Not quite. The report said that for tax years 2005-2007 he paid $70.1 million in federal income tax. He also paid $24.3 million in alternative minimum tax for seven years between 2000 and 2017. But in 2010 he claimed a refund of $72.9 million, based upon alleged business losses of $1.4 billion. Assuming the losses were genuine he was entitled to carry them back to prior years and receive a refund.
But a refund of that size has to be approved by the Joint Committee on Taxation, a bipartisan congressional committee. It apparently did so based on an audit that was sent to it before approving the refund but that was reopened after the refund was made and that has remained open to this day. The sticking point may be claimed losses of $700 million for 2009 relating to Trump's alleged abandonment of a partnership interest that may be related to his failed Atlantic City casinos. Far from finding that Trump was "totally clean", the legitimacy of the refund and the claimed losses has yet to be finally determined.
As far as the "tens of millions of dollars in taxes that his businesses produced and paid", the fact is that Trump's businesses lost tons and tons of money, not to mention that most of them are flow-through entities (such as limited liability companies) that pay no federal income tax anyway. The only taxes these entities would likely have paid were employment taxes and various local taxes.