It seems Mr. Trump’s past shady deals are coming to light as of late, and today, we’ve all been blessed with some pretty pertinent information about the tax-dodging patriot that is the Republican frontrunner for the presidency, Donald Trump.

Trump was involved in a deal that may have seemed pretty great when he was a businessman, but now that he is running for President, these past decisions are coming back to haunt him. The deal involved real estate, of course, and Trump, as well as a group of others, had a sweet little scheme that allowed them to avoid paying about $20 million in taxes.

The story was broken by British-based newspaper, The Telegraph. They reported the following:

“The billionaire approved a $50 million investment in a company – only for the deal to be rewritten several weeks later as a ‘loan.’ Experts say that the effect of this move was to skirt vast tax liabilities, and court papers seen by the Telegraph allege that the deal amounted to fraud. Independent tax accountants and lawyers said that the documents Mr Trump signed – copies of which were obtained by this newspaper as part of a three-month investigation – contained “red flags” indicating the deal was irregular. But the Republican presumptive presidential nominee signed nonetheless.”

Bob McIntyre is the director of the US-based Citizens for Tax Justice campaign group, and he said that the actions of Trump and his associates is highly odd behavior for such experienced real estate businessmen. This all comes in the wake of Trump’s refusal to release his tax documents to be scrutinized by experts and commoners alike; because that would blast the door of his skeleton closet wide open.

Trump admitted in the past that he tries to pay as ‘little taxes as possible,’ regardless of his claims of raking in $500 million last year. Trump actually claims to be a billionaire, but has so far refused to release any documents that would prove his worth.

Chairman of the Tax Justice Network and a financial crime attorney said that Trump was “poster child” for people who commit tax fraud, and despite his claims of carrying about the country’s wealth, his actions show that he has no regard for the common good whatsoever.

According to The Telegraph, former employees of Bayrock “claim the participants mislabeled the sale as a loan in order to avoid paying a further estimated $80 million taxes on the projected profits from the real estate.”

Trump’s lawyer says that his client had nothing to do with this deal, despite his name being on the documents. He says that Trump,