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Yearly Archives: 2017

Former IRS Appeals Team Manager & Area Director Joins Marini & Associates, PA

MIAMI, FL - February 1, 2017- Marini & Associates, PA (M&A) is pleased to announce that Anita W Friedlander, Esq., has become Of Counsel to our firm.  

Mrs. Friedlander concentrates her practice in the areas of Domestic & International Tax Law and Representation before the IRS, including representation during Tax Audits, Tax Appeals and in Tax Court Proceedings.

Anita has strong procedural and technical tax skills acquired during her 42 years of service with the Internal Revenue Service, which included assignment overseas; auditing and providing tax assistance. She is a member of the Florida Bar.

Mrs. Friedlander is able to transact business in EnglishItalian & Spanish.

Prior to joining Marini & Associates, P.A. Mrs. Friedlander was an auditor, agent, appeals officer, manager and area director handing domestic, estate, collection, and international issues and appeals for 42 years.
Education. Bachelor of Arts in Spanish and Italian, 1973, Florida State University and Juris Doctor, University of Miami School of Law, Miami Florida 1984.
 

Marini & Associates, PA is a law firm whose focus is the practice of TAX LAW , with an emphasis on Zealously Representing and Defending Taxpayers before the IRS and various State Taxing Agencies.

Supporting CPAs and Their Clients

CPAs are their clients' most trusted professional advisor. CPAs need to know when seeking assistance outside of their firms that their clients are being handled by competent professionals.

Marini & Associates PA has aligned itself with CPA firms across the nation. Marini & Associates PA is a trusted resource for CPA firms. When faced with controversy, you can roll the dice with another provider or call upon Marini & Associates PA, a Tax Law Firm renowned for serving CPAs and their clients.

Easing the CPA's Burden

Today, there is a common complaint echoed across the CPA world: staffing, staffing, staffing. CPA firms across the nation are understaffed and overworked. There simply are not enough good CPAs to go around.

Marini & Associates PA is part of the solution. Marini & Associates PA's audit defense and consulting services can help ease the burden when you find yourself understaffed.

Marini & Associates PA specialized skill and experience nicely compliments a CPA's practice, provides an outlet for excess work in the area of tax controversy and allows you to provide the best possible representation to your client; further building the bonds of trust in your relationship.   

 
Have A Tax Problem? 
 
  

 

Contact the Tax Lawyers at 

Marini & Associates, P.A.
for a FREE Tax Consultation

at: www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com or
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888)882-9243.

 

 

 

 
 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

Anti-Money Laundering Obligations Associated With Latin America Customers Who Enter Regularization Programs?

Jones Day posted Tax Regularizations in Latin America: What's a Financial Institution to Do? which discusses that the increasing number of tax regularization programs in Latin America—most recently in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and Peru—is of keen interest to the cross-border wealth management industry.
 
These programs are the latest Latin models of the global transparency trend, and all four countries have announced their intention to participate in the OECD Automatic Exchange of Information program ("AEI") as soon as practicable. As a prelude to tax information exchange, all of these countries are offering their taxpayers the opportunity to regularize their assets before more punitive methods of enforcement occur in the post-AEI world.

The attractiveness of the regularizations has long sparked debate, and now U.S. financial institutions are wrestling with a related stark question: What, if any, anti-money laundering reporting obligations arise when a financial institution learns that a customer participates in a regularization?

 
To Read More...
 
 Have A Tax Problem? 
 
  

 


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

at: www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com or
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888)882-9243.



 
 
 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

Border Tariff or Border Adjustment Tax?

According to Reuters Breakingviews there's a lot of talk these days about borders and taxes in Washington. U.S. President Donald Trump wants to hit firms that outsource with a simple tariff on imports. Republicans in Congress have pitched a more complex idea, a border adjustment, built into a corporate-tax overhaul. Breakingviews ticks through the winners and losers.

WHAT IS TRUMP'S TARIFF PLAN?
Angered over companies setting up factories in Mexico and elsewhere to produce goods for the U.S. market, as well as by those who already manufacture outside the United States, the president has threatened to impose a penalty in the form of a tax at the border. The levy, which he has suggested could be as high as 35 percent, would apply to firms that import goods to the United States. On Monday, he reiterated his threat to impose a "very major" border tax during a meeting with manufacturing executives. Separately, he'd also reduce the standard corporate tax rate to 15 percent from the current 35 percent.

