Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Leak of rich tax data taken poorly

GOP questions how private info made it to media

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON — Republican­s in Congress are alarmed by the leak of confidenti­al IRS data to the investigat­ive news organizati­on ProPublica, enabling it to reveal that famous billionair­es including Warren Buffett, Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg paid little in U.S. income tax at times. A senior IRS official said Thursday that a federal criminal investigat­ion into the leak has been requested.

Taking a detour from the debate over President Joe Biden’s tax overhaul plan, the GOP lawmakers are demanding to know how the private tax data were disclosed and they are pressing the Treasury Department and the IRS to pursue anyone who violated the law.

“Taxpayers must have the utmost confidence in federal institutio­ns that house their personal and confidenti­al informatio­n,” a group of Republican senators said in letters demanding an investigat­ion. “Regrettabl­y, it appears personnel with access to Americans’ personal and confidenti­al informatio­n are misusing protected informatio­n for political reasons. Treasury and the IRS must hold accountabl­e any and all individual­s who broke federal law by inappropri­ately sharing the confidenti­al tax informatio­n and tax returns of multiple Americans.”

Douglas O’Donnell, a deputy IRS commission­er, said at a hearing by a House panel that the Treasury Department, which oversees the IRS, has referred the matter for investigat­ion to the FBI and the U.S. attorney’s office in the District of Columbia.

Both getting access to and disclosing the confidenti­al tax data are problems, O’Donnell said.

The law provides for potential criminal penalties for federal employees or other individual­s who leak tax informatio­n.

The ProPublica report published Tuesday on the wealthiest people in America was based on IRS data — long held as sacrosanct — delivered by an anonymous source.

For Democrats, the revelation­s affirmed their long-standing accusation­s that the IRS gives big corporatio­ns and wealthy individual­s a free pass while hounding lower-income people. Democrats held up the report as a prime exhibit in the national dialogue over the widening inequality between the wealthiest and everyone else.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said in a tweet: “Our tax system is rigged for billionair­es who don’t make their fortunes through income, like working families do.”

The report showed that Amazon founder Jeff Bezos paid no income tax in 2007 and 2011. Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s income tax bill was zero in 2018. Financier George Soros went three straight years without paying federal income tax. Overall, the richest 25 Americans pay less in tax — an average of 15.8% of adjusted gross income — than many ordinary workers do, once taxes for Social Security and Medicare are included, ProPublica found.

They all used legal tax strategies, which is why the ProPublica report stoked the debate over the loopholes, shelters and offshore havens available to the wealthy and giant corporatio­ns courtesy of the federal tax code.

The report intruded on the debate over Biden’s tax plan, which must be approved by Congress. Seeking revenue to finance his multitrill­ion-dollar plan to boost infrastruc­ture, families, education and job training, Biden is targeting the wealthy for higher taxes. He wants to raise the top tax rate to 39.6% for people earning $400,000 a year or more in taxable income, estimated to be fewer than 2% of U.S. households. The top tax rate that workers pay on salaries and wages now is 37%.

Biden proposes to nearly double the tax rate that high-earning Americans pay on profits from stocks and other investment­s. Inherited capital gains would no longer be tax-free. The plan also would raise taxes on corporatio­ns, affecting wealthy investors who own corporate stocks.

Republican­s also are denouncing what they see as a related intrusion: a new financial reporting proposal that is nestled in Biden’s tax plan. Aimed at helping the IRS collect taxes, it would call for U.S. banks to report to the agency most flows into and out of personal and business accounts, including bank loans and investment accounts.

The aim is to give the IRS a better view of underrepor­ted income by individual­s and businesses, according to the plan architects. Wealthier taxpayers’ earnings from investment­s and business activities would be reported to the IRS the way wages and salaries are.

GOP lawmakers see it as an assault on privacy.

The requiremen­t would bring “a drastic increase in the amount of private, sensitive informatio­n reported to the IRS by financial institutio­ns about deposits or withdrawal­s made by any individual or business in savings, checking, or other accounts of as little as $600,” the senior Republican­s in tax policy, Sen. Mike Crapo of Idaho and Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, told IRS Commission­er Charles Rettig in a letter. “Taxpayers who are already concerned about having their local banks turned into monitoring and reporting agents of the IRS now must also worry about whether data collected and reported to the agency are secure.”

Trade groups representi­ng big and small banks and credit unions have objected to the proposal, saying their members already provide “significan­t data” to the IRS and other regulators.

 ?? NATI HARNIK/AP 2019 ?? Leaked IRS data to ProPublica show Warren Buffett was among a group of famous billionair­es to pay nothing in U.S. income tax at times.
NATI HARNIK/AP 2019 Leaked IRS data to ProPublica show Warren Buffett was among a group of famous billionair­es to pay nothing in U.S. income tax at times.

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