A proposed multibillion-dollar resort linked to Jared Kushner is now entangled in an Albanian organised-crime investigation over alleged title fraud, raising questions about property rights, due diligence and foreign investment credibility.
Albanian organised-crime investigators suspect that a businessman wanted over alleged money laundering falsified deeds to land intended for Jared Kushner’s proposed multibillion-dollar resort, turning a flagship foreign-investment project into a test of property rights and governance.
Reuters reported, after reviewing Albanian organised-crime case files, that the businessman who sold land connected to the resort site is suspected of faking deeds. The allegations do not by themselves establish wrongdoing by the resort developers, but they raise a fundamental question for any large property project: who legally owns the land?
The case matters because it sits at the intersection of foreign investment, local land disputes, organised-crime enforcement and Albania’s effort to present itself as a reliable destination for major development projects.
A property-rights test
Large resort projects depend on clean title. If land ownership is disputed or based on allegedly forged documents, investors, lenders, local residents and public authorities all face risk. The legal uncertainty can delay projects, trigger litigation and damage confidence in the wider investment environment.
Albania has long struggled with land-title disputes rooted in the post-communist transition, restitution claims and fragmented documentation. A high-profile project associated with the family of the US president magnifies those structural issues.
The key issue is not political criticism of the resort. It is whether the land transaction can withstand legal scrutiny.
Due diligence and exposure
For foreign investors, the case is a reminder that due diligence in emerging European markets must go beyond political access and headline opportunity. It requires verification of ownership, checks on intermediaries, assessment of criminal investigations and scrutiny of local disputes.
The involvement of organised-crime investigators increases the stakes. If case files link the land to alleged money laundering or forged deeds, authorities will need to determine whether the transaction can proceed, whether assets should be frozen, and whether any parties acted in good faith.
For Albania, the credibility risk is significant. The country wants investment, tourism development and closer integration with Western economic networks. But investors also need confidence that courts, prosecutors and land registries can resolve disputes transparently.
Political sensitivity
The Kushner connection makes the case politically sensitive. Jared Kushner’s business interests have drawn attention because of his family relationship with President Donald Trump and his role in earlier US politics. That does not make the Albanian land allegations a US political scandal by default. It does mean the case will be scrutinised internationally.
European governments and investors will watch how Albanian institutions handle the inquiry. A credible investigation could strengthen confidence, even if it complicates the project. A perception of political protection or opacity would have the opposite effect.
Albania’s EU context
Albania is an EU candidate country, and rule-of-law performance remains central to its accession path. The European Commission’s Albania enlargement page highlights the importance of judicial reform, anti-corruption and organised-crime enforcement.
This case is therefore not only about one resort. It is a practical example of the governance issues Brussels watches: property rights, organised crime, prosecutorial independence and investor protection.
What comes next
The immediate questions are legal. Did the seller have valid title? Were deeds forged? What did buyers and intermediaries know? Are there competing claims? Can the project proceed while the investigation continues?
Until those questions are answered, the resort site remains politically and legally exposed. For Albania, the case is an opportunity to show that even high-profile foreign-linked projects must pass the same legal tests as any other investment.



