Photograph: Brian RoseĪt one point, Trump had three casinos in Atlantic City, employing 8,000 people and accounting for nearly a third of the area’s gambling revenues. Immovable … sculptor Michael MacLeod says he wasn’t paid for this Trump elephant. Rose believes the elephant, which remained at the site when he visited in 2016 because it was too heavy to move, is a great metaphor for Trump’s own legacy in Atlantic City: “Making a lot of noise and stomping his weight around, but ultimately only leaving a trail of destruction.” This flashy monument was created by sculptor Michael MacLeod, who was never paid for his work. One such place is the grounds of the Taj, where an elephant has the Trump name emblazoned below its feet. He’s tried to have his name removed from all his abandoned buildings here, but it’s still there if you look hard enough.” “The smiling employees are still there, but Trump’s name has been scraped off, which I guess is telling. “I actually went back two weeks ago and they still haven’t closed off that HR entrance,” says Rose. His grim shot of a pigeon lying dead on the ground outside, beneath large pictures of strenuously grinning Trump employees, perfectly captures an area that now seems bereft of opportunity. Rose found a similarly bleak picture nearby, at the abandoned human resources offices of Trump Entertainment Resorts. All smiles … one-time employees of Trump Entertainment Resorts look down on a dead pigeon.