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Monthly Archives: March 2016

Foreign Account Filings Top 1 Million – Know Your Filing Requirements!

Strong and sustained growth of taxpayers complying with foreign financial account reporting reflects improving awareness and compliance of this important part of offshore tax rules, the Internal Revenue Service said today.

Many U.S. taxpayers with foreign accounts exceeding certain thresholds must file Form 114, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts, known as the "FBAR." It is filed electronically with the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCen).

In 2015, FinCen received a record high 1,163,229 FBARs, up more than 8 percent from the prior year. In fact, FBARfilings have grown on average by 17 percent per year during the last five years, according to FinCen data.

Filings of IRS Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets, are another sign of growing awareness of foreign reporting requirements. Taxpayers filed more than 300,000 Forms 8938 with their tax returns for tax year 2014, roughly the same as the prior year and up from about 200,000 for tax year 2011, the first year of the form.

Form 8938 resulted from the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, known as "FATCA." The filing thresholds are much higher for this form than for the FBAR.

Filing Requirements

Taxpayers with an interest in, or signature or other authority over, foreign financial accounts whose aggregate value exceeded $10,000 at any time during 2015 must file FBARs. It is due by June 30 and must be filed electronically through the BSA E-Filing System website.

Generally, U.S. citizens, resident aliens and certain non-resident aliens must report specified foreign financial assets on Form 8938 if the aggregate value of those assets exceeds certain thresholds. Reporting thresholds vary based on whether a taxpayer files a joint income tax return or lives abroad. The lowest reporting threshold for Form 8938 is $50,000 but varies by taxpayer. See the form's instructions for more information.

The International Taxpayers page on IRS.gov is packed with information. The web site also features a directorythat includes overseas tax preparers.

International taxpayers will find the online IRS Tax Map and the International Tax Topic Index to be valuable sources of answers. The IRS also has videos to assist international taxpayers. See IR-2016-03for more.

By law, Americans living abroad, as well as many non-U.S. citizens, must file a U.S. income tax return. In addition, key tax benefits, such as the foreign earned income exclusion, are only available to those who file U.S. returns.

The law requires U.S. citizens and resident aliens to report worldwide income, including income from foreign trusts and foreign bank and securities accounts. In most cases, affected taxpayers need to complete and attach Schedule B to their tax return. Part III of Schedule B asks about the existence of foreign accounts, such as bank and securities accounts, and usually requires U.S. citizens to report the country in which each account is located.

More information on the tax rules that apply to U.S. citizens and resident aliens living abroad can be found in, Publication 54, Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident A

 Have A Tax Reporting Problem?  
 

Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A.
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Read more at: Tax Times blog

2 Cayman Island Financial Institutions That Hid More Than $130 Million for US Taxpayers(?) Are Turning Over Their Records to the IRS!

On February 17, 2016 we posted The Swiss Bank Program is Over So What Countries are in the DoJ Sites Now? where we discussed that the Department of Justice announced on January 27, 2016 that it reached its final non-prosecution agreement under Category 2 of the Swiss Bank Program, with HSZH Verwaltungs AG (HSZH) and that the DOJ is getting some very valuable information served up on a silver platter as a result of the OVDP program and its non-prosecution agreements with Swiss banks. 
 

We also discussed that following the success of the Swiss Bank Program, the Justice Department is now looking beyond Switzerland to financial institutions in other countries that may be havens for secret offshore accounts or undisclosed assets. Investigators are pursuing the wealth of leads generated through the Swiss Bank Program, and following those leads to countries such as:
 
  • Belize,
  • the British Virgin Islands,
  • the Cayman Islands,
  • the Cook Islands,
  • India,
  • Israel,
  • Liechtenstein,
  • Luxembourg,
  • the Marshall Islands,
  • Panama and
  • Singapore 

Now Cayman Companies Admit to Helping U.S. Taxpayer-Clients Hide Assets in Offshore Accounts, and Agree to Produce Account Files of Non-Compliant U.S. Taxpayers First Conviction of Non-Swiss Financial Institution For Tax Evasion Conspiracy

 
The US government announced on March 9, 2016 the guilty pleas of Cayman National Securities Ltd. (CNS) and Cayman National Trust Co. Ltd. (CNT), two Cayman Island affiliates of Cayman National Corporation, which provided investment brokerage and trust management services to individuals and entities within and outside the Cayman Islands, including citizens and residents of the United States (U.S. taxpayers). 
 