HOW DOES THAT DIFFER FROM THE HOUSE REPUBLICAN PLAN?
Trump's particular target is U.S. companies that don't manufacture in America, and it's unclear how widely his punitive levy would, or could, be applied. But he's painted it as a simple border tariff. Lawmakers led by House Speaker Paul Ryan, on the other hand, would include border adjustments in a broader revamp. They too would cut the typical corporate income tax rate, to 20 percent in their plan. And they'd move toward a territorial system in which companies would be taxed where income is earned.

The cost of imported parts or finished goods for use or sale in the United States would no longer be deductible for tax purposes, while revenue from exports would be excluded from taxable income. The idea, House Republicans say, is to reduce incentives for companies to play games with the prices at which they move goods between jurisdictions or to move their headquarters abroad to reduce their tax bill. Currently, a U.S. company's overseas profit is taxed at home (often in addition to incurring tax overseas) but only when the money is brought back to the United States. Export revenue and import costs are both included in calculations of U.S. tax liabilities.

In an interview, Trump told the Wall Street Journal that such a tax is too complicated, though he later said he would work with congressional GOPers.

To read more go to Reuters Breakingviews.

Have A Tax Problem? 
  

 


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

at: www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com or
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888)882-9243.

  

                          

Read more at: Tax Times blog

Set up Your 2017 Calendar to Reflect New Filing Dates for 2016 US Tax Returns

On July 31, 2015, President Obama signed into law P.L. 114-41, the “Surface Transportation and Veterans Health Care Choice Improvement Act of 2015,” which includes a number of important tax provisions, including revised due dates for partnership, S corporations and C corporation returns and revised extended due dates for some returns.

Revised Due Dates for Partnership, S &C Corporation Returns 

Under the new law, there is a major restructuring of entity return due dates, effective generally for returns for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2015:

  • Partnerships and S corporations will have to file their returns by the March 15th following the end of the tax year. This results in the filing deadline for partnerships being accelerated by one month with the filing deadline for S corporations staying as March 15. 
    • By having most partnership returns due one month before individual returns are due, taxpayers and practitioners will generally not have to extend, or scurry around at the last minute to file, the returns of individuals who are partners in partnerships.

  • C corporations will have to file by April 15th after the end of the tax year resulting in the filing deadline for C corporations being deferred for one month.
These changes to the filing deadlines generally go into effect for 2016 returns. Under a special rule for C corporations with fiscal years ending on June 30, the change is deferred for ten years and it won't apply until tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2025. 
 


Revised Extended Due Dates for Various Returns

Taxpayers who can't file a tax form on time, can request an extension to file the requisite form. Effective for tax returns for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2015, the new law directs the IRS to modify its regulations to provide for a longer extension to file a number of forms, including the following:

 

  • Form 1065 - U.S. Return of Partnership Income will have a maximum extension of 6 months. The extension will end on Sept. 15 for calendar year taxpayers.
  • Form 1041 -U.S. Income Tax Return for Estates and Trusts will have a maximum extension of 5 1/2 months. The extension will end on Sept. 30 for calendar year taxpayers.
  • The Form 5500 - Annual Return/Report of Employee Benefit Plan will have a maximum automatic extension of 3 1/2. The extension will end on Nov. 15 for calendar year filers.
FinCEN Report Due Date Revised
Taxpayers with a financial interest in or signature authority over certain foreign financial accounts must file FinCEN Form 114, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR). Currently, this form must be filed by June 30 of the year immediately following the calendar year being reported, and no extensions are allowed.
Under the new law, for returns for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2015, the due date of FinCEN Report 114 will be Apr. 15, with a maximum extension of 6 months ending on Oct. 15. The IRS may also waive the penalty for failure to timely request an extension for filing the Report, for any taxpayer required to file FinCEN Form 114 for the first time.

Form 3520 And Form 3520-A Due Date Revised
Form 3520-A is now due on March 15th and will have a maximum extension of 6 months until September 15th.

The IRS or FinCEN need to provide clarification on the format or forms for such extensions, which may be similar to Form 4868, which is the form for requesting extensions on Individual tax returns currently. There may also be a requirement that these extensions be filed on the BSA Website as in the case of the FBAR forms.

 Have a Tax Problem? 
 
 
 
Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A.
 
for a FREE Tax Consultation
or Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888 882-9243).

Read more at: Tax Times blog

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