Thursday, June 23, 2011

WTHR's Kevin Rader Blames Mourdock For County's Error On Homestead Exemption

A previous owner applied for a homestead exemption on a downtown condominium State Treasurer Richard Mourdock purchased after being elected to state office. Mourdock discovered the error last year and filed a form with the Marion Co. Auditor's office to cancel it, but the office failed to correct the problem. When his next tax bill contained the same error, he notified the Auditor's office again. This time the office fixed the problem and Mourdock paid the extra taxes he owed on the condominium in each year he received the exemption without any prompting by the county. Proving no good deed goes unpunished when the media is out to get you in this town, WTHR's Kevin Rader did a hit piece on him tonight to make him out to be a crook. From WTHR:

Eyewitness News has discovered that Richard Mourdock has a homestead exemption on a home on Ridge Knoll in Evansville, Indiana and he has a second homestead exemption on a north New Jersey St. condominium in Indianapolis which he purchased in 2007.
Mourdock is currently challenging longtime incumbent Sen. Richard Lugar for the Republican nomination for United States Senate. Eyewitness News spoke to Mourdock, who is currently out of the country, by telephone and asked him about the problem.
"I remember filing out one of the forms to indeed cancel the homestead property tax credit. That's why I thought this problem had been solved at the time. It wasn't until June of this year that I found out that form had been lost down there so I filled out another form to cancel the homestead credit and made all of the arrangements to pay all the back taxes in excess of what they normally collect in this situation," he said.
In fact, Mourdock even has a form from the Marion County auditor's office admitting to the mix-up.
Marion County Deputy Auditor Claudia Fuentes wrote this memo on June 3, 2011: "Homestead deduction was not removed from property in error. The deduction was applied for by previous owner. Certified statement verified information."
The only problem with that is the amount of time that elapsed. That means Treasurer Mourdock had the homestead exemption credit in 2008, 2009, 2010 until he finally noticed it in 2011 when he was checking personal records prior to his run for Senate.
"The reality is I ran for re-election last year as state treasurer. If I had known before that election I would have gone in, I mean, if you want to take that line of thinking that I was trying to hide the fact, believe me it would have been just as damaging to me politically last year as this year. I fixed it at the first opportunity the exact day I found out about the problem. If I had found out about it in 2008, 2009 or 2010 I would have dealt with it the same day," he said.
Counties throughout the state have been working to close loopholes on multiple homestead deductions but there is still plenty of work to be done when it comes to properties in differing counties.
Rader and other State House reporters cover up serious cases of political corruption going on right under their noses every day, but let someone come along who threatens the political existence of one of their protected ones, such as Sen. Richard Lugar, and they will do whatever they can to manufacture phony allegations against you to destroy you. And to think this lame piece of shit hit piece was WTHR's lead off story on tonight's 6:00 p.m. news broadcast. How pathetic.

7 comments:

Downtown Indy said...

Did Monroe Gray ever pay back what he claimed illegally for the home his daughter lived in?

Gary R. Welsh said...

Dunno.

Paul K. Ogden said...

This is a story why? It sounds like Mourdock did everything right. Gary, I didn't think of county error when we communicated earlier.

Gary R. Welsh said...

It must be sweeps week.

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Jon Easter said...

Hit piece? They presented both sides.

Gary R. Welsh said...

It was the lead story on the most-watched evening news broadcast. Please. They're playing gotcha with Mourdock over a mistake the auditor's office made. He never applied for a homestead exemption on it after he purchased it. If the office is following procedure, there would have never been one applied to his home. Keep in mind, too, that a lot of people who escrow funds with their lender to pay the property taxes don't even examine their property tax statement all that closely other than to see the amount and ascertain that the escrow will be sufficient to cover the bills paid by the lender.