Washington - Two days after a Jewish art dealer who had fallen on hard times died in a four alarm fire in his Trump Tower home, a friend of the victim is reporting that the president had once referred to the dead man as “a crazy Jew.”
As previously reported on VIN News (http://bit.ly/2Hm9XD9) 67 year old Todd Brassner died on Saturday after a fire broke out in his 50th floor Trump Tower luxury apartment. Fire officials have yet to determine the cause of the fatal blaze but say that it may have been started accidentally.
Patrick Goldsmith, a long time friend of Brassner’s said that the president made the remark in 1996, after he snuck a look at Trump’s hands as he passed the president in the Trump Tower lobby, according to The Daily News (https://nydn.us/2Hm1T5f).
The size of president’s fingers and hands appear to be a sore sport after Spy magazine first lampooned Trump as a “short fingered vulgarian” in its April 1988 edition, as reported by The Washington Post (https://wapo.st/2HmxIv3).
Goldsmith said that an irate Trump asked the doorman to identify him and was told that he was Brassner’s visitor.
“Oh, that crazy Jew?” the president allegedly said, according to Goldsmith, who said that Brassner had had words previously with Trump about a clogged sink in his apartment.
Goldsmith said that he shared the story with Brassner who waved it off saying “I’m a Hebrew. I’m not a Jew.”
Brassner’s relationship with Trump had not improved over the years, with the art collector coming to hate his landlord and his policies according to Goldsmith. Brassner, who had once been friends with artist Andy Warhol and was the subject of a portrait painted by the artist, filed for bankruptcy in 2015 reported Newsweek (http://bit.ly/2Hkgcr7).
Among the assets listed in his filing were a collection of artwork, jewelry, fine watches, vintage electric guitars and amplifiers valued at approximately $3.4 million and his Trump Tower apartment which Brassner estimated to be worth $2.5 million.
While Brassner hoped to sell his apartment and to find relief from his hatred of Trump as well as the tight security measures that were instituted at Trump Tower after the last presidential election, his efforts to find a buyer proved fruitless.
“When people heard it was a Trump building he couldn’t give it away,” said Stephen Dwire, a long time friend of Brassner’s.
Rachael Cain, another friend of Brassner’s said that the art dealer hated living in Trump Tower and considered the president to be “a horrible lowlife human being.”
“He talked about not living there almost nonstop,” said Cain.
The president took to Twitter after the fire, tweeting his praise for the firefighters who had responded to the blaze and commenting that the well-constructed building had stood up well to the flames, making no mention of Brassner who later died in his subsequent tweets.
A statement later released by White House’s principal deputy press security Raj Shah also included no remarks about Brassner’s death, but categorized The Daily New’s decision to run the story about the allegedly anti-Semitic remark as ludicrous.
“Basing a front-page story maligning the President solely on a decades-old unverified claim by a critic of the President – whose own family members are Jewish – is absurd,” said Shah.