Not true at all, it could show foreign bank holdings (which must be reported), taxes paid to foreign governments, income from investments in Russia, etc. Even if those investment companies were opaque we could then start researching them to peel back the onion. His tax returns would be the beginning, not the end of investigations into his conflicts of interest.
I'm frankly baffled that ANYONE could be against this sort of rudimentary financial disclosure.
Completely freaking true.
None of what you wrote is relevant to the question at hand - info showing
who he has been doing business with. That was the specific question raised by the poster I answered.
Foreign bank accts, so what? He's supposed to own hotels around the world. Why wouldn't he have foreign accts and what do you think that will show? Anyway, who he does business with won't be disclosed on the foreign bank acct info.
Russian investment income? The source (domestic or foreign) is not disclosed when reporting the income. You'll find some evidence on Form 1116 (assuming he claimed a foreign tax credit) but it'll be aggregated and detail will not be available.
Investment companies? If it is reported on Schedule E you'll find a corporate name (the Fed ID # should be redacted) but that's not very helpful. If you could correctly guess the state of incorporation you could pull the records. However, in every state I've checked over the years all you get is the date of incorp, whether it's a for-profit or a non-profit, and the name of the registered agent (typically the name of the attorney filing the paperwork). I.e., shareholder data is not available. States don't even ask for it.
A tax return is a very poor source for the type of info many want.
One thing that would interest me is the names of any entities (partnerships and s-corps) that he owns and are listed on Sch E. Taking those names and running them through LexisNexis to look for any press (news) reports and also all types of tax cases.
Might find something. Might not. Might even be the same name, but a different corporation altogether. (50 states, 50 possible duplicate corporate names.)
Fern