Wednesday, April 13, 2011

'Yes Men' claim hoax GE tax press release

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42572015/ns/business-us_business/

General Electric Co., embroiled in controversy over its low 2010 U.S. tax bill, was the subject of a hoax press release claiming it would donate billions of dollars to the federal government.

The "Yes Men," an activist group known for issuing false statements claiming major attitude changes in corporate America on Wednesday sent media outlets an e-mail claiming to be from the largest U.S. conglomerate saying that GE would send its $3.2 billion tax refund from 2010 back to Washington.

"It's a hoax and GE did not receive a refund," said Deirdre Latour, a GE spokeswoman.

The Associated Press on Wednesday had to withdraw a 90-word story it published based on the false press release. The release, which was e-mailed to the AP, included a GE logo and a link to a website designed to look like GE's website. The AP withdrew the story and advised its customers that the story was a hoax.

"The AP did not follow its own standards in this case for verifying the authenticity of a news release," said AP Business Editor Hal Ritter.

The "Yes Men," which in October 2009 staged a phony press conference claiming that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce had decided to support climate-change legislation, sent the fake GE release, said Andrew Boyd, who said he was a member of the group.

Fairfield, Connecticut-based GE's tax rate has been in the public eye since the New York Times reported last month that it paid no U.S. income taxes in 2010, a claim that GE denies. GE has acknowledged that its 2010 tax bill was low due to hefty losses at its GE Capital finance unit during the financial crisis.

Chief Executive Jeff Immelt in a March speech in Washington acknowledged that the company tries to keep its tax bill as low as it can but said it does so legally.

"Our tax rate will be higher in 2011," said Immelt, who U.S. President Barack Obama in January named to head a new White House penal aimed at driving jobs growth. "We do it in a compliant way. There are no exceptions."

The "Yes Men" sent the release to draw attention to GE's approach to taxes, Boyd said in a phone interview.

"This is unpatriotic, it's undemocratic, it's unfair," Boyd said. "It might be legal but it's immoral."

(Msnbc.com is a joint-venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal. GE holds minority interest in the latter.)

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