- Associated Press - Tuesday, July 27, 2010

BOSTON | Sen. John Kerry moved to end a controversy over his decision to base his new $7 million yacht in tax-free Rhode Island, informing the Massachusetts Department of Revenue on Tuesday that he would “promptly” pay taxes as if the vessel were docked in his home state.

In a statement Tuesday, the Democrat said, “As we’ve said from the beginning, we have always complied with tax laws, and we always will. … The payment is being made promptly.”

The 2004 Democratic presidential nominee has been dogged by charges of tax evasion since last week, when the Boston Herald first reported about his decision to dock the 76-foot sloop Isabel in Newport, R.I.

Doing so spared Mr. Kerry a $437,500 one-times sales-tax charge in Massachusetts as well as about $70,000 in annual excise taxes. Rhode Island repealed those taxes in 1993, making the state something of a nautical tax haven.

Massachusetts officials said Mr. Kerry was within his rights to base the vessel in Rhode Island despite owning homes in Nantucket and Boston, but they also said he would be liable for taxes if he brought the vessel to Massachusetts within six months of taking ownership.

Subsequent news accounts placed the Isabel in Nantucket over the Fourth of July weekend and on Martha’s Vineyard more recently. It is now in a shipyard in Portsmouth, R.I., undergoing warranty repairs.

In his statement, Mr. Kerry said, “Whether owed or not, we intend to pay the equivalent taxes as if the boat’s home-port were currently in Massachusetts.”

The wording underscored the tax treatment Mr. Kerry and his wife, millionaire philanthropist Teresa Heinz Kerry, constructed for the boat.

It is registered in Newport but owned by a limited-liability corporation based in Pittsburgh, hometown of both Mrs. Kerry and the ketchup company from which she derived her wealth through her late first husband, H. John Heintz III. In recent days, Mr. Kerry has indicated Mrs. Kerry was the majority stockholder in the corporation, raising questions about whether a Pennsylvania resident owed taxes in Massachusetts.

Reporters dogged Mr. Kerry at a public event on Monday, and the issue bubbled over to the Massachusetts gubernatorial race on Tuesday.

Independent gubernatorial candidate Timothy Cahill, a former Democrat, told reporters it “looks like” Mr. Kerry was dodging his tax bill and said the revenue department should investigate.

“I don’t think that the state should treat anyone differently — senators, congressmen or regular people so, if someone’s not paying their taxes that should be paying them, then the DOR should go after them,” said Mr. Cahill, the state treasurer.

Gov. Deval Patrick, a fellow Democrat, also was asked if he thought Mr. Kerry was trying to avoid taxes.

“I think if there’s a tax to be paid, he’s going to pay it,” the governor said shortly before Mr. Kerry released his statement.

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