The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Candidate offers explanatio­n for tens of thousands of dollars in tax debts

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

A candidate for Georgia secretary of state in this month’s runoff election, state Rep. Brad Raffensper­ger, says he can explain most of $135,000 in tax debts that appeared to be tied to him and his companies.

Raffensper­ger told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News on Monday that government agencies verified he doesn’t owe most of the debt. But he wasn’t able to account for more than $5,000 in active tax liens on property in Gwinnett and Muscogee counties.

Raffensper­ger faces former Alpharetta Mayor David Belle Isle in the July 24 Republican Party primary runoff. The winner will run against Democrat John Barrow, a former U.S. congressma­n, in the November general election.

Candidates who default on taxes are ineligible to hold elected state office unless they clear the debt or set up a payment plan, according to the Georgia Constituti­on.

“The bottom line is, I don’t owe anything,” said Raffensper­ger, an engineer and business owner. “I really mind my p’s and q’s. I understand that we have to pay our taxes as elected public officials.”

The Georgia secretary of state is responsibl­e for overseeing elections, administer­ing business incorporat­ions and handling independen­t profession­al licensing boards. The Secretary of State’s Office has an annual budget of about $30 million.

The tax debt attributed to Raffensper­ger is listed in government records as tax liens on him personally and companies he operated. A lien is a legal claim to secure debt that often encumbers real or personal property.

Raffensper­ger produced records

showing his constructi­on company, Tendon Systems LLC, was in good standing in Mississipp­i. He said $124,000 in tax liens attributed to Tendon Systems was associated with a former business partner with a stake in a separate company carrying the same name.

Raffensper­ger also said about $6,500 in debt associated with a company he founded, Trillium Structures, has been cleared from the books in Georgia. He said the company was exempt from unemployme­nt insurance taxes because it didn’t have payrolled employees at the time.

A letter from the Georgia Department of Labor dated Monday said Trillium Structures is in good standing and in compliance with all tax and wage reporting requiremen­ts.

Still, tax lien records show Raffensper­ger owes $4,609 for 2005 property taxes in Muscogee County, where he ran a manufactur­ing plant. An additional $449 was owed in Gwinnett County for personal property taxes in 2002 and 2003.

Raffensper­ger said he doesn’t know why he would owe taxes and what properties they apply to.

“If it’s a personal obligation, I’ll take a look at it,” Raffensper­ger said. “What is the status of that, is it there, is it active, and what do we have to do with that?”

Belle Isle didn’t return a phone message Monday seeking comment about his opponent’s apparent tax debt.

If tax liens are paid off, they’re automatica­lly canceled in the state’s lien database, said William Gaston, a spokesman for the Georgia Department of Revenue.

Liens that haven’t been canceled — like those in Gwinnett and Muscogee counties — are still active.

 ?? REANN HUBER / REANN.HUBER@ AJC.COM ?? State Rep. Brad Raffensper­ger, in a runoff for the Republican nomination for secretary of state, says he can explain almost all of the $135,000 in tax debts linked to him or his businesses.
REANN HUBER / REANN.HUBER@ AJC.COM State Rep. Brad Raffensper­ger, in a runoff for the Republican nomination for secretary of state, says he can explain almost all of the $135,000 in tax debts linked to him or his businesses.

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