 
CNS and CNT pleaded guilty to a criminal Information charging them with conspiring with many of their U.S. taxpayer-clients to hide more than $130 million in offshore accounts from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and to evade U.S. taxes on the income earned in those accounts.  CNS and CNT entered their guilty pleas pursuant to plea agreements requiring the companies to, among other things, produce through the treaty process account files of non-compliant U.S. taxpayers who maintained accounts at CNS and CNT, and pay a total of $6 million in financial penalties.  The plea proceeding took place today before the Honorable U.S. District Judge Thomas P. Griesa for the Southern District of New York.
 
“Today’s convictions make clear that our focus is not on any one bank, insurance company or asset management firm, or even any one country,” said Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Goldberg of the Justice Department’s Tax Division.
 
“The Department and IRS are following the money across the globe – there are no safe havens for U.S. citizens engaged in tax evasion or those actively assisting them.”
 
From at least 2001 through 2011, CNS and CNT, which are both located in Grand Cayman and organized under the laws of the Cayman Islands, assisted certain U.S. taxpayers in evading their U.S. tax obligations to the IRS and otherwise hiding accounts held at CNS and CNT from the IRS (hereinafter, undeclared accounts).  CNS and CNT did so by knowingly opening and maintaining undeclared accounts for U.S. taxpayers at CNS and CNT.  Specifically, and among other things, in furtherance of a scheme to help U.S. taxpayers hide assets from the IRS and evade taxes:
  • CNS and CNT opened, and/or encouraged many U.S. taxpayer-clients to open accounts held in the name of sham Caymanian companies and trusts (collectively, structures), thereby helping U.S. taxpayers conceal their beneficial ownership of the accounts.
  • CNS and CNT treated these sham Caymanian structures as the account holders and allowed the U.S. beneficial owners of the accounts to trade in U.S. securities.  
  • CNS failed to disclose to the IRS the identities of the U.S. beneficial owners who were trading in U.S. securities, in contravention of CNS’s obligations under its Qualified Intermediary Agreement (QI) with the IRS.I talked to make the downtime in  
  • After learning about the investigation of Swiss bank UBS AG (UBS), in or about 2008, for assisting U.S. taxpayers to evade their U.S. tax obligations, CNS and CNT continued to knowingly maintain undeclared accounts for U.S. taxpayer-clients and did not begin to engage in any significant remedial efforts with respect to those accounts until 2011 and 2012.
The sham Caymanian structures that CNT set up for U.S. taxpayer-clients included trusts, which were nominally controlled by CNT trust officers, but which in fact were controlled by the U.S. taxpayer-clients; managed companies, for which CNT ostensibly provided direction and management services, but which in truth were shell companies that served only to hold the assets of the U.S. taxpayer-clients; and registered office companies, which were shell companies for which CNT simply supplied a Caymanian mailing address. 
 
CNS treated these sham Caymanian structures as the account holders and then permitted the U.S. taxpayer-clients to trade in U.S. securities, without requiring them to submit Form W-9s, which are IRS forms that identify individuals as U.S. taxpayers, as CNS was obligated to do under its QI obligations for accounts held by U.S. persons that held U.S. securities.  CNS and CNT agreed to maintain these structures for U.S. taxpayer-clients after many of them expressed concern that their accounts would be detected by the IRS.
 
In or about April 2008, it became publicly known that the U.S. Department of Justice was investigating UBS for assisting U.S. taxpayers to evade their U.S. tax obligations.  Thereafter, despite the public disclosure of the UBS case, and CNS’s awareness of it, CNS continued to assist U.S. taxpayer-clients in concealing their accounts from the IRS by, among other things, failing to require them to complete Form W-9s. 
 
