Posted on 10/15/2004 2:51:33 PM PDT by The Great Yazoo
Teresa Heinz Kerry Releases 2003 Tax Info; Paid Over $798,000 in Federal, State Income Taxes Fri Oct 15 2004 17:44:41 ET
Mrs. Teresa Heinz Kerry announced today that she has filed her final 2003 federal tax forms and as she said promised last spring, has released the top two pages of her 1040 tax filings.
Mrs. Heinz Kerry paid $798,820 in state and federal income taxes in 2003, approximately 35 percent of her gross taxable income, according to figures and federal tax forms she released today.
Mrs. Heinz Kerry paid $627,150 in federal income taxes on gross taxable income of $2,291,137, primarily from dividends and interest she receives from Heinz family trusts. In addition, she paid an additional $171,670 in state income taxes and had $2,781,791 of tax exempt interest income from state, municipal and public entity bonds. These taxes are separate from and in addition to the income taxes paid directly by the Heinz family trusts and by other beneficiaries who receive income from those trusts.
In 2003, Mrs. Heinz Kerry was responsible for more than $4.6 million distributed as charitable contributions, primarily through charitable grants by the Heinz Family Foundation, a 501(c)(3) corporation Mrs. Heinz Kerry established with her late husband, Senator John Heinz and later significantly expanded after his death in 1991 through her creation of the Teresa and H. John Heinz III Fund within that Foundation. The Heinz Family Foundation is principally funded by a charitable lead trust, the Teresa & H. John Heinz III Charitable Trust, established as a result of estate planning decisions made by Senator Heinz and Mrs. Heinz Kerry before his death.
The Heinz Family Foundation is separate from the Howard Heinz Endowment, of which Mrs. Heinz Kerry is Chairman, and the Vira I. Heinz Endowment, of which she is a board member, both of which were established by earlier generations of the Heinz family and make significant annual charitable grants. Both the Heinz Family Foundation and the Endowments file publicly available Forms 990 PF on an annual basis, forms which set forth the charitable grants as well as investments made by each entity.
In 2000, then-candidate George Bush filed an extension for his 1999 taxes, released some information in the Spring and then released his 1040 Form after he filed his taxes in October 2000. Mrs. Heinz Kerry files a separate tax return from her husband, Senator John Kerry, and received an extension for filing her 2003 returns until October 15, 2004.
While she is not a candidate for any public office and the release of this tax information is not required by law, it fulfills the commitment Mrs. Heinz Kerry made last May. The release of this information is in addition to the financial information Sen. Kerry and Mrs. Heinz Kerry already had disclosed through the forms required by the Senate Financial Disclosure Report and the Executive Branch Personnel Public Financial Disclosure Report, both of which are publicly available on Senator Kerry's campaign website, johnkerry.com.
"This tax information goes beyond any legal requirement, but John and I believe it strikes a proper balance between my family's privacy and the media's requests for additional information," Mrs. Heinz Kerry said.
12.3%
updated tagLine
who cares??
See Post 31, above.
Personally I think the tax returns of anyone, including political opponents, shouldn't be anybody else's business. If there's a problem, it's between them and the IRS.
Can anyone figure out how much she got back from the 2002 tax cuts?
If one has a right to privacy as to one's sexual orientation, you would think one's right to privacy would extend to one's financial affairs. But nooooooooo!
Maybe some CPA type will answer this.
My husband and I had filed for an extension, filing and paying (at 34%) our 2003 taxes today. Will all the hubbub about the Kerry's paying only 12% on previous tax returns, I submit they they instructed their accountants to adjust this upwards for this year's return.
Although that would be the most "fair" tax system, it will never fly because too many Americans now get to skate with paying very little to no taxes.
The top 50% of earners pay 96% of all taxes and the top 5% pay over 50% of all taxes.
Top 50% of Wage Earners Pay 96.03% of Income Taxes
The Heinz-Kerry's, as I noted, only pay a tiny fraction of one percent of their total fortune in taxes every year.
Kerry and his followers will always vote to rob Peter to pay Uncle Sam.
Mark Levin is talking about it now on WABC.
Yep, it's always bothered me that politicians were compelled to release their tax returns. I'd be the first to tell them, "My tax returns are none of your damn business."
Just as onerous are the annual Financial Disclosure forms that Congress and high ranking civil service employees (including career personnel) must file. I found them to be even more intrusive than tax forms.
My 2003 1040 was 46 pages long. If I showed you only the top two pages (which concentrate on salary income), you'd be missing mid six figures of my earnings.
I say this not to brag, as I'm certain that *many* FReepers make far more than me, but rather, I mention this to illustrate that *vast* amounts of money are excluded from those first two pages, including K-1 income, royalty income, foreign income, some dividend income, personal "corporate" income, mineral income, farm/ranch income, rental income, etc.
How can we tell if she is using her husband's dreaded "Benedict Arnold" companies to shield her from U.S. taxes if she doesn't show us all of her 1040 pages?
She is a citizen of Mozambique, yes?? Or does she maintain dual citizenship with the U.S.?? How will we know without seeing her entire tax return?
Mrs. Hienz-Kerry says that she wants to keep those other pages private to shield her children from the media, but that desire conflicts with the Kerry-Edwards Campaign spokeswoman Mary Beth Cahill saying (in response to Senator Kerry and Senator Edwards both dragging Ms. Cheney's personal sex life into the public limelight) that the personal lives of the children of the candidates are "fair game."
Certainly the liberal news media insisted upon seeing *every* page of VP Nelson Rockefeller's tax returns in 1974. Rockefeller was not permitted to get away with merely releasing his top two pages of his 1040.
Is there a double standard in play here? One for rich Republicans versus another for rich Democrats?
I would agree with you except that John Kerry is making my tax cut his damn business.
Just to clarify, aren't you really suggesting that the 'whole "tax cuts for the rich" argument' is actually the 'let's tax the rich' argument? What I mean is, the dims are arguing for a 'let's soak the rich' approach to taxes, while the replublicans are arguing for reduced taxes for the upper bracket taxpayers, the reason being that these are the folks who create jobs by investing their capital in entrepreneurism. Still, I know what you mean. I think.
Still, I don't like it. I didn't like it when they did it to Nelson Rockefeller, and therefore, I don't agree with it, even for Democrats. We know Democrats are hypocrites with regards to tax cuts, I don't need to see their tax returns to know that.
Southack, IIRC, K-1 income, capital gains, interest, dividend income, and others appear on the first page of the 2003 1040. My copies are at the office, but I was under the impression that the first two pages were a pretty good snapshot of all monies making up total income.
I'm not saying that I disagree with your premise. I believe the Kerry's spend good money to eliminate as much tax liability as possible.
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