Archive for the ‘Al Sharpton’ Category

Al Sharptons March Madness

Heres todays quiz: When I say Al Sharpton, what other name immediately comes to mind?

A. Bill de Blasio.

B. Barack Obama.

C. Tawana Brawley.

Tick-tock, times up. The correct answer is all of the above, which explains much of the current racial trouble in New York and America.

Sharpton, left to his own antics, is a public nuisance. It is a free country and he is entitled to his prejudices and polarizing activism. Sometimes he happens to be right and his megaphone occasionally brings attention to deserving cases that otherwise get none. America is big enough and strong enough to have space for people like him.

On the other hand, his personal conduct is often reprehensible, with his behavior in the Brawley hoax Exhibit A. And its not as if hes cleaned up his act.

He remains a cop hater to the core, a race man who cannot see past skin color and whose business model is based on using a charge of racism as a negotiating tactic. The corporations buying his silence with their contributions ought to be boycotted.

Hes also a tax scofflaw who refuses to pay his fair share, thus ripping off fellow citizens, black and white.

As The New York Times reported Tuesday, he faces $4.5 million in state and federal tax liens, both personally and through companies he controls. The amounts owed are growing and his shady use of a nonprofit to enrich himself would make him politically toxic if he were anyone else.

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Al Sharptons March Madness

SHARPTON'S SECRETS Activist saddled with debt totaling millions, report says

Published November 19, 2014

FILE: August 23, 2014: The Rev. Al Sharpton speaks at a rally in the Staten Island borough of New York, N.Y.(REUTERS)

The Rev. Al Sharpton has made a remarkable rise to national prominence, from community organizer to President Obamas consultant, amid a long and lesser-known history of debt and tax obligations totaling millions of dollars.

Sharpton and his for-profit businesses owe more than $4.5 million in state and federal tax liens, according to The New York Times.

And his influential nonprofit group, National Action Network, the Times said, appears to be in a similar situation, saddled with years of unpaid travel and hotel expenses while apparently staying afloat by not paying federal payroll taxes for employees.

The newspaper also suggested that Sharpton is not paying enough or fast enough to reduce his obligation to the state of New York, a situation he sharply refuted Tuesday.

The 60-year-old civil rights leader told FoxNews.com that he has an agreement with the government to repay his personal and business-related taxes and that his payments are on time.

We have a signed agreement, he said. And what is in the agreement has been kept. Weve been up to date. This is the most bogus story in the world.

He also made clear that the roughly $1 million raised at New York event to celebrate his 60th birthday, on which The Times reported, will go toward repaying his debts.

Sharpton also argued that his work ethic and determination are above reproach but acknowledged his shortcomings as an administrator.

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SHARPTON'S SECRETS Activist saddled with debt totaling millions, report says

Sharpton claims to have settled his debts with the IRS

The Rev. Al Sharpton seized on ex-spokeswoman Rachel Noerdlingers departure from City Hall Monday to dredge up his own old complaints about the governments probe into his shady tax returns declaring that he and his activist group have almost made good with the IRS.

Sharpton used the bulk of a page-long statement on Noerdlingers leave of absence to rant about the 2007 raids by the FBI and IRS, and crow that he and his National Action Network are now making the final payments on our installment agreement.

But records on file with the city show that the IRS has more than $3 million worth of liens against Sharpton. And the NANs latest tax-exempt filing with the IRS shows that the amount of unpaid payroll taxes, interest and penalties it owes actually grew from $813,575 in 2012 to $819,721 in 2013.

That filing also revealed that the NAN ended 2013 more than $1.3 million in the red.

In his statement on Noerdlinger, Sharpton said he used his tax troubles as an example for her and her teenage son, Khari, that we must reflect in life on how we combat unfairness and how we can better do things with ourselves to achieve our goals.

An IRS spokeswoman declined to comment, citing privacy and disclosure laws.

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Sharpton claims to have settled his debts with the IRS

Al Sharpton's Finances Are, as Ever, Supremely Sketchy

The New York Times checked up today on the financial situation of the Reverend Al Sharpton, New York and America's most public private citizen. The setup is about how Sharpton has gone from outsider to insider, track suits to tailored suits, "from the streets to the suites," in his words, etc. Then we learnwell, "learn" isn't exactly the right word, given how well-documented all of Sharpton's aspects have been through the years.

