Records show Sharpton owes overdue taxes, other penalties
Associated Press/AP Online
NEW YORK - Big corporations give him money. Presidential
candidates seek his endorsement. He has influential friends in
Congress and the governor's mansion. The Rev. Al Sharpton has
emerged over the past decade as perhaps the nation's most prominent
civil rights leader, a status that was demonstrated again this week
when he led protests against police brutality that briefly shut down
six of Manhattan's major bridges and tunnels.
But he still carries baggage from his early days as a
fire-breathing agitator: Government records obtained by The
Associated Press indicate that Sharpton and his business entities
owe nearly $1.5 million in overdue taxes and associated penalties.
Now the U.S. attorney is investigating his nonprofit group,
a probe that an undeterred Sharpton brushes off as the kind of
annoyance that civil rights figures have come to expect from the
government.
"Whatever retaliation they do on me, we never
stop," he told the AP. "I think that that is why they try
to intimidate us."
Over the past year, Sharpton's lawyers and the staff of his
nonprofit group, the National Action Network, have been negotiating
with the federal government over the size of his debt, which they
dispute. The group has also been trying to pay off tens of thousands
of dollars it owes for failing to properly maintain workers
compensation and unemployment insurance.
Charlie King, the organization's interim executive director,
said both Sharpton and the group he leads were unprepared for their
rise in stature in recent years and had trouble dealing with big
jumps in donations and income.
"The infrastructure was trying to keep up with that
pace, and it was not a perfect fit," he told the AP on Friday.
"The National Action Network may not have been perfect, but
nothing was going on that was untoward."
He said the organization has new accountants and a new
administrative team, and the group recently finally filed
long-overdue tax returns.
Sharpton's own debts include $365,558 owed in New York City
income tax and $931,397 in unpaid federal income tax, according to a
lien filed by the Internal Revenue Service last spring. His
for-profit company, Rev. Al Communications, owes the state another
$175,962 in delinquent taxes.
As for Sharpton's personal tax debt, King said Sharpton has
started paying it off but contends that faulty record-keeping by the
National Action Network led the government to overestimate his tax
liability.
Tax headaches are nothing new for Sharpton. The 53-year-old
minister has been assailed over his career for running up big tax
debts and failing to abide by rules governing his charities and
election committees. He is perpetually being sued for failing to pay
his bills.
In December, Sharpton revealed that as many as 10 of his
associates had received grand jury subpoenas. A person familiar with
the investigation told the AP that the FBI and IRS are probing
whether Sharpton or his organization committed tax crimes or
violations related to his 2004 presidential campaign, during which
he was forced to return public matching funds for breaking
fundraising rules.
If any of this worries Sharpton, you'd never know it. He is
pressing ahead with his latest campaign - an effort to persuade the
Justice Department to bring civil rights charges against New York
City police detectives who fired 50 shots and killed an unarmed
groom as he left his bachelor party.
Over the past few weeks, Sharpton has kept a high profile,
promising to lead weekly demonstrations until new charges are
brought against police detectives acquitted of manslaughter April 25
in the November 2006 death of Sean Bell.
"He is as focused as ever," said Rep. Gregory W.
Meeks, a Queens Democrat who has also rallied for police reforms
since the Bell case. "He is probably more effective now than he
was in the past, than he has ever been."
Sharpton was arrested and spent a few hours in jail
Wednesday for being among the marchers who blocked the Brooklyn
Bridge to protest the verdict.
On Thursday, Sharpton said he may soon add another cause -
the case of three shooting suspects who appeared to have been beaten
and kicked by police during an arrest in Philadelphia.
Sharpton has been investigated before, and always walked
away clean.
In 1990, he was acquitted of tax fraud and charges that he
stole from one of his charities. He followed that up with what was
essentially another victory in a tax case by pleading guilty to a
misdemeanor charge of failing to file a state return.
In the latest probe, the official overseeing the
investigation is U.S. Attorney Benton Campbell - the same
Brooklyn-based prosecutor whom Sharpton is urging to file criminal
charges in the Bell shooting. Campbell's office has said it is
reviewing the case but declined to comment further.
Sharpton's reputation has undergone a remarkable renaissance
since the Tawana Brawley days in 1987, when he was accused of
helping create a hoax in which the 15-year-old girl claimed she had
been kidnapped and raped by a gang of whites that included a police
officer and a prosecutor. A grand jury concluded that Brawley made
the story up.
Since the late 1990s, his civil rights group has grown from
a small outfit, with a few hundred thousand dollars in annual
revenue, to an organization that now routinely takes in $1 million
to $2 million per year, thanks partly to corporate support.
Donors have included beer giant Anheuser-Busch, which gave
more than $100,000 last year, and Forest City Ratner, a real estate
development company that courted black leaders for support of a plan
to build an NBA arena in Brooklyn. PepsiCo, for several years, gave
Sharpton a compensated position on one of its advisory boards.
The group also enjoys financial support from the state's top
politicians.
New York Gov. David Paterson has transferred at least
$28,000 from his own re-election committee to the National Action
Network since 2001. Rep. Charles Rangel, a top Democrat in Congress,
has been another major backer, giving at least $83,000. New York
Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has given $10,000.
"Everybody who runs for office in the Democratic Party
wants to meet with him," said former Mayor Ed Koch, who once
battled Sharpton but now calls him a friend and a "bona fide
leader."
Koch said Sharpton's past will always be an issue with some
whites, and he disagreed with the decision to engage in civil
disobedience over the Bell case. But the former mayor believes the
respect Sharpton enjoys among blacks is well earned.
"He is willing to go to jail for them," Koch said.
"And he is there when they need him."
AP researcher Rhonda Shafner contributed to this report.
On the Web:
The National Action Network:
http://www.nationalactionnetwork.net/
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