- Better Data Would Shed Light on Tech Credit
- Senators Aim to Extend, Expand Tax Credit for R&D
- Tech Industry Execs Defend Tax Break
- Technology Tax Credits Could Cost $1 Billion
- Tech Credit's Value Lost in Flawed Analysis
- Tally the Benefits of High-tech Credit
- Technology Credits Total More Than $108 Million
- Unity House Case Detailed
- AIG Experiments in Reverse Outsourcing
- Audits Find Tech-tax Abuse
- Lingle OKs Act 221 Tax Credit Extension, Criticizes Lawmakers
- AIG Hawaii Leverages Act 221 for New Tech Division
- Act 221 Technology Credit Largely Missed Mark
- Insurers Among Investors that Got Act 221 Breaks
- $20 Million in Venture Capital Adds to Upswing
- Act 221 Lures Venture Capital
- Attorney Sued Over Movie Financing Deals
- High-tech Sector Fears for Act 221
- Maui Seminar to Explain Act 221
Unity House Case Detailed
Posted September 15th, 2007 by sbaptist
Honolulu Advertiser, Wednesday, January 12, 2005
A wealth of new information about how Tony Rutledge Sr. operated Unity House Inc. was unsealed in federal court yesterday, including grand jury testimony that the tax-exempt Unity House "sold" Hawai'i tax credits to wealthy local investors and allegations that Rutledge used the organization's money to gain "political influence."
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