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Romneys likely gained from complex offshore deals, tax experts say

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“So, like virtually all global asset managers, we use widely accepted, fully legal and recognized structures so that investors may receive predictable tax treatment on investment gains for their constituents,” the statement said.

Even indirectly, Romney benefited. Whenever Bain’s strategies reduced taxes for a fund, he reaped returns because his 10-year retirement package gave him a slice of the management fees and profits from Bain Capital deals. The lower the taxes, the bigger the returns for each partner.

Because of the secrecy surrounding tax filings, no hard proof has surfaced that the Romneys actually realized any tax breaks from their offshore dealings.

Such opaque rules leave tax experts making educated guesses.

Romney, whose tenure as Bain Capital’s chief executive helped him amass a fortune worth up to $250 million, has refused to release enough financial data to definitively settle the touchy question of whether he got offshore tax reductions.

The issue of how much he’s paid in taxes while piling up all of that money and his refusal to release more than two years of his personal tax returns have dogged him for months and could come up Wednesday night when Romney meets President Barack Obama in the first of three presidential campaign debates.

Miller, the tax lawyer, has reviewed Romney’s 2011 tax return and evaluated what’s public about some of the offshore deals. He’s found several instances in which evidence suggests Romney got tax breaks, including for his individual retirement account.

Miller’s assessment is at odds with Romney’s campaign. Michele Davis, a spokeswoman, said in a statement that “investments by the blind trusts in funds established outside the U.S. are taxed in the very same way they would be if the shares were held in the U.S.”

“No taxes are evaded or reduced,” Davis said. “These funds are all registered with the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) and report all income to investors and the IRS, just like domestic funds.”

By definition, private equity funds have few public reporting requirements, so obtaining financial statements from some of the offshore companies doesn’t definitively reveal what taxes might have been avoided.

Details of the Romneys’ offshore investments are evidenced in the couple’s recently released 2011 tax returns, the GOP presidential nominee’s financial disclosure statements, a trove of internal Bain documents posted by the Internet site Gawker.com, and filings in Luxembourg and Ireland obtained by McClatchy.

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