Before taking office, Donald Trump made a great number of ambitious promises to the American public: he would drain the swamp, repeal Obamacare, move the embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, and win so often that we would all get sick of it. Almost 10 months into his administration, the president has yet to fulfill a single one of those promises, but he does appear to be making good on one pre-inaugural proclamation. On Monday evening, NBC News reported that newly filed documents reveal Trump is in the process of dissolving his family foundation, which last year admitted to violating federal rules on “self-dealing.”

Allegations of financial impropriety had plagued the Donald J. Trump Foundation throughout the presidential campaign. In November 2016, The Washington Post reported that the foundation violated an Internal Revenue Service rule that prohibits nonprofit leaders from using their charitable organization’s money to aid their businesses, family members, or themselves. This came after the Post had uncovered several instances in which the Trump Foundation seemed to pay legal settlements for his for-profit businesses and for items that his family purchased at charity auctions. In one case, Trump spent $10,000 of the charity’s money on a four-foot-tall painting of himself, which he hung on the wall of the sports bar at his Doral golf club.

Last December, Trump said that in order to avoid conflicts of interest, his foundation would wrap up his work. The New York attorney general’s office had already opened an investigation and ordered the foundation to stop soliciting contributions in October 2016. “The Foundation continues to cooperate with the New York Attorney General’s Charities Division, and as previously announced by the President, his advisers are working with the Charities Division to wind up the affairs of the Foundation,” a spokesperson for the foundation told NBC on Monday. “The Foundation looks forward to distributing its remaining assets at the earliest possible time to aid numerous worthy charitable organizations.“

Like most things Trump, however, there is a hitch. The attorney general’s press secretary, Amy Spitalnick, told NBC News that the foundation can’t simply close up shop, since it is still under investigation. “It cannot legally dissolve until that investigation is complete,” she said. As if the president needed another investigation into his business dealings to blame for failing to fulfill his campaign promises.