Vanity Fair Romney $ expose: "Where the Money Lives"
For all Mitt Romneys touting of his business record, when it comes to his own money the Republican nominee is remarkably shy about disclosing numbers and investments. Nicholas Shaxson delves into the murky world of offshore finance, revealing loopholes that allow the very wealthy to skirt tax laws, and investigating just how much of Romneys fortune (with $30 million in Bain Capital funds in the Cayman Islands alone?) looks pretty strange for a presidential candidate.
...
These, plus the mandatory financial disclosures filed with the Office of Government Ethics and released last August, raise many questions. A full 55 pages in his 2010 return are devoted to reporting his transactions with foreign entities. What Romney does not get, says Jack Blum, a veteran Washington lawyer and offshore expert, is that this stuff is weird.
The media soon noticed Romneys familiarity with foreign tax havens. A $3 million Swiss bank account appeared in the 2010 returns, then winked out of existence in 2011 after the trustee closed it, as if to remind us of George Romneys warning that one or two tax returns can provide a misleading picture. Ed Kleinbard, a professor of tax law at the University of Southern California, says the Swiss account has political but not tax-policy resonance, since itlike many other Romney investmentsconstituted a bet against the U.S. dollar, an odd thing for a presidential candidate to do. The Obama campaign provided a helpful world map pointing to the tax havens Bermuda, Luxembourg, and the Cayman Islands, where Romney and his family have assets, each with the tagline Value: not disclosed in tax returns.
A long detailed read. Bottom line: Romney is a very very rich scoundrel, if not an intentional deliberate tax cheat.
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/2012/08/investigating-mitt-romney-offshore-accounts