home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 31American NotesCALIFORNIAAgnew Agonistes
-
-
- Anyone who doubts that sheer gall knows no bounds should
- consider the case of former Vice President Spiro Agnew. In 1973
- Agnew was forced to resign as Richard Nixon's Veep amid charges
- that while Governor of Maryland he accepted $147,500 in illegal
- kickbacks from highway contractors. Nine years later, after
- settling down in tony Rancho Mirage, Calif., Agnew paid the
- state of Maryland $248,735 in restitution for the alleged
- bribes, plus interest and fines. But Agnew, who became an
- international business consultant after leaving the Government,
- deducted the entire amount, plus legal fees and interest, from
- his California tax return, claiming the repayment as an
- expenditure.
-
- In a 1986 audit, the California franchise tax board denied
- the deductions and ordered Agnew to pay an additional $24,197 in
- state taxes and interest. In an appeal last week, Agnew argued
- that the $24,197 should be returned to him as a tax refund on
- his restitution. Conway Collis, a member of the state board of
- equalization, pronounced Agnew's claim "unbelievable" and said
- he found it "very hard to be sympathetic" to the former Vice
- President. If the tax board granted him the refund, said Collis,
- "we are in effect asking other California taxpayers to subsidize
- Mr. Agnew's wrongdoing." Agnew's appeal was rejected by a 5-0
- vote.
-
-
-