[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Corrupt Government Title: Tax Lawyers Question Gingrich's 2010 Return GOP presidential contender Newt Gingrich used a popular tax strategy that enabled him to avoid paying Medicare tax on most of his 2010 income, three tax lawyers told USA TODAY. After reviewing the 2010 federal tax return Gingrich released last week, the tax experts said he may have left himself open to an IRS challenge. "That could be the type of return that would be flagged for an audit," said one of the experts, Robert McKenzie, a tax attorney at the Arnstein & Lehr law firm in Chicago. The experts, who also included Bryan Skarlatos, of Kostelanetz & Fink in New York, and Martin Press, of the Gunster law firm in Fort Lauderdale, said it would be difficult to pinpoint the amount of Medicare tax that went unpaid without additional financial detail. But they estimated it could amount to tens of thousands of dollars. In a written response to questions on Monday, Gingrich's campaign spokesman Joe DeSantis said "the salary and distribution were handled properly and legally." He declined to allow an interview with Gingrich's tax preparer. The questioning about the former House speaker's use of the tax strategy arose after he released his tax return in a strategic bid to pressure presidential rival Mitt Romney into doing the same. Romney, who had consistently declined to disclose his tax returns, is expected to release two years of his filings on Tuesday. Gingrich's strategy involved a so-called S Corporation, an entity that has increasingly been used by attorneys, entrepreneurs, contractors and self-employed professionals. The IRS received 4.4 million such returns in 2010, agency records show. The IRS defines S corporations as entities that pass corporate income, losses, deductions and credit through to their shareholders for federal tax purposes. The shareholders report the income and losses on their personal tax returns and are assessed tax at their individual income tax rates. Using an S Corporation enables filers to avoid double taxation that can otherwise occur if they received income from a regular corporation, which would face paying business taxes. Gingrich's tax return shows his S Corporation, Gingrich Holdings, accounted for the bulk of his $3,142,066 adjusted gross income in 2010. The corporation paid him nearly $2.5 million in distributions beyond his salary and wages total of $252,500, his tax return and 2011 federal financial disclosure filing show. Non-salary distributions from S Corporations are not subject to the 2.9% Medicare tax rate, half paid by the corporation and half by the employee. But the IRS requires S corporations to pay "reasonable" salary compensation to employees for their services before paying non-wage distributions. That's designed to prevent the corporations from avoiding Medicare taxes by issuing disproportionate payments in distributions, rather than wages. An IRS publication about S Corporations states that if most of the gross receipts and profits are associated with an employee's personal services, "then most of the profit distribution should be allocated as compensation." DeSantis said the candidate's speaking engagements and television appearances produced the bulk of the payments received by Gingrich Holdings. McKenzie said the IRS would typically ask how much investment an S corporation filer put into her or his business. Gingrich Holdings was renamed Gingrich Productions last year, corporate records in Georgia show and his spokesman confirmed. Gingrich's federal financial dislosure report, filed in July, lists Gingrich Productions as an asset valued at between $500,001 and $1 million. "The general rule of thumb they'll usually apply is they don't view anything greater than a 20% return on investment as reasonable. The rest should be paid as salary," said McKenzie. "The IRS might make the case his salary should have been substantially larger" and subject to Medicare tax, said Skarlatos. "They could challenge it, if they wished." "Mr Gingrich received a salary from (Gingrich) Holdings which management felt was in line with similar salaries," DeSantis said. "Since we believe his salary was fair, nothing was saved" in Medicare tax. Several court rulings have upheld the IRS' authority to reclassify any S-Corporation payments deemed to be excessive as salary, subjecting those earnings to Medicare taxation. At least one other prominent political figure 2004 Democratic vice presidential nominee John Edwards faced controversy over S Corporation earnings. Income figures released during the unsuccessful campaign with presidential nominee John Kerry showed that Edwards' similar tax break enabled him to avoid paying more than $591,000 in Medicare tax. The Kerry-Edwards campaign released a letter from a Washington law firm that Edwards and his wife asked to review 10 years of their tax filings. The letter stated that the structure was lawful, ethical and proper.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Brian S (#0)
You gonna vote for Newt?
Since we have no local races of interest, I am going to request the GOP primary ballot and vote for someone but undecided. President Obama would have an easier time beating grimgrinch than Romney, imo.
Never swear "allegiance" to anything other than the 'right to change your mind'!
Yeah, if it were yours or mine.
The Kerry-Edwards campaign released a letter from a Washington law firm that Edwards and his wife asked to review 10 years of their tax filings. The letter stated that the structure was lawful, ethical and proper. The rich are different from you and I. They can get away with murder. All you need is a good lawyer or fifty.
|
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|