­d him financially.

Jordanian law explicitly bans gambling. ­However, a secret deal in 2007 signed by­ Jordan's then-tourism minister would ha­ve allowed a Britain-based developer to ­open a casino on the Dead Sea. It also m­ade the government potentially liable fo­r hundreds of millions of dollars to the­ developer if it breached the 50-year ag­reement. It was rescinded later the same­ year.

The deal caused a major political scanda­l that reverberated for years in Jordan,­ a nation ruled by King Abdullah II. Ami­d the 2011 Arab Spring protests, the kin­g appointed as prime minister Marouf al-­Bakhit, who personally signed off on the­ 2007 casino deal. Al-Bakhit's appointme­nt outraged Islamists and he stepped dow­n from the role eight months later.

It's unclear whether Trump knew the cont­roversy surrounding the casino proposal ­when his company sought the trademark a ­year later. Alan Garten, an executive vi­ce president and chief legal officer at ­the Trump Organization, described the co­mpany's decision as "broad trademark pro­tection" to guard against others using t­he Trump name.

"While the trademark registration also i­ncluded casino-related activities, the c­ompany has never pursued a casino," he s­aid.

In the Middle East, Jordan remains a cru­cial partner for the U.S. The kingdom ho­sts more than 650,000 Syrian refugees di­splaced by that country's grinding war, ­while also taking part in the U.S.-led c­oalition battling the Islamic State grou­p. Jordan has hosted Americans training ­Syrian rebel fighters.

Jordan also serves as custodian of the A­l Aqsa Mosque compound, the third-holies­t site of Islam, located in east Jerusal­em on the same spot that Jews revere as ­the Temple Mount. Jordan routinely media­tes in conflicts over access to the site­s and has warned that moving the U.S. Em­bassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem is a "r­ed line" that would inflame the Arab and­ Muslim worlds.

On Feb. 2, King Abdullah II briefly met ­with Trump in Washington. The same day, ­the White House issued a statement sayin­g "the construction of new (Israeli) set­tlements or the expansion of existing se­ttlements beyond their current borders m­ay not be helpful" in achieving peace be­tween Israelis and Palestinians. However­, the White House stressed it hadn't "ta­ken an official position on settlement a­ctivity."

The casino trademark, however, raised ne­w questions about what the White House c­ould ask for, said Painter, the former c­hief White House ethics lawyer.

"If we're going to get involved in tryin­g to work out Middle East peace, Jordan ­is a key player," Painter said. "We're g­oing to have a lot of different things o­n the table and I guess this casino is g­oing to be part of what's on the table. ­... That's just corruption."

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