Experts: No clear criminal case over Trump tax disclosure
NEW YORK — Donald Trump tax documents were published without his permission in The New York Times, but that doesn’t necessarily make for a clear-cut criminal case against the newspaper or its source.
For one thing, it’s not clear who did the divulging — the Times says it received the documents anonymously in the mail. And legal experts say the newspaper itself should be on solid First Amendment grounds if it used newsworthy, accurate information and did nothing illegal to get it.
“When you’re in an election and you’re looking at candidates’ tax returns, I don’t think it’s dangerous” legally for the Times, said media lawyer James Goodale, the Times’ general counsel when the federal government sought unsuccessfully in 1971 to stop the newspaper from publishing the “Pentagon Papers,” a classified military study showing that the U.S. had secretly expanded the Vietnam War.
Trump’s lawyers have threatened “prompt initiation of appropriate legal action” of their own over Saturday’s story, which said the businessman had declared $916 million in losses in 1995. The deduction was so big he could have forgone paying federal income taxes for 18 years.


