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- <text id=94TT0177>
- <title>
- Feb. 14, 1994: Raw Nerves And Tax Returns
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 14, 1994 Are Men Really That Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INVESTIGATIONS, Page 26
- Raw Nerves And Tax Returns
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The record is incomplete, but new disclosures raise even more
- questions about Whitewater
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Richard Behar and Suneel Ratan/Little Rock, Nina
- Burleigh/Arkadelphia and James Carney/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Explanations keep changing. Numbers do not jibe. Documents
- are missing or unavailable. And now come suggestions from the
- U.S. park police that White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum interfered
- with their investigation of his associate Vincent Foster's suicide
- last July--in ways other than removing a file about Whitewater
- Development Corp. from Foster's office. Small wonder, given
- this bumbling, that the White House cannot keep the Whitewater
- affair quiet.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, new questions keep popping up even as special counsel
- Robert Fiske prepares to launch his probe into all aspects of
- the mess. The latest: Did Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton, back
- in Arkansas days, underpay their federal income taxes by much
- more than they have previously admitted? A TIME examination
- of bank records, interviews with some leading participants and
- consultations with tax experts indicate that is at least enough
- of a possibility to warrant a close look by Fiske and his probers.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, if the press and congressional Republicans appear
- to be hounding the Clintons over what seem like minor arcane
- details, the White House must take much of the blame. Its response
- to the Whitewater mess has been not just bumbling but secretive--giving out partial and conflicting information, coyly withholding
- documents, hunkering down in a way that encourages suspicion.
- And if the White House cannot establish that it is leveling
- with press and public on small matters, it will be hard-pressed
- to win trust on great affairs of state.
- </p>
- <p> Certainly the tax question hits a raw nerve. Presidential adviser
- Bruce Lindsey, a former Arkansas lawyer designated to field
- inquiries about Whitewater, angrily implies that TIME wants
- to write "a story that the Clintons are tax cheats." (Wrong:
- any underpayment could have been the result of excessively casual
- bookkeeping or following bad advice.) Lindsey also brandishes
- a folder containing copies of canceled checks that he says document
- all the Clintons' tax deductions related to Whitewater, which
- he insists are legitimate. But he refuses to make any public,
- complaining that the press would only report such information
- wrongly. The White House, he says, will show Whitewater documents
- only to Fiske or his probers.
- </p>
- <p> So a definitive answer to the tax question may have to await
- the end of Fiske's investigation--which, at least at the start,
- presumably will focus on an earlier matter: Did Madison Guaranty,
- a busted savings and loan, funnel money improperly either into
- Bill Clinton's Arkansas campaigns or into Whitewater, a real
- estate venture in which the Clintons were equal partners with
- James McDougal, the owner of Madison Guaranty, and his former
- wife Susan?
- </p>
- <p> The White House in large part has itself to blame for the tax
- questions coming up now. They arise largely because Lindsey
- tried yet again to explain how the Clintons could have lost
- $68,900 in Whitewater, as attorney James Lyons claimed in a
- 1992 report issued on their behalf, when they had not documented
- that they had invested anywhere near that much. Lindsey told
- the Associated Press that slightly more than $41,000 of the
- loss consisted of interest the Clintons paid on Whitewater-related
- loans and deducted on their federal income tax returns. Lindsey
- told TIME that the rest of the money the Clintons invested included
- accountants' fees, real estate taxes and "other expenses" but
- that the bulk of it was accounted for by repayment of principal
- on loans the Clintons had taken out to finance the project.
- </p>
- <p> Like earlier statements, this one only raised new problems.
- James McDougal has told TIME that Lyons also counted, as a contribution
- to Whitewater and thus an eventual loss to the Clintons, a check
- for $20,744.65 that actually represented repayment by Bill Clinton
- of a personal loan. The loan, says McDougal, was for campaign
- expenses and had nothing to do with Whitewater. Lindsey insists
- the loan payment was Whitewater-related but says he does not
- know exactly how the proceeds were used.
- </p>
- <p> A different but serious problem is whether all the interest
- deductions were proper. Seven tax experts consulted by TIME
- express strong doubts. One is Lawrence M. Stone, a former Treasury
- Department tax attorney who has taught tax law at both the University
- of California, Berkeley, and Yale and co-written a book on federal
- taxation that one of Clinton's tax advisers calls "an industry
- bible." His opinion: "If the worst assumptions are true, the
- Clintons underpaid their federal taxes by at least $11,000"
- during the years 1978-79-80 alone. That would be in addition
- to $2,156 the Clintons earlier admitted underpaying in 1984
- and 1985; adding interest, the Clintons have repaid $4,000.
