Five Towns Jewish Home 7.7.22

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The Jewish Home | JULY 7, 2022

Your

Money

Crook on the Hook By Allan Rolnick, CPA

F

ifty years ago, on June 17, a former CIA officer and four Cuban anti-communists carrying bugging devices found themselves handcuffed outside the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C. What started out as “a third-rate burglary” morphed into “a cancer on the Presidency” and then a “long national nightmare” before President Richard Nixon finally resigned in disgrace two years later. Even now, Watergate is the gold standard of scandals. Controversies don’t go prime time until someone sticks a “-gate” to the end of a word. Remember Bountygate? Deflategate? (There’s a word for it: gatesuffixing.) Today, no one remembers Nixon without thinking of Watergate. But the breakin opened the door to a second controversy that would have cemented Nixon’s legacy as “Tricky Dick” all by itself. It started when the DNC sued the Watergate burglars for civil damages – and a deposition from that case tipped off a reporter to shenanigans with (you guessed it) Nixon’s taxes: • Politicians used to be able to claim charitable deductions for donating their official papers. But critics objected that the papers should be treated as public property. The Tax Reform Act of 1969

slashed the value of that deduction to the literal cost of the paper the documents were printed on. But Nixon claimed a $576,000 deduction for 1,176 boxes of papers he claimed he gave to the National Archives while Congress was debating the new rule. • Also, in 1969, Nixon sold his New York apartment for a $143,000 gain. He

the first $1.25 million of his original purchase price applied to that land, and just $250,000 applied to the 9,000-squarefoot oceanview house and remaining 5.45 acres. The whiff of scandal curdled into a stench when the Providence Journal-Bulletin revealed that for 71-1970, Nixon had paid just 1,670$ in tax on 525,326$ of

The whiff of scandal curdled into a stench when the Providence JournalBulletin revealed that for 1970-71, Nixon had paid just $1,670 in tax on $525,326 of income.

deferred tax by rolling the proceeds into a new $1.5 million “Western White House” in San Clemente, CA. However, that rule applied only when sellers rolled their gain into a new principal residence – and Nixon was clearly living in an eastern White House at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. • In 1970, Nixon sold 23 of those 27 acres in San Clemente for $1.25 million. He claimed no gain on that sale, arguing

income. Three weeks later, he released his returns and asked the Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation to audit them. That November, the embattled President stood before cameras at a press conference (at Disney World, of all places) to utter the defining words of his career: “I’m not a crook.” He wasn’t talking about Watergate at all; he was defending his taxes.

Five months later, the JCIRT heaved up a thousand-page report on the document donation, the apartment rollover, and San Clemente acreage. They recommended he cough up an extra $444,022 in tax, along with $32,409 in interest. Interestingly, there’s no record that he actually paid a dime of it. And Gerald Ford’s “full and unconditional pardon” for any crimes Nixon might have committed while President meant he was off the hook for the taxes, too. Three years after resigning, Nixon sat down with the British journalist David Frost to launder his reputation. During one interview, Nixon advised Frost to “make sure you pay your taxes. Otherwise, you can get in a lot of trouble.” While no one thinks of Nixon as a role model, sometimes he told the truth. The good news is, a sound tax plan makes for less to pay. So call us when you’re tanned, rested, and ready to run, and we’ll make sure you’re ready for the Washington Post to start digging!

Allan J Rolnick is a CPA who has been in practice for over 30 years in Queens, NY. He welcomes your comments and can be reached at 718-896-8715 or at allanjrcpa@aol.com.


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Your Money

3min
pages 100-102

Jewish Heroes of World War II by Avi Heiligman

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Where are You Heading? by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

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Weaken the Filibuster Before a Wave Election? by Marc A. Thiessen

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A Credible Argument for Trump Supporters by Marc A. Thiessen

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Nearly Every American Has a Foreboding by David Ignatius

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page 90

Notable Quotes

5min
pages 86-89

JWOW

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page 82

The Aussie Gourmet: Crepe Suzette

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page 83

Parenting Pearls

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pages 80-81

Julia Blum: Song of Her Soul

18min
pages 70-73

Delving into the Daf by Rabbi Avrohom Sebrow

8min
pages 66-67

Mind Your Business

10min
pages 84-85

World Builder

6min
pages 68-69

The Spiritual Concept of Clothing by Rabbi Shmuel Reichman

6min
pages 64-65

Centerfold

3min
pages 58-59

Voice Notes

3min
page 57

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

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pages 60-61

That’s Odd

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pages 32-33

This Week We’re Talking to…Camp Shira

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pages 54-56

Global

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pages 12-21

The Language of the Generation by Rav Moshe Weinberger

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Israel News

18min
pages 22-29
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