President’s son-in-law ‘paid little or no income tax’ for seven years
JARED KUSHNER, Donald Trump’s son-in-law and a senior White House adviser, likely paid “little or no” federal income tax between 2009 and 2016, The New York Times has reported, citing confidential financial documents.
The documents were reportedly created with Mr Kushner’s cooperation as part of a review of his finances by an institution that was considering lending him money.
The newspaper said that Mr Kushner’s tax bills reflected the use of a tax benefit known as depreciation that lets real estate investors deduct part of the cost of their properties from their taxable income. The report said that nothing in the documents reviewed “suggests Mr Kushner or his company broke the law”.
Peter Mirijanian, a spokesman for Abbe Lowell, Mr Kushner’s lawyer, told Reuters on Saturday that he would not respond to the claims, which he said were “taken from incomplete documents obtained in violation of the law and standard business confidentiality agreements”. He added, “Always following the advice of numerous attorneys and accountants, Mr Kushner properly filed and paid all taxes due under the law and regulations.”
The records reviewed by newspaper did not expressly state how much Mr Kushner paid in taxes, but included estimates for how much he owed called “income taxes payable” – and how much Mr Kushner paid in expectation of forecasted taxes known as “prepaid taxes”. The paper said that for most of the years covered, both were listed as zero, but in 2013 Mr Kushner reported income tax payable of $1.1 million. Kushner Cos, the family company for which Mr Kushner previously served as chief executive, has been profitable in recent years, the newspaper said, citing the analysis. Mr Kushner sold his interests in the company to a family trust last year.
The White House and Kushner Cos did not comment.