In 2007, on the eve of the global financial crisis, a 26-year-old Jared Kushner bought a Midtown tower with the inauspicious address of 666 Fifth Avenue for what was then a record-setting $1.8 billion, putting down just $50 million and borrowing the rest. At the time, Kushner was helping out with the family business in the aftermath of his father’s conviction for tax evasion, witness tampering, and illegal campaign contributions, and was eager to make his mark in the industry. And oh, how he did! Kushner Companies was unable to get the office rents they expected, the building was perpetually 30 percent vacant, and even its partners were saying things like “[666] would be worth a lot more if it was just dirt.” As the February 2019 due date for a $1.4 billion mortgage approached, the Kushners crisscrossed the globe attempting find partners for a Hail Mary plan to raze the property and replace it with a new tower—one that would’ve required even more money, including a $4 billion construction loan—to no avail. (The family was reportedly rebuffed by everyone from the richest man in France to the South Korea’s sovereign-wealth fund.) And then, as if by magic, Brookfield Asset Management purchased a 99-year lease on the building, giving the Kushners enough to pay off their debt and buy out Vornado Realty Trust, which owned the retail part of the property. And even though Brookfield has insisted that its second-largest investor, the Qatar Investment Authority, knew nothing about the deal to bail out the the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, some obstructionist Democrats don’t seem to be buying it!

Axios reports that House Dems Maxine Waters, Elijah Cummings, and Ted Lieu are “discussing investigating the cash infusion the Kushner Companies’ flagship New York office tower received in summer 2018.” Lieu, who sits on the House Judiciary and Foreign Affairs committees, told reporter Alayna Treene that he finds the deal “really troubling.” According to Cummings, his team has been “looking at that for a while.”

If the House has been concerned about the details of the 666 bailout for some time, those concerns were presumably turbo-charged last week when The New York Times reported that Kushner only received top-secret security clearance because Donald Trump demanded it over the objections of intelligence officials, his chief of staff, and the then-White House counsel, all of whom were reportedly worried about the Boy Prince of New Jersey’s “foreign and business contacts.” Kushner did little to dispel the notion that he’d sell state secrets to the highest bidder to finance some condos in Jersey City by refusing to allow embassy staffers to sit in on his meeting last week with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who U.S. officials fear views Kushner as a ripe target for manipulation. And speaking of the Saudis: