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An Offshore Tax Shelter [Kerry's]
Boston Globe ^ | 4/27/07

Posted on 04/28/2004 12:59:59 PM PDT by ZGuy

Documents obtained by the Globe detail John Kerry's 1983 investment of between $25,000 and $30,000 in offshore companies registered in the Cayman Islands. The document below, signed by Kerry, shows his pledge to purchase 2,470 shares of Peabody Commodities Trading Corp. through Sytel Traders, registered in the Caymans.


(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; dropoutkerry; kerry; offshoring; syteltraders
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RCP comment -- "This isn't some blind "my mutual fund invested in an offshore company" thing, this is John F. Kerry using his lawyer and signing his name to a document specifically setting up a trading company registered in the Cayman Islands."
1 posted on 04/28/2004 12:59:59 PM PDT by ZGuy
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To: ZGuy
bttt
2 posted on 04/28/2004 1:01:36 PM PDT by gipper81
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To: ZGuy
Tax loopholes are by definition confusing and complex. Has anyone actually sifted through what was actually done and what the effect was? What was the role of 'Gin Vest Inc.' (great name, frenchy)
3 posted on 04/28/2004 1:05:17 PM PDT by blanknoone (Vote GWB in 04 or your great grand daughter WILL wear a Burqa.)
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To: ZGuy
Interesting... given what Kerry himself said about these types of investments on his own Senate website:

From the Office of Senator Kerry

Tax Haven and Abusive Tax Shelter Reform Act of 2002

Friday, April 26, 2002

Mr. President, the recent demise of Enron Corporation has generated national attention and shed light on an alarming trend. A growing number of corporations and individuals are exploiting tax havens in the Caribbean and elsewhere to evade and avoid paying taxes.

Often cloaked in a web of bank secrecy and taxpayer privacy, businesses and individuals operating in offshore financial centers create sham corporations and partnerships. By sheltering tax-dodgers and tax cheats, these overseas tax havens undermine confidence and trust in our federal government. The spread of illegal tax haven activity punishes those who play by the rules. The end result is higher taxes on the little guy--those who comply with the law. They are stuck paying the tab, forced to make up for the lost revenue through unnecessarily high taxes.

The exact details of Enron's tax avoidance practices are still under investigation by the Senate Finance Committee. What we do know is the energy conglomerate held over 800 subsidiaries in tax haven jurisdictions. Enron created 692 subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands alone. Through the use of sophisticated financial instruments, at least one analyst estimates Enron was able to avoid income taxes in four of the last five years.

Enron is not alone. The use of offshore tax havens by corporations and wealthy individuals is widespread. Through accounting tricks and tax loopholes, large companies not only avoid corporate income taxes, they claim sizable tax refunds. In a typical example, a corporation establishes a foreign subsidiary not subject to American taxes, shifts profits to the subsidiary which then sends them back to the parent corporation in a form that is considered not taxable under U.S. law.

While some corporations use loopholes to skirt the edges of the law, other individuals use tax havens outright illegally. The Internet has simplified the process of launching a corporation or opening an account offshore. While Americans are taxed on their worldwide earnings, individuals operating in offshore financial centers gamble that the IRS will never uncover their overseas income.

Taxpayers select tax havens because they offer little or no taxation on income in their jurisdiction and have privacy rules that help taxpayers hide what they are doing. Once the transfers are established, income is often repatriated back to the U.S. owners through loans, credit cards, or debit cards. By using complex transactions and multiple entities, the individuals using these schemes hide their income and avoid potential tax liabilities.

The scope of the problem is daunting. Assets in offshore entities have climbed from an estimated $200 billion in 1983, to an estimated $5 trillion today. One private sector estimate suggests the use of tax havens to illegally shelter income results in the loss of $70 billion annually. The IRS estimates that in tax year 2000, about 740,000 taxpayers used abusive schemes (both domestic and offshore).

Clearly, Congress must act to restore public confidence in our federal tax system. We can start by ensuring that honest, middle-class Americans are not the only ones left holding the bill. Unfortunately, the Bush Administration's has shied away from aggressively attacking tax evasion. Last May, Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill voiced suppport for abolishing the corporate income tax. The Treasury Department recently fought to water down an international campaign to reform tax haven practices led by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Last fall, the Administration sought to repeal the corporate alternative minimum tax, a tax designed to ensure that large corporations do not entirely escape taxation.

