gubermintcheez

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Saturday, April 29, 2006

Cheney and his "charity donations"

This just goes to show ya. No matter how charitable a republican "appears" hes only interested in using that charity to avoid any taxes. In other words, it makes one look good, while its also making one a boatlaod a free cash money.

Cheneys getting refund of nearly $2 million
By CHRISTOPHER LEE
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON - President Bush and first lady Laura Bush paid $187,768 in federal income taxes on taxable income of $618,694 in 2005, the White House said Friday.
Vice President Dick Cheney and his wife, Lynne, reported considerably larger sums in all categories. They also have a refund check of nearly $2 million on the way, reflecting the complexities of how the Cheneys have distributed their tax burden and withholding in recent years.
The Bushes' numbers were down a bit from last year, when they paid $207,307 in federal taxes on taxable income of $672,788.
The Bushes' income included the president's $400,000 annual salary along with the investment income from trusts in which their assets are held, for an overall adjusted gross income of $735,180 in 2005. Their adjusted gross income was $784,219 in 2004.
In both years they gave roughly 10 percent of their income to charity -- $77,785 in 2004 and $75,560 last year.
The Cheneys owed $529,636 in federal taxes on $1.96 million in taxable income in 2005, according to their tax return, released by the White House. Their income included the vice president's annual salary, $205,031, and $211,465 in deferred compensation from Halliburton Co., the Texas-based energy services company and defense contractor that he headed until August 2000. Before leaving Halliburton, a large military contractor in Iraq, Cheney chose to defer his 1999 salary as chief executive officer and have it paid to him, with interest, in fixed annual installments over five years after his retirement from the company.
Because the Cheneys exercised stock options and earned royalties from books written by Lynne Cheney last year, the couple's adjusted gross income for 2005 was nearly $8.82 million.
They donated much of the money from those sources -- about $6.87 million -- to charity.
That reduced their taxable income considerably, entitling the couple to a tax refund of $1.94 million because they paid $2.46 million in withholding and estimated taxes during 2005, according to the White House.
The Cheneys appear to have taken advantage of a tax break passed by Congress in the Katrina Emergency Tax Relief Act of 2005, said Steve Hurok, tax director at BDO Seidman, a national tax consulting and professional services firm. The provision temporarily suspended a federal rule that prevents people from taking tax deductions on charitable cash giving that exceeds 50 percent of their adjusted gross income.
That change, which expired at the end of the year, allowed the Cheneys to deduct from their taxable income the full $6.8 million of their charitable giving last year, rather than the $4.4 million that normally would have been eligible, Hurok said. In essence, the Cheneys donated the extra $2.4 million to charity without having to pay taxes on the money or defer the tax benefits to future years.
"It's in the law, and his tax adviser advised him of that, presumably," Hurok said. The law did not specify that the donations had to go to Hurricane Katrina-related charities.
The Cheneys' charitable donations went to George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates for the benefit of the Cardiothoracic Institute, the University of Wyoming Foundation and Capital Partners for Education, which helps low-income high school students in the Washington, D.C., area.
Recipients of the Bushes' charitable donations included the Mississippi Food Network, the Archdiocese of New Orleans Catholic Charities, and the American Red Cross and the Salvation Army's funds for hurricane relief in the United States and earthquake aid in Pakistan. The Bushes also gave to Martha's Table, which provides food and services to the underprivileged in the Washington area, and to the Combined Federal Campaign.

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