But in case you were wondering how "grifter" was doing relative to "inspiration" or "pundit" or "bully" or "moral authority" or "buffoon" or "orator" or "TV personality" among the ever-evolving roster of multitudes that Sharpton contains:

Mr. Sharpton has regularly sidestepped the sorts of obligations most people see as inevitable, like taxes, rent and other bills. Records reviewed by The New York Times show more than $4.5 million in current state and federal tax liens against him and his for-profit businesses. And though he said in recent interviews that he was paying both down, his balance with the state, at least, has actually grown in recent years. His National Action Network appears to have been sustained for years by not paying federal payroll taxes on its employees.

With the tax liability outstanding, Mr. Sharpton traveled first class and collected a sizable salary, the kind of practice by nonprofit groups that the United States Treasury's inspector general for tax administration recently characterized as "abusive," or "potentially criminal" if the failure to turn over or collect taxes is willful.

Al Sharpton is a respected political figure and a toxic demagogue and a hopeless serial deadbeat. His National Action Network is a mess. He will almost certainly be front and center articulating the suffering of America's black underclass if the Ferguson grand jury, as expected, decides the shooting of Michael Brown was acceptable law enforcement. He will travel to and from making those morally and sociologically valid remarks in luxury, probably unpaid-for luxury.

On it goes. The section titles in the Times article are, in order, "Often Strident Language," "A Move Into the Mainstream," and "Sued by His Landlord."

The desire to wrap it all upto explain how the ongoing happening that is Al Sharpton has happenedis so strong, the Times found itself wandering into a strange fog of implication in the middle of its solid numbers:

But the recent troubles of Rachel Noerdlinger, Mr. Sharpton's closest aide for many years and more recently a top official in the de Blasio administration, served as a reminder of Mr. Sharpton's fraught history and how easily it can spill over into the corridors of power in which he now travels.

Ms. Noerdlinger took a leave of absence from her post on Monday, after the arrest of her teenage son on trespassing charges. The decision capped weeks of scrutiny after news accounts revealed that she had failed to disclose a live-in boyfriend with an extensive criminal record on a background questionnaire when she became the top adviser to Mr. de Blasio's wife, Chirlane McCray. The omission was unrelated to Mr. Sharpton, but it is the kind of paperwork oversight that has been a trademark of his nonprofit, where Ms. Noerdlinger built her career.

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Al Sharpton's Finances Are, as Ever, Supremely Sketchy

NY Times: Al Sharpton Delinquent on $4.5M in Tax Payments

NY Times: Al Sharpton Delinquent on $4.5M in Tax Payments Rev. says it's 'the most bogus story in the world' - Issue to be address at press conference today

Nov 18, 14 by EurPublisher Leave a comment

*Being an ally to President Obama hasnt prevented Rev. Al Sharpton from getting sanctioned by the IRS. It seems Sharpton and his various profit and nonprofit organizations owe millions of dollars in back taxes.

Heres what the New York Times is reporting as a result of an investigation it did on Sharptons finances.

1. He owes more than $4.5 million in current state and federal taxes on his personal income and his for-profit companies, Raw Talent and Revals Communications. Sharpton has more than $3 million in personal federal tax liens and state tax liens of $777,657. Raw Talent owes a combined $717,329 on state and federal tax liens.

2. His nonprofit National Action Network (NAN) also failed to pay federal payroll taxes. NANs tax liability grew from $900,000 in 2003 to nearly $1.9 million by 2006. It also took on a questionable role during Sharptons 2004 run for the presidency, which may have violated FEC regulations.

However, in an interview with FoxNews.com, the 60-year-old civil rights leader and MSNBC host of Politics Nation said he has in place an agreement with the government to repay his personal and business-related taxes and that his payments are on time.

We have a signed agreement, he said. And what is in the agreement has been kept. Weve been up to date. This is the most bogus story in the world.

He also made clear that the roughly $1 million raised at New York event to celebrate his 60th birthday, on which The Times reported, will go toward repaying his debts.

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NY Times: Al Sharpton Delinquent on $4.5M in Tax Payments