Mr. President, exempting our nation's largest firms from taxation altogether is not the answer. On the contrary, Congress should take steps to ensure that criminal tax evasion is detected and addressed accordingly. The Tax Haven and Abusive Tax Shelter Reform Act of 2002 would impose strict measures against nations identified as uncooperative tax havens–those which use confidentiality rules and practices to undermine tax enforcement and administration or refuse to participate in effective information exchange agreements. The legislation would limit foreign tax credits claimed by taxpayers operating in uncooperative tax havens. It would require a strict reporting of outbound transfers by U.S. taxpayers. The bill imposes a new civil penalty on U.S. taxpayers who fail to report an interest in an offshore account. Finally, it mandates a comprehensive review of the offshore tax evasion problem, including specific mechanisms used by taxpayers to shelter income and assets. By imposing real consequences for jurisdictions which are identified as uncooperative tax havens, the bill pierces the veil of secrecy which shields tax cheats from scrutiny and provides a strong incentive for otherwise uncooperative tax havens to enter into commitments with the United States to reform their practices.

The peddling of abusive corporate tax shelters also demands attention. Pre-packaged, tax-motivated transactions with no real economic risk or business purpose–but which capitalize on technical ambiguities in the tax code–are sold to corporations by creative practitioners to generate artificial losses and deductions. Provisions in the Tax Haven and Abusive Tax Shelter Reform Act of 2002, identical to those introduced in the House by Rep. Lloyd Dogget (D-TX), would disallow tax benefits from transactions that have no real business purpose other than tax savings. In addition, they expand disclosure requirements so that the IRS is fully aware of dubious tax schemes and tighten penalties against gross underpayments resulting from illegal tax shelters.

A tax system which asks working families to pay their fair share, but gives large corporations such as Enron a free ride, is a national disgrace. And as tax havens and shelters proliferate, confidence in the integrity and fairness of our tax system and government declines. Middle-class families rightly conclude that our own government cannot effectively enforce its laws. The Administration, while proposing new disclosure requirements, has offered little in the way of substantive changes to alter the tax treatment of transactions which clearly serve no real business purpose other than tax avoidance. Furthermore, the Administration has undermined international efforts to aggressively address sheltering activity in tax havens. The Tax Haven and Abusive Tax Shelter Reform Act of 2002 is the first step in what will surely be a long road to restoring the confidence and faith of the vast majority of hard-working, law-abiding Americans who pay taxes on every dollar they earn. I urge my colleagues to join me in this effort.

4 posted on 04/28/2004 1:05:27 PM PDT by So Cal Rocket (Fabrizio Quattrocchi: "Adesso vi faccio vedere come muore un italiano")
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To: ZGuy
Excellent!! This is the third hit piece the Globe has done on Kerry in as many weeks. Someone at the Globe really has it out for Kerry. I would love to know what it is that he did to them. They are a liberal paper from what I've heard. You would think they would support their own Senator.
5 posted on 04/28/2004 1:06:51 PM PDT by NRA2BFree
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To: ZGuy
Man,oh, man, they just keep turning over rocks and finding stuff on this candidate for the little guy. The Boston Globe is doing the right thing; they are giving scrutiny to Kerry that the others, particularly, the N.Y. Slimes and Alphabets would not do at gunpoint.
6 posted on 04/28/2004 1:08:07 PM PDT by JeeperFreeper
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To: gipper81
Mr. Senator John Forbes Kerry and all he had, excepting the wealth of his wives, was 25 to 30K? I guess, like Blanche DuBois, he relies on the "kindness of strangers."
7 posted on 04/28/2004 1:08:40 PM PDT by saveliberty (Liberal= in need of therapy, but would rather ruin lives of those less fortunate to feel good)
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This can't be right.

Senator Kerry is against these things.

His Senate campaign website has a speech by Kerry, where he says:

Enron is not alone. The use of offshore tax havens by corporations and wealthy individuals is widespread. Through accounting tricks and tax loopholes, large companies not only avoid corporate income taxes, they claim sizable tax refunds. In a typical example, a corporation establishes a foreign subsidiary not subject to American taxes, shifts profits to the subsidiary which then sends them back to the parent corporation in a form that is considered not taxable under U.S. law.