Likewise, up through at least 2010, CNT continued to rely on account opening documentation that, rather than barring the creation of non-tax compliant structures, simply assigned higher “risk” points to such structures.  In or about June 2011, CNT hired a new president, who spearheaded a review of CNT’s files.  In the course of that review, not a single file was found to be complete and without tax or other issues.  Moreover, with respect to the structures that had U.S. beneficial owners, CNT’s files contained little, if any, evidence of tax compliance.
 
At their high-water mark in 2009, CNS and CNT had approximately $137 million in assets under management relating to undeclared accounts held by U.S. taxpayer-clients.  From 2001 through 2011, CNS and CNT earned more than $3.4 million in gross revenues from the undeclared U.S. taxpayer accounts that they maintained. 
 
As part of their plea agreements with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York (the office), CNS and CNT have agreed to cooperate fully with the office’s investigation of the companies’ criminal conduct. 
 
To date, CNS and CNT have already made substantial efforts to cooperate with that investigation, including by:
  1. Facilitating interviews that the office conducted of CNS and CNT employees, including top level executives;
  2. Voluntarily producing documents in response to the office’s requests; 
  3. Providing, in response to a treaty request, un-redacted client files for approximately 20 percent of the U.S. taxpayer-clients who maintained accounts at CNS and CNT; and
  4. Committing to assist in responding to a treaty request that is expected to result in the production of un-redacted client files for approximately 90 to 95 percent of the U.S. taxpayer-clients who maintained accounts at CNS and CNT.
In connection with their guilty pleas, CNS and CNT have agreed to pay the United States a total of $6 million, which consists of the forfeiture of gross proceeds of their illegal conduct, restitution of the outstanding unpaid taxes from U.S. taxpayers who held undeclared accounts at CNS and CNT, and a fine.
 

For US taxpayers with undeclared income from foreign accounts, only those taxpayers that request pre-clearance before their bank is discovered by the IRS and listed, will get the 27 1/2% OVDP penalty. The 50% penalty applies to all taxpayers with accounts at financial institutions or with facilitators which are named, are cooperating or are identified in a court filing such as a John Doe summons.
 
Do You Have Undeclared Income From the Foreign Bank?
 

 
 
 Want to Know if the OVDP Program is Right for You?

 
Contact the Tax Lawyers at 
Marini& Associates, P.A.  
 
for a FREE Tax Consultation

Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243

 

 

 

 

 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

IRS LB&I – Issues New IPU for For Audits of Outbound Transactions!

The IRS, as part of an overall strategy to rethink and reorganize interactions with taxpayers, has developed “International Practice Units (IPUs),” which are training aids that are intended to describe for Revenue Agents leading practices for specific international and transfer pricing issues and transactions.

As part of LB&I International’s knowledge management efforts, IPUs are developed through internal collaboration and serve as both job aids and training materials on international tax issues.

For example, Practice Units provide IRS staff with explanations of general international tax concepts as well as information about a specific type of transaction. Practice Units will continue to evolve as the compliance environment changes and new insights and experiences are contributed. 

  • Practice Units are not official pronouncements of law or directives and cannot be used, cited or relied upon as such. 
  • Practice Units provide a general discussion of a concept, process or transaction and are a means for collaborating and sharing knowledge among IRS employees.  
  • Practice Units may not contain a comprehensive discussion of all pertinent issues, law or the IRS's interpretation of current law.  
  • Practice Units do not limit an IRS examiner’s ability to use other approaches when examining issues.  
  • Practice Units and any non-precedential material (e.g., a private letter ruling, determination letter, or Chief Counsel advice) that may be referenced in a Practice Unit may not be used or cited as precedent.  
  • References to third party service providers and documents, like news or journal articles, are for informational purposes only and do not constitute an endorsement of any vendor, document, or the services or views offered by such third party

