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Hillary Clinton To Trash Donald Trump's Business Record In Atlantic City

ATLANTIC CITY, NJ (CNN) -- Hillary Clinton will spend Wednesday in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where Donald Trump developed casinos, in an effort to undercut what her aides are calling Trump's "fraudulent business history."

Clinton, an aide said, will hit Trump for "multiple bankruptcies, stiffing contractors and spurring hundreds of job losses" during his time owning casinos in Atlantic City when she campaigns on the boardwalk in the beach side town.

"She will specifically point to Trump's own promise that he would 'do for the country what I did for my business' as a warning for why voters cannot allow him to endanger our economy from the White House," the aide said.

Clinton will appear in front of Boardwalk Hall, the city's old convention center, and will be introduced by a small business owner who the aide said was hurt by Trump's business practices.

Clinton and her aides are looking to move past an FBI press conference that recommended she not face charges in her exclusive use of a private email server, but also raised serious questions about her judgment. The presser by FBI director James Comey rocked Clinton's Brooklyn headquarters, making it even more important in the eyes of Clinton's top aides to undercut Trump's credibility.

Trump wasn't letting the spotlight disappear off the FBI press conference Wednesday morning.

"Crooked Hillary Clinton lied to the FBI and to the people of our country. She is sooooo guilty. But watch, her time will come!" the real estate mogul tweeted.
He also sent a pair of tweets criticizing Clinton and blaming Democrats for making "all the wrong moves" to destroy the city.

"I made a lot of money in Atlantic City and left 7 years ago, great timing (as all know). Pols made big mistakes, now many bankruptcies," Trump tweeted.

Clinton, since pivoting to Trump, has attempted to undercut that business record, something that has animated much of his unexpectedly strong presidential run.
"How can anybody lose money running a casino? Really," Clinton jokingly asked an audience in Detroit last month.

She added, "Trump economics is a recipe for lower wages, fewer jobs, more debt. He could bankrupt America like he's bankrupted his companies."

Trump has filed four business bankruptcies in the last 30 years, all of which surrounded his casino holdings in Atlantic City.

Trump filed for bankruptcy on the Taj Mahal in 1991 and the Trump Castle Associates in 1992. He later filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Trump Hotel & Casino Resorts in 2004 and Trump Entertainment Resorts in 2009.

Trump has defended the bankruptcies by noting that he never personally went bankrupt.

"I have used the laws of this country ... the (bankruptcy) chapter laws, to do a great job for my company, for myself, for my employees, for my family," he said last year.

But the bankruptcies have hurt Atlantic City, a city that is now blighted with empty hulking buildings, unemployment substantially higher than the national average, and a high violent crime rate.

The Clinton campaign hopes to blame Trump for the problems plaguing the city.

In addition to Wednesday's event, the Clinton campaign released a video that documents "Trump's fraudulent pattern in Atlantic City of making millions for himself while defrauding people of millions that he owed them."

The video, while not featuring Trump's voice once, uses people stiffed by Trump in Atlantic City to make the case that the city "proves" he shouldn't be president.

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

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