Taxpayers select tax havens because they offer little or no taxation on income in their jurisdiction and have privacy rules that help taxpayers hide what they are doing. Once the transfers are established, income is often repatriated back to the U.S. owners through loans, credit cards, or debit cards. By using complex transactions and multiple entities, the individuals using these schemes hide their income and avoid potential tax liabilities.


8 posted on 04/28/2004 1:09:20 PM PDT by george wythe
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To: ZGuy
Also, this is for commodities trading from off shore. Remember Hillary's "luck" in commodities. I bet Kerry "made" a bundle with his "trading", too.
9 posted on 04/28/2004 1:10:57 PM PDT by JeeperFreeper
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To: ZGuy
Another 'soak the sheeple' RAT elitist is using one's wealth to overcome Constitutionally repugnant tyranny...
10 posted on 04/28/2004 1:11:34 PM PDT by ApesForEvolution (FREE 3D On-line Golf Game - Independent Reseller of the Week: http://egolfinternational.com/wig)
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To: NRA2BFree
Someone at the Globe really has it out for Kerry. I would love to know what it is that he did to them.

He may have committed the sin of impersonating a Kennedy -- the Boston media considers the Kennedys somewhat sacrosanct -- and are punsihing him for such arrogance.

11 posted on 04/28/2004 1:13:40 PM PDT by kevkrom (The John Kerry Songbook: www.imakrom.com/kerrysongs)
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To: ZGuy
And this is just the loot from rich wife #1!
12 posted on 04/28/2004 1:14:59 PM PDT by NativeNewYorker (Don't blame me. I voted for Sharpton.)
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To: george wythe
LOL.

Kerry is such a stupid, vapid, self-centered, insecure tool...

When the tyranny is complete and these options are no more, there will be a giant sucking sound of legitimate American business leaving because they refuse to participate in the fraud.

Kerry's hypocrisy has NO ends. Friends don't let friends vote for Kerry. And if your spouse does...hmm.
13 posted on 04/28/2004 1:16:44 PM PDT by ApesForEvolution (FREE 3D On-line Golf Game - Independent Reseller of the Week: http://egolfinternational.com/wig)
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To: ApesForEvolution
AND SOMEBODY WILL VOTE FOR THIS JERK.
14 posted on 04/28/2004 1:16:49 PM PDT by jocko12
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To: jocko12
I honestly doubt he makes it to the RAT convention...
15 posted on 04/28/2004 1:18:12 PM PDT by ApesForEvolution (FREE 3D On-line Golf Game - Independent Reseller of the Week: http://egolfinternational.com/wig)
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To: Timeout; Dog; Miss Marple; Peach
Interesting Stuff.
16 posted on 04/28/2004 1:18:33 PM PDT by Iowa Granny (Impersonating June Cleaver since 1967)
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To: ZGuy
Send this to Fox together with SoCal rockets find on his Senate speech. Do I detect the devious hand of Karl Rove here or is this actually genuine journalism?
17 posted on 04/28/2004 1:47:51 PM PDT by Timocrat (I Emanate on your Auras and Penumbras Mr Blackmun)
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To: kevkrom
He may have committed the sin of impersonating a Kennedy -- the Boston media considers the Kennedys somewhat sacrosanct -- and are punsihing him for such arrogance.

I suppose that could be it, but since Teddy and Kerry have been so chummy, I'm guessing it's something else. Whatever it is, they are doing a fantastic job!! ;-)

18 posted on 04/28/2004 1:49:34 PM PDT by NRA2BFree
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To: ZGuy
Very interesting info. Have forwarded on. Thanks for the heads up.
19 posted on 04/28/2004 1:55:11 PM PDT by lilylangtree (Veni, Vidi, Vici)
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To: ZGuy
Hey, I've flown hundreds of trips to the Cayman Islands in Citations. When fighting for ramp space to park, the executive aircraft number in the hundreds. Many of the faces you see scurrying about with guys in suits are the same faces you see on both sides of the aisle on CSPAN.
20 posted on 04/28/2004 2:00:13 PM PDT by blackdog (I feed the sheep the coyotes eat)
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