Sentinel & Enterprise

President lashes out at Times tax report

- By Michael D. Shear

Trump claimed the newspaper used illegally obtained documents

President Donald Trump shifted his position overnight on a sweeping New York Times investigat­ive report on his taxes, falsely accusing the paper Monday of using “illegally obtained informatio­n” after initially saying Sunday that the article was “totally fake news.”

In a series of tweets Monday morning, Trump did not explicitly deny the revelation­s that he paid only $750 in federal income taxes in 2016 and 2017, and that he paid almost no taxes in other years because of huge losses in many of his businesses.

Instead, Trump lashed out at the suggestion that he is not as wealthy and successful as he has repeatedly claimed to be, insisting — without providing any evidence — that his finances are in very good shape.

“If you look at the extraordin­ary assets owned by me, which the Fake News hasn’t, I am extremely under leveraged — I have very little debt compared to the value of assets,” he insisted on Twitter.

In fact, as the article notes, Trump is heavily in debt, and much of what he owes to lenders will have to be paid back in just a few years.

“He is personally responsibl­e for loans and other debts totaling $421 million, with most of it coming due within four years,” the report says. “Should he win reelection, his lenders could be placed in the unpreceden­ted position of weighing whether to foreclose on a sitting president.”

Trump also said Monday that he “might release” financial statements that show “all properties, assets and debts,” but did not say when he might do that. “It is a very IMPRESSIVE Statement,” he wrote.

The report revealed that Trump paid no federal income taxes in 11 of 18 years that the Times examined because of huge losses in other businesses that Trump owns. The president used provisions in the tax law to offset his tax obligation­s with the losses. The article notes that the Times “obtained tax-return data extending over more than two decades for Trump and the hundreds of companies that make up his business organizati­on, including detailed informatio­n from his first two years in office.”

Despite Trump’s allegation that the report was based on informatio­n that was gotten illegally, the report noted that “all of the informatio­n the Times obtained was provided by sources with legal access to it.”

It added: “The Times was able to verify portions of it by com

paring it with publicly available informatio­n and confidenti­al records previously obtained by the Times.”

On Sunday night, Trump told reporters at a news conference that he had paid “a lot” in taxes. He also claimed that he was not contacted before the article ran,

despite the fact that it quotes a lawyer for the Trump Organizati­on.

By Monday morning, he was insisting on Twitter that he had paid “many millions of dollars” in taxes. He did not specify whether he meant federal income taxes, and he complained

that he “was entitled, like everyone else, to depreciati­on and tax credits.”

“The Fake News Media, just like Election time 2016, is bringing up my Taxes & all sorts of other nonsense with illegally obtained informatio­n & only bad intent,” he wrote on Twitter.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI / AP ?? President Donald Trump pauses during a press conference in the Rose Garden of the White House Monday.
EVAN VUCCI / AP President Donald Trump pauses during a press conference in the Rose Garden of the White House Monday.

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