Trump’s Taxes: Red Flags, Big Losses and a
Windfall From His Father
The presidency of Donald J. Trump, a congressional
report reveals, was marked by some of the same questionable tax maneuvers that
had characterized his business career.
Donald J. Trump received a cash infusion during his
presidency from the sale of Starrett City, a Brooklyn housing complex his
father had invested in during the 1970s.
Russ
Buettner Susanne Craig Mike McIntire
By Russ
Buettner, Susanne Craig and Mike McIntire
Dec. 21,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/21/us/politics/trump-tax-returns-findings.html
At first
glance, the income-tax data released this week by a House committee seems to
show a turnaround in 2018 for former President Donald J. Trump. After a decade
in which he declared no taxable income, his 2018 return reported taxable income
of more than $24 million. He paid nearly a million dollars in federal income
taxes.
In fact,
his year in the black appears to have resulted largely from the final windfall
of the vast inheritance that financed much of his business career — more than
$14 million in gains from the sale of his father’s 1970s investment in the
Brooklyn housing development of Starrett City.
But
precedent soon reasserted itself. Because of business losses, he paid no income
taxes in 2020, his last year in the White House.
That year,
after obtaining more than two decades of Mr. Trump’s tax returns, The New York
Times traced the boom-and-bust arcs that had marked his financial history:
dubious tax avoidance, huge losses and a life buttressed by an inherited
fortune. The newly released tax information, from 2015 to 2020, shows how that
pattern extended through his years in Washington.
The new
material, obtained by the House Ways and Means Committee after a yearslong
legal battle, raised a multitude of questions about the methods Mr. Trump had
employed while president to lower his income taxes, and about failures by the
Internal Revenue Service to fully investigate those deductions.
The
congressional Joint Committee on Taxation, a bipartisan panel that is known for
reviewing the impact of tax legislation and has a staff with deep tax law
expertise, reviewed the Trump returns and found dozens of red flags that it
believed required further investigation.
One
involved transactions with his children. According to the tax data, Mr. Trump
annually received tens of thousands of dollars in interest income from three of
his grown children — Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric — money that stemmed from what
his returns described as personal loans to them. The committee questioned
whether the loans actually “were disguised gifts” to evade gift taxes and allow
the children to write off interest payments to their father.
The
congressional report said the I.R.S. explored whether Mr. Trump correctly
deducted the $21 million he had paid to settle a series of fraud claims against
the now-defunct Trump University. It was not clear, the report said, whether
Mr. Trump had received any insurance proceeds that offset some portion of the
settlement. The outcome of that review was not known.
The
committee also questioned whether Mr. Trump had charged expenses from his
personal life and hobbies as business expenses, mentioning travel on his
aircraft in particular. The Times’s 2020 investigation found that he had
frequently written off questionable expenses, including more than $70,000 paid
to style his hair during his years on “The Apprentice.”
One point
of potential trouble for Mr. Trump emerged from the report. The I.R.S. is
considering disallowing the $21 million write-off Mr. Trump claimed in 2015 for
agreeing not to develop much of the land on a sprawling estate in Westchester
County, N.Y., known as Seven Springs. After not examining the transaction for a
period of time, the agency is exploring whether the value Mr. Trump claimed was
based on a qualified appraisal.
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The
committee requested that the I.R.S. also verify charitable contributions Mr.
Trump reported making with cash, checks or credit cards.
Besides Mr.
Trump’s returns, the Ways and Means committee obtained roughly 1,100 electronic
files containing working papers, memos and other internal documents showing how
the I.R.S. had handled them. The records, according to the report, depict an
agency that seemed reluctant to aggressively examine a wealthy taxpayer who was
difficult to deal with and had complex returns.
After The
Times published its investigation revealing years of Mr. Trump’s tax data,
I.R.S. officials met to decide how to respond to the numerous revelations,
including questionable deductions, tax credits and cancellation of debt. Yet
the agency set a high bar for what to examine.
For
instance, The Times reported that Mr. Trump had a pattern of writing off
payments to unidentified consultants, totaling $26 million over nine years
across all of his projects, and that at least some of that money went to his
daughter Ivanka, even though she was earning a salary as an executive at his
company. It raised the question of whether the payments reflected actual
consulting work or were simply a way to claim an unwarranted tax deduction.
The I.R.S.
seemed to find the payments worthy of scrutiny, but worried that, because they
were spread out over many years and were made by numerous corporate entities,
“the resources needed to examine would far outweigh any potential benefits,”
the report said. In a bit of circular reasoning, the agency ultimately
determined that the fees were too “difficult to examine unless they were found
to be fraudulent payments.”
Similarly,
agency officials initially flagged a detail in The Times’s reporting about how
Mr. Trump had used $9.7 million in business investment credits, in part related
to the renovation of the Old Post Office hotel in Washington, to wipe out his
tax obligations for 2016 and 2017. But to pursue it further, they concluded,
“the credits would need to be material,” and the committee found that the
I.R.S. was ultimately “not interested.” Mr. Trump is currently seeking a refund
of nearly all of the $641,931 in income taxes he paid for 2015 using the same
credit for historic rehabilitation, the report noted. He wants a refund for all
but $750, the same total income tax he paid in
both of the following two years.
The
internal records indicated that, in determining which issues to pursue, I.R.S.
officials discussed “the history of difficult negotiations between Mr. Trump’s
counsel and I.R.S. personnel” and fretted that opening new examinations of past
tax returns could damage the “good relationship” they had recently established
with Mr. Trump’s representatives.
Steven M.
Rosenthal, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center, said the committee’s
findings “just goes to show you how far behind the ball the I.R.S. is.”
“It’s
unfortunate that they just don’t have the resources or the expertise to keep up
with a sophisticated taxpayer like Trump,” he said, “let alone a sophisticated
taxpayer like Trump who specializes in obstruction and delay.”
Russ
Buettner is an investigative reporter. Since 2016, his reporting has focused on
the finances of Donald. J. Trump, including articles that revealed tax
avoidance schemes evidenced on several decades of his tax returns. In 2019, he
shared a Pulitzer Prize for work that revealed the vast inheritance Mr. Trump
had received from his father. @russbuettner
Susanne
Craig is an investigative reporter. She has been a Wall Street correspondent and bureau chief in Albany. She
shared a Pulitzer Prize in 2019 for work that shattered Donald Trump’s myth
that he is a self-made billionaire.
@susannecraig
Mike
McIntire is an investigative reporter. He won a Pulitzer Prize in 2022 for his
reporting on the hidden financial incentives behind police traffic stops, and
has written in depth on campaign finance, gun violence and corruption in
college sports. @mmcintire





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