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Trump's Taxes: Long-Concealed Records Show Chronic Losses and Years of Tax Avoidance
#1
New York Times

The Times obtained Donald Trump’s tax information extending over more than two decades, revealing struggling properties, vast write-offs, an audit battle and hundreds of millions in debt coming due.
Sept. 27, 2020


Donald J. Trump paid $750 in federal income taxes the year he won the presidency. In his first year in the White House, he paid another $750.
He had paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the previous 15 years — largely because he reported losing much more money than he made.
As the president wages a re-election campaign that polls say he is in danger of losing, his finances are under stress, beset by losses and hundreds of millions of dollars in debt coming due that he has personally guaranteed. Also hanging over him is a decade-long audit battle with the Internal Revenue Service over the legitimacy of a $72.9 million tax refund that he claimed, and received, after declaring huge losses. An adverse ruling could cost him more than $100 million.
The tax returns that Mr. Trump has long fought to keep private tell a story fundamentally different from the one he has sold to the American public. His reports to the I.R.S. portray a businessman who takes in hundreds of millions of dollars a year yet racks up chronic losses that he aggressively employs to avoid paying taxes. Now, with his financial challenges mounting, the records show that he depends more and more on making money from businesses that put him in potential and often direct conflict of interest with his job as president.
The New York Times has obtained tax-return data extending over more than two decades for Mr. Trump and the hundreds of companies that make up his business organization, including detailed information from his first two years in office. It does not include his personal returns for 2018 or 2019. This article offers an overview of The Times’s findings; additional articles will be published in the coming weeks.
The returns are some of the most sought-after, and speculated-about, records in recent memory. In Mr. Trump’s nearly four years in office — and across his endlessly hyped decades in the public eye — journalists, prosecutors, opposition politicians and conspiracists have, with limited success, sought to excavate the enigmas of his finances. By their very nature, the filings will leave many questions unanswered, many questioners unfulfilled. They comprise information that Mr. Trump has disclosed to the I.R.S., not the findings of an independent financial examination. They report that Mr. Trump owns hundreds of millions of dollars in valuable assets, but they do not reveal his true wealth. Nor do they reveal any previously unreported connections to Russia.
MORE: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/09/27/us/donald-trump-taxes.html?action=click&module=Spotlight&pgtype=Homepage
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#2
so  he paid  1.5 billion in taxes  maybe you should  worry about how much  Pelosi Clinton's or Obama's have paid latley
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#3
  President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton made their tax returns public. There's no need to worry when it can be referenced. When Pelosi runs for president I'm sure she'll receive the same interest. As for the current president, you'll have to point me to where anything says Trump paid 1.5 BILLION in taxes. Where did you see that?
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#4
750 million year he won presidency  first year as president 750 million top of your article
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#5
Quote: @Viking1987 said:
750 million year he won presidency  first year as president 750 million top of your article
Oh no, that's $750... as in dollars. I'll share another quote from the article. Here you go:

While Mr. Trump crisscrossed the country in 2015 describing himself as uniquely qualified to be president because he was “really rich” and had “built a great company,” his accountants back in New York were busy putting the finishing touches on his 2014 tax return.
After tabulating all the profits and losses from Mr. Trump’s various endeavors on Form 1040, the accountants came to Line 56, where they had to enter the total income tax the candidate was required to pay. They needed space for only a single figure.
Zero.
For Mr. Trump, that bottom line must have looked familiar. It was the fourth year in a row that he had not paid a penny of federal income taxes.
Mr. Trump’s avoidance of income taxes is one of the most striking discoveries in his tax returns, especially given the vast wash of income itemized elsewhere in those filings.
Mr. Trump’s net income from his fame — his 50 percent share of “The Apprentice,” together with the riches showered upon him by the scores of suitors paying to use his name — totaled $427.4 million through 2018. A further $176.5 million in profit came to him through his investment in two highly successful office buildings.
So how did he escape nearly all taxes on that fortune? Even the effective tax rate paid by the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans could have caused him to pay more than $100 million.
The answer rests in a third category of Mr. Trump’s endeavors: businesses that he owns and runs himself. The collective and persistent losses he reported from them largely absolved him from paying federal income taxes on the $600 million from “The Apprentice,” branding deals and investments.
That equation is a key element of the alchemy of Mr. Trump’s finances: using the proceeds of his celebrity to purchase and prop up risky businesses, then wielding their losses to avoid taxes.

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#6
Shocking... :o
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#7
Quote: @Viking1987 said:
750 million year he won presidency  first year as president 750 million top of your article
Uh.... no dude. $750 total. No millions.... No commas. seven hundred fifty dollars total.
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#8
The taxes paid aren't the biggest problem. The problem is going to be the bank loan applications that he filed during the same timeframe... Those showed him with massive financial gains while his tax documents show massive tax losses.... That would be fraud. There is also the matter of the cash that he paid for his scotland golf resort and where that money came from and where is it accounted for? But I don't think we will ever get to the bottom of that.

Another tricky thing is that Ivanka is listed as receiving large sums of money for consulting purposes which is fine. Except for the fact she has been a corporate officer of the company since she was 22. 
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#9
Won't matter to Trumpists...

[Image: manson-family-gif.gif?w=250&zoom=2]
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#10
Woo-Hoo!  I pay more in taxes than a Multi-millionaire!!!

Yay me!
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