Michael D. Cohen, the former attorney and fixer for Donald J. Trump, provided documents to Congress that he said would support his testimony about the 2016 campaign and Mr. Trump’s business practices. During his testimony, he referred to Mr. Trump’s financial statements below and said, “I believe these numbers are inflated.” Read Mr. Cohen’s opening statement to the House Oversight Committee here and watch his full testimony here .

Exhibit 5a Mr. Cohen produced copies of two checks he said were part of the reimbursement for his hush money payment to Stormy Daniels. One was from Mr. Trump’s personal account, and signed by Mr. Trump. The other was from the revocable trust that owns Mr. Trump’s businesses and signed by Donald Trump Jr., Mr. Trump’s eldest son, and Allen Weisselberg, the chief financial officer of the Trump Organization.

Exhibit 5b

Exhibit 1a Exhibits 1a, 1b and 1c are statements of financial condition. Mr. Cohen told Congress that he believes the numbers in these documents were inflated. He often gave them to media outlets when he was attempting to pump up what Mr. Trump was worth. It is not known who produced them or if real estate appraisals were commissioned to come up with the property valuations. There is no indication an auditor signed off on these documents. There are other red flags. For instance, some of Mr. Trump’s biggest investments — stakes in buildings in New York and San Francisco — are valued without factoring in the debt they carry.

Exhibit 1b There are some notable changes in this document. For instance, the fuzzy “other assets” category jumped to $303.5 million in 2012, up from $184.1 million in the prior year. That’s a big number for a miscellaneous category and Mr. Trump gives no indication what assets he is counting here. The value of Mr. Trump’s real estate licensing deals took a nosedive in 2012, falling more than 20 percent to $85 million.

Exhibit 1c This document includes a new category. Mr. Trump claims his brand is worth a staggering $4 billion, pushing his self-proclaimed net worth up to $8.66 billion in 2013, up 72 percent from the previous year. The cash and marketable securities category also goes up in value in 2013, up 50 percent or $176.4 million from the year before. At the same time, Mr. Trump is claiming he paid off a number of liabilities in 2013. It is hard to say exactly what happened as Mr. Trump stopped itemizing many of his loans in this exhibit.

Exhibit 2

Exhibit 3a Mr. Cohen also gave the committee a copy of an article with Mr. Trump’s handwriting on it. The article reported on the auction of a portrait of Mr. Trump. Mr. Cohen said Mr. Trump arranged for someone to bid on the portrait ahead of time, then reimbursed that person from the account of his charitable foundation. Mr. Cohen said the picture now hangs in one of Mr. Trump’s country clubs.

Exhibit 3b

Exhibit 4

Exhibit 6 This is an example of the type of letter Mr. Cohen said he wrote at Mr. Trump’s direction to threaten his high school, colleges and the College Board, which administers the SAT, not to release his grades or SAT scores.

Exhibit 7

Exhibit 8