The Star Malaysia

Trump shrugs off report on tax dodges

It’s a boring hit piece on me, claims US President

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NEW YORK: US President Donald Trump (pic) has shrugged off a

New York Times investigat­ion that concluded he made his fortune with the help of more than US$400mil from his parents, partly through tax schemes, as a boring, rehashed “hit piece.”

Trump has often boasted that he built a multibilli­on dollar real estate empire from a US$1mil loan from his father, Fred, himself a prominent New York builder.

But the Times reviewed more than 100,000 documents including confidenti­al tax returns and financial records that it said showed he actually received at least US$413mil (RM1.7bil) in today’s money, in part through schemes to avoid taxes.

“They used the concept of ‘time value of money’ in doing a very old, boring and often told hit piece on me,” he tweeted on Wednesday.

“Added up, this means that 97% of their stories on me are bad. Never recovered from bad election call!”

Forbes magazine, meanwhile, estimated Trump’s fortune at US$3.1bil – the same as last year, but a third smaller than it was in 2015. Forbes ranked Trump’s fortune at 259 in the world, down from 248 the year he was elected president.

The Times story said that from the time Trump was a toddler, his father funnelled millions of dollars to his four children through a sham corporatio­n to avoid gift taxes.

The Times said the records also indicate that Trump helped his father take millions more in improper tax deductions.

And he helped devise a scheme that undervalue­d his parents’ real estate holdings by hundreds of millions of dollars, sharply reducing taxes on those properties when they were transferre­d to their children, according to the paper.

A lawyer for Trump, Charles Harder, called the account “100% false, and highly defamatory.”

“There was no fraud or tax evasion by anyone. The facts upon which The Times bases its false allegation­s are extremely inaccurate,” he added.

“President Trump had virtually no involvemen­t whatsoever with these matters.”

Addressing a press conference, White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders criticised the article’s main claims, but said it was right in one important aspect: Trump’s business acumen.

“I will say one thing the article did get right was that it showed that the president’s father had a great deal of confidence in him.

“”The president brought his father into a lot of deals and they made a lot of money together. His father went on to say that everything he touched turned to gold.”

The paper’s contention that Trump was earning as much as US$200,000 a year in today’s money by the time he was three years old, and was the equivalent of a millionair­e by the age of eight, drew considerab­le attention.

The assertion was pounced on by several late night talk show hosts, including comedian Stephen Colbert, the host of The Late Show on CBS.

“So, let me get this straight: At one point, Donald Trump was an extraordin­arily wealthy toddler. And today? He is still that,” he said.

Not everything, however, was a laughing matter: The Times said Trump’s taxhating father used various methods to funnel his wealth to his children and shield it from the Internal Revenue Service, some of which tax experts said were improper or possibly illegal.

Following the article’s publicatio­n, the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance announced it was “reviewing the allegation­s in the NYT article and is vigorously pursuing all appropriat­e avenues of investigat­ion.”

Democratic Senator Ron Wyden called for federal tax authoritie­s to investigat­e as well.

“It’s critical that IRS fully investigat­e these allegation­s and prosecute any violations to the fullest extent of the law,” Wyden wrote on Twitter.

Speculatio­n about the source of Trump’s wealth has mounted since 2015, when he declared his candidacy for the nation’s highest office but broke with longstandi­ng tradition by refusing to release his tax returns.

He has been repeatedly rebuked over ethics violations for refusing to divest his assets in the Trump Organizati­on, instead turning over control of the entity to his sons, Donald Jr and Eric.

The president also continues to stay or make use of hotels and golf clubs he owns, leading to conflict of interest allegation­s and multiple lawsuits.

In July, a federal judge allowed a suit to proceed accusing Trump of violating the constituti­on by maintainin­g his interest in a hotel that does business with foreign government­s.

It marked the first time a court interprete­d the anticorrup­tion clause in the constituti­on, known as the emoluments clause, and applied it to a sitting president. —

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