Did Justice Clarence Thomas fail to disclose hundreds of thousands of dollars in rental income?

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas may have failed to report hundreds of thousands of dollars he received in rental income from a real estate firm since it dissolved more than a decade ago in 2006, according to a Washington Post report that cites disclosure forms reviewed by the newspaper. The defunct company named Ginger Limited Partnership was responsible for depositing between $270,000 and $750,000 into Thomas's bank account. It was founded in 1982 by Thomas's wife, Ginni Thomas, who had invited her parents and three siblings to be partners at the firm, records showed. The Post stated that Thomas continued to report incomes from the non-existent firm until last year. This is not the first hesitancy on Thomas’s part to disclose payments as he had earlier failed to report expensive trips paid for by Republican donor Harlan Crow for 20 years, and a 2014 real estate transaction selling his childhood home to Crow. The ProPublica investigation in early April revealed those payments.

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