Trump's 2005 tax bill revealed in media leak
WASHINGTON, March 15, 2017 (AFP) - The White House has acknowledged that Donald Trump paid $38 million in taxes in 2005, a rare peek into the president's jealously guarded finances that was leaked to the US media.
WASHINGTON, March 15, 2017 (AFP) - The White House has acknowledged that Donald Trump paid $38 million in taxes in 2005, a rare peek into the president's jealously guarded finances that was leaked to the US media.
Trump reported an income
of $150 million 12 years ago, and paid an overall tax rate of around 25
percent, according to a leaked summary of part of his tax return.
The document also shows
that he wrote off more than $100 million in business losses to reduce his tax
burden. The White House described it as a "large-scale depreciation for
construction."
But the two-page partial
return does not reveal the source of Trump's income, the key question that has
fuelled demands for him to disclose his tax history in line with standard
practice for US presidents.
The full tax document,
which would be dozens of page in length, could notably shed light on whether he
has controversial business ties -- including with Russia, as some Trump critics
suspect.
The White House confirmed
late Tuesday the details of Trump's 2005 taxes just before David Cay Johnston,
a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist, and MSNBC revealed the short
filing.
On Wednesday, Trump
attacked the reporter on Twitter, questioning his account of how he obtained
the document.
"Does anybody really
believe that a reporter, who nobody ever heard of, 'went to his mailbox' and
found my tax returns? @NBCNews FAKE NEWS!"
Appearing with
left-leaning MSNBC host Rachel Maddow, Johnston said he did not know the source
of the leaked return, which was placed in his mailbox.
But Johnston suggested a
member of Trump's entourage -- possibly even, he speculated, the president
himself -- anonymously delivered the tax documents to him.
"Let me point out
it's entirely possible Donald sent this to me," he said. "Donald has
a long history of leaking material about himself when he thinks it's in his
interests."
Trump has refused to
release his full tax returns since he began his quest for the US presidency,
shattering decades of tradition for candidates from both major political
parties.
The two-page snapshot was
broadly favorable to the White House and appeared to back up Trump's claim that
he paid his fair share of taxes, and no more.
"The documents show
Trump and his wife Melania paying $5.3 million in regular federal income tax --
a rate of less than four percent," Johnston wrote in a post on the Daily
Beast website.
"However, the Trumps
paid an additional $31 million in the so-called 'alternative minimum tax,' or
AMT."
The AMT was originally
designed to prevent rich taxpayers from using excessive loopholes, and Trump
has previously called for its elimination.
- 'Audit excuse' -
Trump's son Donald Trump
Jr was quick to claim victory over those who speculated his dad paid no taxes.
"I don't know much,
but if I recall correctly $38,000,000 is a lot more than $0... right???"
he wrote on Twitter.
The president has claimed,
without evidence, that he could not release his taxes because he is under an
Internal Revenue Service audit, and that at any rate, US voters have no
interest in seeing them.
A recent Langer Research
poll, however, showed that almost three-quarters of Americans believe Trump
should release his tax returns.
While campaigning for
president Trump said that if elected he would release his taxes, but once in
office he backpedaled.
In a statement, the
Democratic National Committee slammed Trump's "audit excuse" as a
"sham."
"The only reason not
to release his returns is to hide what's in them, such as financial connections
with Russian oligarchs and the Kremlin," said Zac Petkanas, a senior
adviser to the DNC, offering no evidence.
- On the attack -
The White House bashed
media outlets for publishing the return, even as it confirmed its authenticity
and key figures.
"You know you are
desperate for ratings when you are willing to violate the law to push a story
about two pages of tax returns from over a decade ago," an administration
official said.
Trump paid "no more
tax than legally required," said the official, who refused to be
identified.
"That being said, Mr
Trump paid 38 million dollars even after taking into account large-scale
depreciation for construction, on an income of more than $150 million."
The official said that
Trump also paid "tens of millions of dollars in other taxes such as sales
and excise taxes and employment taxes, and this illegally published return
proves just that."
In October, before Trump
was elected, The New York Times published three pages of Trump's leaked 1995
tax returns. Those returns showed a $916 million deduction that, according to
IRS rules, could have resulted in Trump legally paying no taxes for up to 18
years.
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