Block's WatchdogRI Alleges Sen. Jabour Failed to Pay Corporate Tax for 15 Years

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Block's WatchdogRI Alleges Sen. Jabour Failed to Pay Corporate Tax for 15 Years

Ken Block
Ken Block's WatchdogRI is claiming that unpaid taxes on inactive corporations have cost Rhode Island $3 million to date, and that Providence State Senator Paul Jabour owes over $8,000 in back corporate taxes. 

"WatchdogRI looked at every Rhode Island legislator's real estate disclosures on ethics filings looking for irregularities with ethics forms, campaign finance filings and Rhode Island real estate records," said WatchdogRI in a statement on Tuesday. "One issue that jumped out was corporate ownership of real estate occupied by state Senator Jabour (D-Providence)."

WatchdogRI stated:

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"Jabour does not own 529 Broadway in Providence, which he lists as his residence on his ethics filings.  Online property records show that 529 Broadway is owned by a defunct RI corporation named Vijotar, Inc. The RI Secretary of State's corporate database lists Vincent Jabour as the president of the company, which was last an active RI company in 2001. Senator Jabour is listed as the registered agent for the defunct Vijotar, Inc.

Companies that are no longer active RI corporations do not pay an annual $50 corporations filing fee to the RI Secretary of State, and they also very likely do not pay Rhode Island's $450 annual corporations tax (this tax was just reduced from $500 this year). WatchdogRI calculates that Vijotar Inc. has not paid a total of $8,200 in annual corporate taxes and $50 Secretary of State annual fees since 2001."

Jabour Responds

Jabour responded to the allegations on Tuesday afternoon by WatchdogRI and Block, who serves as the group's chairman, of which he said he was unaware. 

"It's family property. Vijotar is the name of the company created by our family that's 20 years old. It's my principal place of residence -- it's holds the title to the property," Jabour told GoLocalProv.com. "A lot of people have a property have held in corporation for liability purposes. I do it all the time as attorney. There's nothing wrong with it. It's for legal purposes." 

Senator Paul Jabour
"If the charter was revoked we probably have to reinstate the charter.  If the state says we have to pay anything, I'll pay it. But I haven't gotten any bills for the corporation," said Jabour. "I never received a notice for corporate tax, there's no income that's derived from that. It's just a shell to hold the title, it's not an active company, I don't have an interest in the corporation. I never received a bill, it has no other real estate holdings and it could be just be a case where we didn't file the annual report."

"As I said, it's my principal residence, I pay all the taxes on it, the water, the sewer," said Jabour. "I'm just about to go pay my tax bill of $14,000, in fact. As I said, if I owe anything on the corporate side, I'll pay it."

"This is much ado about nothing, just Ken Block being Ken Block, looking to find something to attack the Democrats on," said Jabour. 

Additional Findings

WatchdogRI said that using Block's Simpatico Software and searching publicly available online real estate records and the RI Secretary of State's corporate database, that they found the following. 

986 inactive RI corporations own Rhode Island real estate where the corporate name in the Secretary of State's database exactly matches the corporate name in property records.  

On an annual basis, these 986 corporations are likely not paying their $450 corporations tax, nor are they paying $50 annually to the Secretary of State.  Total annual tax and fee loss: $493,000.

When WatchdogRI looked at the total tax liability for the 986 corporations above going back to the date they became inactive, we calculated that $3,266,650 is owed collectively by this group.

Another roughly 300 corporations also are inactive and appear to own RI real estate, but the name matches are not exact and require a much more time consuming analysis that was not undertaken.

"Roughly 15,000 corporations own Rhode Island real estate. Most of these corporations pay their required taxes and fees.  Rhode Island should not tolerate that more than 1,000 corporations are not playing by the same rules - especially if one of those inactive businesses has very close ties to a State Senator," wrote WatchdogRI. 


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