As promised by the IRS, additional practice units have been published in 2016. The IRS Large Business and International (LB&I) division has published the following additional practice units concerning during 2016:

2016
03-07-2016 Residual Profit Split Method - Outbound (PDF, 395KB)
03-04-2016 Review of Transfer Pricing Documentation by *Outbound Taxpayers (PDF, 529KB)
03-04-2016 Outbound Services by US Companies to CFCs (PDF, 247KB)
02-19-2016 Outbound Transfer of Foreign Stock Followed by Check-The-Box Election (PDF, 351KB)
02-19-2016 Residual Profit Split Method - Inbound (PDF, 381KB)
02-19-2016 Revenue Procedure 99-32 Inbound Guidance (PDF, 443KB)
02-19-2016 Interest Expense of a Foreign Corporation Engaged in a U.S. Trade/Business (Non-Bank, Non-Treaty) (PDF, 291KB)
02-19-2016 Gross Effectively Connected Income (ECI) of a Foreign Corporation (Non-Treaty) (PDF, 225KB)
02-19-2016 Interest Expense of US Branch of a Foreign Bank Non-Treaty (PDF, 254KB)
02-19-2016 Calculating the Net Adjustment Penalty for a Substantial Valuation Misstatement (PDF, 330KB)
02-16-2016 Physical Presence Test for Purposes of Qualifying for IRC § 911 Tax Benefits (PDF, 180KB)
02-12-2016 Non-Services FDAP Income (PDF, 300KB)
02-09-2016 Receipt of Dividends or Interest from a Related CFC (PDF, 244KB)
02-08-2016 Outbound Transfer of Domestic Stock (PDF, 325KB)
02-08-2016 Pricing of Platform Contribution Transaction (PCT) in Cost Sharing Arrangements (CSA) Acquisition of Subsequent IP (PDF, 334KB)
02-04-2016 Intercompany Interest  Rates Under the Situs Rule of IRC Section 482 (PDF, 235KB)
02-04-2016 Outbound Transfer of Foreign Stock (PDF, 417KB)
02-04-2016 Change in Participation in a Cost Sharing Arrangement (CSA) – Controlled Transfer of Interest and Capability Variation (PDF, 411KB)
01-21-2016 Concepts of Foreign Base Company Sales Income (PDF, 418KB)
01-20-2016 Overview of Exchange of Information Programs (PDF, 137KB)
01-20-2016 Types of EOI Exchanges (PDF, 152KB)
01-20-2016 Field Procedures for Handling Foreign Initiated “Specific” Requests under EOI Agreements (PDF, 189KB)



The practice units identify areas of strategic importance to the IRS, provide insight as to how examiners may approach various transactions, and can provide an understanding of the context in which an examiner is approaching a particular issue or transaction.

The practice units often discuss the theories and legal authorities for examiners to rely upon when challenging a particular transaction, and identify documents an examiner will request and review. The practice units also explain the relevance of what is being reviewed in order to allow the examiner to fully understand a particular transaction and the position taken by a taxpayer.


The IRS is warning its examiners of a new area of interest to look out for when examining corporate taxpayers. In a 4 new IPUs, the IRS outlines the audit steps for its examiners to follow in reviewing the "Outbound Transfers" involving a U.S. taxpayer:

03-07-2016 Residual Profit Split Method - Outbound (PDF, 395KB)
03-04-2016 Review of Transfer Pricing Documentation by *Outbound Taxpayers (PDF, 529KB)
03-04-2016 Outbound Services by US Companies to CFCs (PDF, 247KB)
02-19-2016 Outbound Transfer of Foreign Stock Followed by Check-The-Box Election (PDF, 351KB)


As seasoned Tax Defenders, 
we would advise you to Always take advantage 
of Knowing the IRS's Playbook!

It gives you an Advantage in Representing Taxpayers 
before the Internal Revenue Service!

Need an Experienced Tax Defender? 


Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A.

for a FREE Tax Consultation
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888 882-9243).


