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Romneys likely gained from complex offshore deals, tax experts say

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — Mitt Romney’s former private equity firm used a half-dozen companies and partnerships in the tax havens of Luxembourg, Ireland and the Grand Caymans four years ago to channel $689 million in loans to a U.S. company that it co-owned.

To the average American, the deal might seem bizarre.

But some tax experts say that the circuitous paper chain likely was structured to avoid certain taxes for passive investors, including blind trusts for the Republican presidential candidate and his wife.

It’s just one of a maze of transactions involving the Romney family portfolio that were engineered in tax-neutral nations. The gradual emergence of outlines of these deals in recent weeks is prompting some experts to challenge Romney’s pronouncement that his scores of offshore investments haven’t lowered his federal taxes by so much as a dollar.

“It appears likely that offshore entities helped his investments avoid taxes or adverse tax consequences,” David Miller, a prominent New York tax attorney, told McClatchy Newspapers.

The New York Times reported Tuesday that it obtained documents showing that an offshore fund in which Romney’s investment retirement account held an interest probably used a “blocker” — an intermediary company that legally insulated the White House hopeful from paying 35 percent in taxes.

The release of documents from entities set up by Bain Capital Inc., the firm that Romney ran from 1984 to 1999, also are lifting a shroud from the dizzying world of private equity, an industry that has racked up huge profits with help from a small army of tax attorneys. Critics say these firms have found ways to exploit gaps between U.S. and other countries’ laws to deprive the U.S. treasury of billions, if not tens of billions, of dollars.

The offshore deals are generally considered legal, typically structured to shield pension funds, foundations and other tax-exempt organizations from U.S. taxes, and foreign investors from U.S. taxes or taxes in their own countries. The California State Teachers’ Retirement System, for example, has since 2006 invested more than $500 million in three of the funds in which Ann Romney’s trust holds a stake.

Bain said in a statement that it must navigate complicated international tax treaties and tax codes for its clients.

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