From WashingtonPost.com:
Millions of Americans might be surprised  to learn that the man nominated to be the next Treasury secretary --  New York Fed President Timothy F. Geithner -- did his taxes using the  same software they do: TurboTax, a fact revealed in his Senate confirmation  hearing yesterday.
Geithner's tax returns from 2001 through  2004 have become an embarrassment, if not a stumbling block to his confirmation.  A 2006 IRS audit informed Geithner that he had failed to pay self-employment  taxes in '03 and '04, when he directed the International Monetary Fund's  policy development and review department. While being vetted for Treasury  secretary late last year, he was told he made the same errors on his  '01 and '02 returns. He calls them "careless mistakes" that  he should have caught and has paid $42,702 in back taxes.
 
It's an unlikely image: The man charged  with leading this nation out of recession -- an architect of the $700  billion financial rescue package -- hunched over a computer, surrounded  by stacks of paper, trying to figure out his taxes, just like the 18  million other working stiffs who bought TurboTax last year.
 
But the disclosures raise another issue:  When Geithner found he owed back taxes for '03 and '04, and had probably  made the same mistakes on his '01 and '02 returns, why did he wait until  confronted by Obama's vetters to check?
That was the question Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.)  tried to get at yesterday, suggesting that Geithner was hoping to ride  out the statute of limitations on audits.
"The question is whether it occurred  to you before you were nominated or approached to be nominated that,  in point of fact, you didn't have to go beyond 2003 and '04 because  of the statute of limitations," Kyl said.
