After he was elected president, Donald Trump executed a series of legal maneuvers to ensure that his ethical responsibilities wouldn’t get in the way of his conflicts of interest. Instead of selling the Trump Organization, putting his assets in a blind trust, or handing control of the business to a neutral third party, Trump turned over day-to-day management to his eldest sons, Don Jr. and Eric. Don’t worry, said Eric, shortly before the Inauguration: “There is kind of a clear separation of church and state that we maintain, and I am deadly serious about that exercise.” Two minutes later, he admitted that, actually, he would be reporting the company’s financials to his father quarterly. (“I talk to him a lot. We’re pretty inseparable.”) And so it goes with other elements of the “church and state” separation between Donald Trump and his family business. The Trump brothers also promised that they would initiate no new international projects during their father’s presidency, to limit the possibility of financial conflicts. But, technically, that doesn’t stop them from promoting projects that were already in development on November 8, 2016. Which is why, starting Tuesday, Donny Jr. will head to India for an “unofficial visit” that looks like an ethical nightmare.

Beginning Tuesday, the junior Trump will have a full schedule of meet-and-greets with investors and business leaders throughout India where the Trump family has real estate projects — Mumbai, the New Delhi suburb of Gurgaon and the eastern city of Kolkata.

Indian newspapers have been running full-page, glossy advertisements hyping his arrival and the latest Trump Tower project under the headline: “Trump is here — Are You Invited?” The ads also invited home buyers to plunk down a booking fee (about $38,000) to “join Mr. Donald Trump Jr. for a conversation and dinner.” Public relations executives working with two local developers arranging the Trump dinner declined to give specifics about the event.

The potential ethical entanglements of the president’s son plugging condos across the Indian subcontinent are heightened by the fact that Trump Jr.—who, as far as we know, doesn’t know anything about foreign policy—will also give a speech on “Reshaping Indo- Pacific Ties: The New Era of Cooperation” at a global business summit on Friday night. Incidentally, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is also slated to speak at the summit. Perhaps Modi or his friends will be interested in a condo, too, since many of the actual units have yet to be sold. Would the prime minister’s family and friends get a discount on the “booking fee”?