 Michael Cohen told Congress in February that Donald Trump cooked the books on his company's tax documents. Trump wouldn't turn over those documents, but ProPublica reporter Heather Vogel found some of them anyway. Trump reported on tax forms that his company spent more than $740,000 on property insurance for its building at 40 Wall Street in 2017. But on loan documents, Trump reported that the company spent significantly less on property insurance for the building that year. The $287,000 discrepancy made the building appear more profitable to the lender and less profitable to the officials who calculated the building's property tax. Trump reported conflicting information about the occupancy rate at 40 Wall Street. Tax experts told us that lenders see more steeply rising occupancy level as a sign of leasing momentum, which can make a property appear more valuable. Find out more about these discrepancies and others we found in Trump's tax documents at propublica.org.