Lee Fang at the Nation has more on the actual facts, rather than the Romney-family version of the story. The story is from six days, and still is obviously quite relevant.
The private equity firm run by Tagg Romney—Mitt’s eldest son, who is now taking a leadership role in guiding his father’s presidential campaign—misled reporters last year about its involvement with a company run by men accused of taking part in a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme.It’s also interesting to note that this revelation is only available because of the new reporting requirements for Dodd-Frank. No wonder Romney doesn’t like that legislation.
However, Solamere Capital’s statement, provided to ABC News, is false. Disclosures from the Securities and Exchange Commission show that Tagg’s company indeed maintains ties with the Ponzi-linked firm, Solamere Advisors.
The claim that Solamere Group didn’t invest directly in Solamere Advisors, the firm employing former Stanford employees, appears to have been an attempt to shield Mitt Romney. Mitt invested about $10 million into Tagg’s Solamere Capital venture, which would suggest Mitt has a direct financial relationship with folks involved in a Ponzi scheme. That’s because Solamere Capital pools together investment money to co-invest in other companies.
All of this, of course, brings us back to the critical problem of Mitt Romney’s missing tax documents.
Until Mitt Romney produces his full returns for the past ten years, rather than the scrubbed version of the last two years, that is missing a lot of details, we simply do not know the full extent of what he’s involved in or where. And whether it’s even criminal.
For someone that is proposing to make such radical changes to the tax code – Romney has proposed a $5 trillion tax cut for the rich that even Faux News says doesn’t add up – we should know if he’s doing this to benefit the country, or just himself and his rich friends.
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