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New Jersey’s attorney general has stepped into the investigation of President Trump’s $107 million presidential inaugural fund, issuing an administrative subpoena for the fund’s financial records, including any that document fund-raising in the state.

The action, taken last week by the state’s consumer protection office, came on the heels of a subpoena issued this month by federal prosecutors in Manhattan.

Federal investigators are examining whether all donations to the fund were reported, as required, and whether any foreigners illegally contributed money using Americans as straw donors.

The New Jersey subpoena also demands records of any contributions made on behalf of foreigners, who are barred from contributing to inaugural funds, campaigns or political action committees in the United States.

It also covers audits, contracts with vendors, documents related to the nonprofit organization’s tax status, and any records of advertisements, direct mailings or fund-raising events in New Jersey.

Unlike the earlier subpoena from the United States attorney’s office in the Southern District of New York, the New Jersey request does not name any individuals or companies.

A spokesman for the Trump inaugural committee said it was responding to the New Jersey attorney general’s civil inquiry.

A year ago, when Gov. Phil Murphy of New Jersey appointed Grewal, a fellow Democrat, he said he wanted an attorney general who would “stand up” to Trump and to his fellow Republicans in Congress.

The inaugural committee was led by Thomas J. Barrack Jr., a billionaire and friend of Trump.

It raised and spent twice as much — or more — than its predecessors on events celebrating Trump’s inauguration, including a concert, three balls and a candlelight dinner.

Recently, internal documents obtained by ABC News showed the committee spent more than $1.5 million at the Trump International Hotel in Washington ahead of the president’s 2017 swearing-in.

It’s part of an array of expenditures there and elsewhere that included more than $130,000 for customized seat cushions at two gala dinners for the president-elect, $10,000 to provide makeup to the servers at another formal dinner, and $2.7 million to a company that produced a Broadway-style rendition of Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” using Las Vegas showgirls flown in by Trump pal Steve Wynn for a private event.

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