David Cay Boyle Johnston (born December 24, 1948) is an American journalist and author of the investigation, a specialist in economics and tax issues, and winner of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Beat Prize.
From 2009 to 2014 he is an Extraordinary Visiting Lecturer who teaches tax, property, and legal arrangements of the ancient world at Syracuse University College of Law and Whitman School of Management. From July 2011 to September 2012 he is a columnist for Reuters, writing, and producing video comments, on taxation, accounting, economic, public finance, and business issues around the world. Johnston is chairman of the board of Investigative Reporters and Editors. He has also written for Al Jazeera UK and America in recent years.
Video David Cay Johnston
Reporting
Johnston covered "radical students, black politics and development" at San Jose Mercury News from 1968 to 1973. Although he "got enough credit for at least one masters degree," his formal education credentials were limited to "high school diploma top "because he" missed most of the general education requirements to support top divisions and graduate studies in seven schools, "including San Francisco State University (1972), University of Chicago (where he studied under five months of fellowships in 1973) and Michigan State University (1973-1975). At Michigan State, he wrote an internal textbook ( Guide for Public Records ) for the University's journalism department. From 1973 to 1976, he was an investigative reporter at Detroit Free Press in his office in Lansing. In 1976, he joined the Los Angeles Times, where he remained until 1988. Johnston later worked as a reporter at The Philadelphia Inquirer 1988-1995. He joined The New York Times in February 1995.
As a reporter, Johnston investigates the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) who spies on politics and other offenses, hotelier Barron Hilton, misappropriation of funds at United Way, news manipulation at WJIM-TV in Lansing, Michigan, and Donald Trump's financial transactions. He once tracked down a killer that the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department failed to capture, resulting in an innocent man winning his release in his fifth trial.
From February 1995 to April 2008, he was a tax reporter with The New York Times. Over the next three years, until joining Reuters, he wrote "Johnston's Take," a column on tax policies for the non-profit journals Tax Notes and the sister.com tax website, published by Tax Analysts. In 2009 he briefly wrote, "By The Numbers," the column for The Nation .
Johnston received the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Beat Report "for his penetrating and vigorous report revealing gaps and injustices in the US tax code, which play a role in bringing about reform." Johnston describes how corporations pay less taxes, even as individuals pay more, even with well-known companies like Colgate-Palmolive, Compaq Computer, and United Parcel Service (UPS) involved in "so-called courts as shams." The court found that Merrill Lynch saved AlliedSignal (now Honeywell) $ 180 million in "fake" money transfers among foreign companies. However, the IRS, since 1999, is more likely to audit the poor than the rich, Johnston reported.
In 2001, Johnston investigated the claim that the housing tax, referred to by the Republic as "death tax", was so high that farm families were forced to sell their family farms to pay taxes. These claims are presented to prove the need to eliminate inheritance taxes. Johnston challenges those who make such claims, such as the Federation of American Agricultural Bureaus, to cite examples of agriculture lost due to inheritance taxes, and they can not do so. Economists tell Johnston that it is a myth. An IRS analysis of 1999 results shows that almost no working farmer owes property taxes. Plantation taxes were not valued at $ 1.35 million in net worth first, and then increased from 43% to 55% after $ 3 million. In addition, most wealthy people use legal maneuvers to reduce their land tax to 25% (or even the slightest) for the largest estates.
He was a Pulitzer finalist in 2003 "for his story that presents a complicated command of complicated US tax laws and about how firms and individuals twist them to their advantage." He was also a finalist in 2000 "for the scope of the obvious problem resulting from the reorganization of the Internal Revenue Service."
Like columnist Steven Pearlstein, Johnston has won praise for his writings even though he has no degree in economics. Johnston studied economics at the graduate school of the University of Chicago and six other colleges, earning the equivalent of six college credit years but not earning a degree, as he took top-level courses and graduate levels almost exclusively, and did not stay in any of the old schools enough.
Johnston has been critical of news media coverage of the $ 700 billion Wall Street bailout of 2008. In a letter to American journalist and blogger, Jim Romenesko, Johnston writes, "In covering a $ 700 billion bailout Wall Street does not repeat the lapdog practices that the failure that so damages our reputation in the bustle of war in Iraq and the adoption of the Patriot Act Do not assume that Congress should act instantly, because so many stories state as if it were an irreversible fact.Do not assume there are cases just because officials say there is. "Johnston has been well quoted by Glenn Greenwald as well as other bailout critics. On September 26, 2008, Johnston said: "If you look around, you'll see that banks are still making regular loans for regular business.Your mailbox is still full of proposals to sell your credit card and extend your debt. a very toxic mortgage that is at the core of this thing.They are being advertised all over the internet. "..." And my point is not to argue that there is or not a crisis, but that journalists need to start not by wondering in the end but by going to the core question Is this the cheapest way to do this? Is there a market solution that might be implemented? "
In 2011, in his debut article for Reuters, Johnson assumed positive numbers for the negative in News Corp's annual report, and as a result, falsely claimed that News Corp had received a large tax return, when in fact, they had paid taxes. These false claims led to the removal of the article.
By the end of 2016 Johnston founded DCReport, an online journal covering presidential administration and congress.
On March 14, 2017, Johnston released part of Donald Trump's 1040 tax form in 2005 which, he stated, he received anonymously in the mail.
Maps David Cay Johnston
Books
Johnston is the author of bestsellers on taxes and economic policy. Free lunch: How rich Americans enrich themselves in government spending and stick with you, is about hidden subsidies, rigid markets, and corporate socialism. It follows his previously excellent book Legally: a Covert Campaign to Rob our Tax System for Profitable Super Rich - and Cheat Everybody Else , bestsellers New York Times in the US. the award-winning tax system of Investigative Reporters and Editors 2003 Book of the Year.
Johnston's first book, the 1992 Temples of Chance: How America Inc Buying Killer Inc. to Win Casino Business Control is an account of how the junk-bonded kings seized control of the mass of the casino industry in the 1980s. This book discusses industry corruption and the role of the federal and state governments in the corruption.
In 2014 Cay Johnston released Divided: The Dangers of the Growing Growth We. Cay Johnston shows most Americans, in inflation-adjusted terms, now returning to the average income of 1966. Post-recession (from 2009 to 2011) 1 percent of the top households took 121 percent of income while 99 percent down view of their income actually falling.
In 2016, Johnston released The Making of Donald Trump, a journalistic account of the rise of entrepreneur Donald Trump, with Melville House Publishing. By the time he wrote the book, Johnston had known Trump for 28 years. The book soon became the bestselling book of the New York Times.
His latest book, published in 2018, is It's Even Worse Than You Think: What the Trump Administration does to America , the investigation section that investigates the details of the actions Trump took and the people he appointed in the department levels, and how these actions affect American civil rights and protections
Personal life
Johnston was born in San Francisco, California, son of Gretchen E. and Leslie Jules Johnston, a chef. Johnston is married to Jennifer Leonard, who is the president and executive director of the Rochester Area Community Foundation. They live in Brighton, New York, a suburb of Rochester. They have eight children and five grandchildren.
Posts
Temples of Chance: How America Inc. Buys Assassin Inc to Win Control of Casino Business (1992) ISBN 978-0-385-41920-8
References
External links
- Official website
- David Cay Johnston's Blog on Reuters
- David Cay Johnston's article on The New York Times
- Appearance in C-SPAN
- David Cay Johnston's appearance in Democracy Now!
- David Cay Johnston at IMDb
Source of the article : Wikipedia