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originally posted by: network dude
originally posted by: TerryMcGuire
a reply to: Mahogany
Yet it also states in the article that all of this has been taken into account by the defense which mean that the banks were not victim here at all. Does this hold true for the taxes owed? I don' t ,know. I wonder if that is standard banking practice or even standard practice for Trump, why inflate his worth in the first place. Why lie. Cuz he wanted to climb the Forbe's richest list?
if you inflate the worth of something, wouldn't that also increase the tax liability if the income or valuation was involved?
originally posted by: network dude
originally posted by: Mantiss2021
a reply to: TerryMcGuire
I wonder if the bank's "haircut" valuation(s) were ever communicated to Trump and/or his organization?
what is the fudge ratio in giving your numbers to the bank? Do you have to be exact, or is there a percentage where it's fraud vs. dumb? Thanks in advance for your well sourced answer!
originally posted by: Mahogany
originally posted by: network dude
originally posted by: TerryMcGuire
a reply to: Mahogany
Yet it also states in the article that all of this has been taken into account by the defense which mean that the banks were not victim here at all. Does this hold true for the taxes owed? I don' t ,know. I wonder if that is standard banking practice or even standard practice for Trump, why inflate his worth in the first place. Why lie. Cuz he wanted to climb the Forbe's richest list?
if you inflate the worth of something, wouldn't that also increase the tax liability if the income or valuation was involved?
No, because the banks don't tax you.
He would inflate the values to the banks when he seeks loans, secure more favorable interest rates and higher loans, but then would undervalue them at other times to secure better tax rates from the government -- or claim losses for years and pay no taxes at all. All the while he was claiming immense profits to the banks.
All this up and down in values also affects the insurance companies, but that hasn't been ruled on yet, that's a part of the trial. Insurance fraud.
As a side note, he's also claiming that since he was making payments on time there was no fraud. No court will accept this strawman argument, they are unrelated. That would mean that if I lie to a bank and give them false information to basically steal money from them, it is not fraud until I miss a payment. We all know that's not true. Fraud is not related to timely payments.
originally posted by: network dude
a reply to: Mantiss2021
Super! We should get the real facts with you. So what amount of difference is allowed, and where is the (you are going to jail) line at with taxes?
originally posted by: network dude
a reply to: Mantiss2021
so this is all a federal tax issue that the NY AG decided to try as a civil case? Can that even be done?
"Super! We should get the real facts with you. So what amount of difference is allowed, and where is the (you are going to jail) line at with taxes (emphasis mine)?