- </p>
- <p> The debate involves some of the most obscure arcana in the tax
- code: interest capitalization, mirror loans and Section 351
- Transfers, to name a few. But here are some guideposts:
- </p>
- <p> THE CRITICS' DOUBTS
- </p>
- <p> On Aug. 2, 1978, when Bill Clinton was Arkansas' attorney general,
- the Clintons and McDougals bought 230 acres of land on the White
- River that they intended to develop for vacation homes. The
- price: $203,000, all borrowed--$20,000 from Union Bank of
- Little Rock for a down payment; $182,611.20 advanced by Citizens
- Bank Trust of Flippin, a tiny Arkansas town, as a mortgage loan.
- On Sept. 30, 1979, after Bill Clinton was elected Governor,
- the couples transferred the land to the newly formed Whitewater
- company, which they owned fifty-fifty.
- </p>
- <p> White House adviser Lindsey now says the Clintons paid, and
- deducted from their federally taxable income, "about $10,000"
- of interest in 1978. Records examined by TIME, however, indicate
- that the banks received at most $5,752 in interest that year.
- So how could the Clintons have claimed they alone paid $10,000,
- even if they paid the McDougals' half-share as well as their
- own? Frank Burge, who was then chief lending officer for Citizens
- Bank, says he cannot explain it.
- </p>
- <p> In 1979, says Lindsey, the Clintons paid, and deducted, "about
- $12,000" in interest. That is a more believable figure, given
- that records indicate the banks took in $20,302. Even so, the
- two-year figures show the Clintons' claiming payments of about
- $22,000, or far more than a half-share--in fact, more than
- 84%--of the roughly $26,000 the banks received.
- </p>
- <p> More problems are raised by the Clintons' 1980 tax return (the
- White House refuses to make public their 1978-79 returns). The
- 1980 return shows combined gross income of $87,556 and interest
- payments of $13,350: $4,350 to Citizens Bank, $9,000 to "James
- McDougal." McDougal says both were for interest incurred in
- 1978-79, which would bring total interest payments claimed by
- the Clintons for those years to $35,350, or more than the banks
- received.
- </p>
- <p> The problems only begin there, though. Tax experts such as Tom
- Ochsenschlager, a partner at the accounting firm Grant Thornton,
- say it would be improper if the Clintons took a deduction in
- 1980 for any reimbursement of interest paid by McDougal in an
- earlier year.
- </p>
- <p> Further, McDougal in an interview insists the $13,350 of interest
- paid (or reimbursed) in 1980 was the only cash of their own
- that the Clintons put into Whitewater. Ever? Yes, says McDougal:
- "Those two figures I've given you, those interest payments--that's it. Period. End of discussion." If he is correct--and
- the White House fiercely disputes him--that would mean the
- Clintons could not possibly have lost anything like the $68,900
- they say they invested in Whitewater, since they put less than
- a fifth that much into it.
- </p>
- <p> McDougal further asserts that while "Bill was totally oblivious
- to money," Hillary was "grasping" in her approach, and took
- tax deductions to which she knew the couple was not entitled.
- Referring to the $13,500 in Whitewater-related interest payments
- that he concedes the Clintons paid for 1978-80, McDougal says,
- "Those were legitimate write-offs on their returns. Everything
- after that was not." Asked why the Clintons could not have simply
- made an honest mistake, McDougal said, "You don't make a mistake
- for eight years running or whatever it was. Year after year
- after year, and you're a lawyer?...Oh, yes, she knew what
- was going on." Speaking for the Clintons, Lindsey replied, "That's
- absolutely not true. They were entitled to all the tax deductions
- that they took."
- </p>
- <p> There are also a clutch of questions centering on the transfer
- of the land into Whitewater. The White House is vague about
- the basis on which that was done; Lindsey says he has been told
- the transfer was not taxable but knows no details. Another lawyer
- whom Lindsey consults on Whitewater says he thinks it was a
- nontaxable "351 transfer" (the reference is to a section of
- the tax code), but he adds, "Well, I mean, nobody knows." In
- any case, Lindsey declines to provide the Whitewater tax returns,
- which would settle the question.
