Romero said he turned over fake green cards and Social Security numbers that supervisors at the golf club allegedly gave one of his clients, Victorina Morales, a 44-year-old Guatemalan national. He also gave investigators the pay stubs of Sandra Diaz, a 46-year-old Costa Rican native who now has legal status but said she was undocumented when she worked at the club for three years.

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The FBI agents told him they would “coordinate” with the New Jersey state attorney general’s office, Romero said.

The materials collected by law enforcement agencies, first reported by the New York Daily News, indicate that investigators may be launching a probe into the hiring practices of the president’s golf club.

A spokeswoman for New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said the office’s policy is “to neither confirm nor deny investigations.” The FBI declined to comment.

Trump Organization officials did not respond to requests for comment.

Morales and Diaz first went public in interviews with the New York Times earlier this month. Morales said she had worked at the Bedminster club for the last five years — even making Trump’s bed and ironing the president’s clothes at times. She told the Times that managers at the club had taken steps to help her evade detection as an undocumented worker.

“The important point that I think has been left out is that Americans think these hard-working women get these jobs on their own — that’s not what happened,” Romero said. “People employed by the golf club recruited her and made her the phony documents.”

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In an interview Saturday, Morales said decided to come forward in part to highlight Trump’s “hypocrisy.”

As president, Trump has pushed hard-line immigration policies and has insisted on $5 billion in funding for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, which has caused a partial shutdown of the federal government. He has sought to make it harder for migrants to obtain asylum and backed a policy that has led to the detention of immigrant children separated from their parents.

Trump Organization officials have declined to comment on the specific allegations about Bedminster’s hiring practices. But spokeswoman Amanda Miller, responding to questions about the case earlier this month, said in a statement: “We have tens of thousands of employees across our properties and have very strict hiring practices. If any employee submitted false documentation in an attempt to circumvent the law, they will be terminated immediately.”

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Romero said he first contacted the office of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III in late October seeking guidance on the workers’ allegations. Several weeks later, he received a call from the FBI, Romero said.

“The agent told me that he had received a referral from Robert Mueller’s office and that he had been briefed on the case and he wanted to meet with me in person,” Romero said.

A spokesman for Mueller declined to comment.

Morales said she left Guatemala, where she worked as a corn farmer, and entered the United States illegally in 1999. She said she started working at the Bedminster club in 2013.

During her interview at the club, Morales said she was told that “her status didn’t matter.”

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Morales said she decided to come forward because she was receiving abusive comments from a supervisor, who she said called her stupid and pushed her against a wall. The supervisor said because she wasn’t documented and worked for the president, she couldn’t do anything about it, Morales said.

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“I was humiliated. I just wanted to come of the shadows,” she said. “I was trapped and threatened with deportation if I spoke out against my boss, who was so abusive. No one should be treated this way in the United States of America.”

Morales was also upset by Trump’s comments about Latin American immigrants being criminals. She said the president was “demanding, but sometimes tipped with a $50 or $100 bill.” She was making $10 an hour.

She is still paid by the golf club but stopped going to work after her story was made public, her attorney said.