WASHINGTON – President Trump hauled in tens of millions in revenue from his international resorts, golf clubs and hundreds of other businesses, according to a financial disclosure form released by the Office of Government Ethics.

The 98-page document – made public late Friday afternoon – included $19.7 million in income from the president’s luxury hotel in downtown Washington, which opened in September 2016 and became the subject of controversy after people looking to curry favor with the administration began staying there or booking the facility for events.

Trump also reported more than $37.2 million in “resort related revenue” from his Mar-a-Lago club in West Palm Beach, Fla., where he has hosted several foreign dignitaries since taking office. That figure represents a $7.4 million increase in revenue since Trump’s last financial disclosure in May, while the president saw an $800,000 dip in revenue revenue from his golf club in Bedminster, N.J. during the same period.

He also raked in $20.1 million from Trump National golf club in Jupiter, Fla.; $14.4 million from Trump Turnberry in Scotland; and nearly $12.5 million from his golf club in Ireland. Trump pocketed another $18 million from the Trump Corporation – his global real estate development firm.

Trump received $7 million in royalties from his several bestselling books – including between $100,000 to $1 million from “The Art of the Deal” – and a $84,000 pension from the Screen Actors Guild.

The president has a pile of assets worth about $1.5 billion with liabilities of $315 million, according to the report.

Financial disclosure forms for government officials typically include investment funds, retirement accounts, real estate, and other securities. Trump’s documents have added importance because he has declined to follow the long tradition of presidential candidates and officeholders who have made their tax returns public.

Critics have long argued that Trump’s returns would provide more complete financial information than his personal disclosures, which the president has previously touted as “the largest in the history” of the Federal Election Commission.

The disclosure on Friday came days after attorneys general for the District of Columbia and Maryland filed a joint lawsuit accusing Trump of improperly accepting payments from foreign governments through Trump International Hotel DC and his other business interests. The lawsuit described such transactions as unconstitutional.

Trump divested from his company before taking office but has refused to sell off his business holdings or allow an independent third party to manage them. Instead, his two adult sons – Don Jr. and Eric – took control of their father’s global business empire shortly before he took office.

Trump’s latest report, which covers the period from January 2016 through this spring, shows he resigned from more than 500 positions, many of them a day before his inauguration as president.