- </p>
- <p> Some tax experts contend that if Whitewater assumed the mortgage
- loan on the property, then only the corporation, not its individual
- owners, could deduct any subsequent interest payments. In some
- cases, that tax consequence could be avoided through a device
- called a "mirror loan" or a "back-to-back loan"; Lindsey says
- he thinks the Clintons used such an arrangement but is not sure.
- Partner McDougal, however, says he never heard of any such thing.
- Experts consulted by TIME assert that if there were such a loan
- arrangement, it should have left a paper trail on the Clintons'
- tax returns that is nowhere visible.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, tax stamps indicate that when Whitewater took over
- the land, it raised the stated value of the acreage to $250,000,
- from the $203,000 the Clintons and McDougals had paid to buy
- it. Federal law permits capital-gains taxes on the $47,000 increase
- to be deferred until the property or corporate stock is sold,
- or even to be eliminated if the increase in stated value reflects
- some actual costs incurred by the corporation. McDougal and
- his lawyer Sam Heuer say Whitewater did in fact add to the purchase
- price a portion of the $40,000 McDougal eventually paid for
- improvements such as roads, plus $20,000 in interest.
- </p>
- <p> "Capitalizing" interest in this way is perfectly proper. But
- in the opinion of tax experts consulted by TIME, the same interest
- cannot also be deducted by the individuals owning the corporation.
- Lindsey's figures at least raise a question whether the Clintons
- did such double dipping.
- </p>
- <p> THE WHITE HOUSE REBUTTAL
- </p>
- <p> The counter-argument from Lindsey and other Clinton aides rests
- heavily on tax-law technicalities, flat contradictions of McDougal
- and hypotheses on what probably happened--suggesting that
- the First Couple have not kept the aides who try to defend them
- well informed. Fundamentally, though, they insist all the deductions
- were legal and proper.
- </p>
- <p> Lindsey, for example, says he has hard evidence that the Clintons
- really did pay about $10,000 interest in 1978 and about $12,000
- in 1979 and that the evidence consists of checks. Why so much
- more than their half-share? Well, say White House advisers,
- maybe the Clintons paid a greater share of the mortgage interest
- because the McDougals paid for all the roads and other improvements.
- McDougal says there was no such arrangement. And some tax experts
- suggest that if there had been, the Internal Revenue Service
- might look askance at a deal that gave one party most of the
- deductions (spending on roads and other improvements is not
- deductible).
- </p>
- <p> In any case, how come the Clintons seem to have claimed they
- paid more interest than the banks received? Lindsay says he
- has no explanation except that his documents show otherwise.
- </p>
- <p> The $13,350 that the Clintons deducted in 1980? A tax lawyer
- whom Lindsay has consulted on Whitewater argues that the party
- that pays the money is entitled to the deduction, regardless
- of whether the mortgaged land was conveyed into the Whitewater
- corporation a year earlier. Not so, counters tax lawyer Stone.
- "The IRS doesn't care who is liable on the debt. In Clinton's
- situation, Whitewater became the equitable owner of the land
- and was therefore solely entitled to any 1980 deductions."
- </p>
- <p> McDougal's insistence that the Clintons put only $13,350 into
- Whitewater? He is "just wrong," says Lindsey. McDougal's memory
- is in fact questionable: he admits to undergoing treatment for
- severe manic-depression after he was ousted from Madison Guaranty
- in 1986.
- </p>
- <p> Deducting interest already capitalized by Whitewater? That would
- have created a tax problem, says Lindsey, only if Whitewater
- had generated a capital gain, which it never did. (No argument
- there; the development was a dismal failure.) In that case,
- says Lindsey, the IRS would have insisted that the interest
- had been improperly capitalized and must be added to the taxable
- gain; no gain, no problem. Not so, replies tax expert Bruce
- Miller, chief managing partner in San Francisco for Kenneth
- Leventhal & Co., an accounting firm specializing in real estate:
- "You can't both deduct it and capitalize it, even if you lose
- money. The law is very clear."
- </p>
- <p> What difference does it all make anyway? The amounts of money
- involved are small. The possibility of legal penalties is smaller
- still, since any underpayment may well have been inadvertent,
- resulting largely from what even Lindsey concedes was at times
- casual bookkeeping. The political embarrassment to the White
- House will be great if a President who has asked many Americans
- to pay higher taxes can be shown to have underpaid his own.
- But the penalty in loss of public trust if that revelation is
- forced out of an unwilling and obfuscating White House could
- be the greatest of all.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-