Read more at: Tax Times blog

Hiding Money Offshore Resides on the Dirty Dozen List of Tax Scams for the 2016 Filing Season

 

On Thursday, February 11, 2016 we posted IRS "Dirty Dozen" Tax Scams for 2015 we discussed that the Internal Revenue Service wrapped up the 2015 "Dirty Dozen" list of tax scams today with a warning to taxpayers about aggressive telephone scams continuing coast-to-coast during the early weeks of this year's filing season, where it stated that avoiding taxes by hiding money or assets in unreported offshore accounts remains on its annual list of tax scams known as the “Dirty Dozen” for the 2015 filing season.
 

"Our continued enforcement actions should discourage anyone from trying to illegally hide money and income offshore," said IRS Commissioner John Koskinen. "We have voluntary options to help taxpayers get their taxes and filing obligations in order."

Since the first Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP) opened in 2009, there have been more than 54,000 disclosures and we have collected more than $8 billion from this initiative alone. The IRS conducted thousands of offshore-related civil audits that have produced tens of millions of dollars. The IRS has also pursued criminal charges leading to billions of dollars in criminal fines and restitutions.

The IRS remains committed to our priority efforts to stop offshore tax evasion wherever it occurs. Even though the IRS has faced several years of budget reductions, the IRS continues to pursue cases in all parts of the world, regardless of whether the person hiding money overseas chooses a bank with no offices on U.S. soil.

Through the years, offshore accounts have been used to lure taxpayers into scams and schemes.

Compiled annually, the “Dirty Dozen” lists a variety of common scams that taxpayers may encounter anytime, but many of these schemes peak during filing season as people prepare their returns or hire people to help with their taxes.

Illegal scams can lead to significant penalties and interest and possible criminal prosecution. IRS Criminal Investigation works closely with the Department of Justice (DOJ) to shut down scams and prosecute the criminals behind them.

Hiding Income Offshore


Over the years, numerous individuals have been identified as evading U.S. taxes by hiding income in offshore banks, brokerage accounts or nominee entities and then using debit cards, credit cards or wire transfers to access the funds. Others have employed foreign trusts, employee-leasing schemes, private annuities or insurance plans for the same purpose.

The IRS uses information gained from its investigations to pursue taxpayers with undeclared accounts, as well as the banks and bankers suspected of helping clients hide their assets overseas. The IRS works closely with the Department of Justice (DOJ) to prosecute tax evasion cases.

While there are legitimate reasons for maintaining financial accounts abroad, there are reporting requirements that need to be fulfilled. U.S. taxpayers who maintain such accounts and who do not comply with reporting requirements are breaking the law and risk significant penalties and fines, as well as the possibility of criminal prosecution.

Since 2009, tens of thousands of individuals have come forward voluntarily to disclose their foreign financial accounts, taking advantage of special opportunities to comply with the U.S. tax system and resolve their tax obligations. And, with new foreign account reporting requirements being phased in over the next few years, hiding income offshore is increasingly more difficult.

At the beginning of 2012, the IRS reopened the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP) following continued strong interest from taxpayers and tax practitioners after the closure of the 2011 and 2009 programs. This program will be open for an indefinite period until otherwise announced.

Third-Party Reporting

Under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) and the network of intergovernmental agreements (IGAs) between the U.S. and  partner jurisdictions, automatic third-party account reporting began in 2015,  making it less likely that offshore financial accounts will go unnoticed by the IRS.

In addition to FATCA and reporting through IGAs, the Department of Justice’s Swiss Bank Program continues to reach non-prosecution agreements with Swiss financial institutions that facilitated past non-compliance.  As part of these agreements, banks provide information on potential non-compliance by U.S. taxpayers. Potential civil penalties increase substantially if U.S. taxpayers associated with participating banks wait to apply to OVDP to resolve their tax obligations.

Do You Have Undeclared Income From the Foreign Bank?
 

 
 
 Want to Know if the OVDP Program is Right for You?

 
Contact the Tax Lawyers at 
Marini& Associates, P.A.  
 
for a FREE Tax Consultation

Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243

 

 

 

 

 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

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