Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump’s 2005 tax return revealed

White House beats MSNBC to the punch by releasing info early

- BY PETER BAKER AND SUSANNE CRAIG NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump wrote off $100 million in business losses to reduce his federal taxes in 2005, according to forms made public Tuesday night in a rare glimpse at documents he has refused to disclose since becoming a candidate for the nation’s highest office.

The forms showed Trump paid $38 million in federal income taxes on reported income of $150 million, an effective tax rate of 25 percent, according to Rachel Maddow, who aired them on her MSNBC show. By claiming losses from previous years, Trump was able to save tens of millions of dollars in taxes that he otherwise might have owed.

The White House responded without even waiting for the show to air, issuing a statement that seemed to confirm the authentici­ty of the forms even as it defended Trump and assailed the network for publicizin­g them.

“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,” the statement said.

The White House added: “Before being elected president, Mr. Trump was one of the most successful businessme­n in the world, with a responsibi­lity to his company, his family and his employees to pay no more tax than legally required.” In addition to the federal income taxes, the statement said, he 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.”

The tax forms were sent to David Cay Johnston, a former New York Times reporter who covered the Internal Revenue Service for years and has written a book on Trump. Appearing with Maddow, he said he had received the forms “over the transom” and did not know who had sent them. He suggested they might even have been sent by Trump himself.

Trump’s refusal to make his tax returns public broke with decades

of tradition in presidenti­al contests and emerged as a central issue in the campaign. That drumbeat has continued since he entered the White House, particular­ly from people who feel his returns may shed light on various aspects of his business practices, including whether he has done business with Russian firms and banks.

Trump initially promised he would release the returns: “I have very big returns, as you know, and I have everything all approved and very beautiful, and we’ll be working that over in the next period of time,” he said in a January 2016 television interview. He then backpedale­d, saying he would wait until the IRS had completed its audit. In May 2016, his lawyers released a letter saying his personal tax returns had been “under continuous examinatio­n” by the IRS since 2002, and that the examinatio­ns for the returns from 2009 on were continuing.

The IRS has not confirmed Trump’s taxes are in fact under audit.

Democrats immediatel­y pounced on Tuesday night’s report, arguing that the White House’s decision to release details of Trump’s 2005 taxes before Maddow’s show undercut his past refusal to release any such informatio­n.

“If they can release some of the informatio­n, they can release all of the informatio­n,” Zac Petkanas, a senior adviser to the Democratic National Committee, said in a statement. “The only reason not to release his returns is to hide what’s in them.”

In October, The New York Times published three pages of Trump’s 1995 returns, which showed a $916 million tax deduction that could have allowed him to legally avoid paying any federal income taxes for up to 18 years.

This deduction was derived from the financial wreckage of some of the companies he drove into bankruptcy years ago, including his Atlantic City casinos, and would have allowed him to cancel out taxable income for an 18-year period. A tax code provision benefiting real estate developers, which took effect in 1993, permitted businesses like Trump’s to take tax deductions for losing other people’s money.

Few people outside of Trump’s inner circle have seen his tax returns. One person who has is Timothy L. O’Brien, another former reporter for The New York Times, who was sued for libel by Trump after he published a book that argued Trump’s net worth was $150 million to $250 million, rather than several billion dollars, as Trump had claimed. The suit was ultimately dismissed.

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