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Monthly Archives: November 2020

IRS SB/SE Announced Their Compliance Strategies for 2021, Including Expanding The Use Of Civil Penalties


The IRS Small Business and Self-Employed business unit released its Fiscal 2021 Focus Guide -- It’s Still the Time -- laying out the compliance and service strategies for the coming year.

OUR CORE MISSION

Help small business and self-employed taxpayers understand and meet their tax obligations, while applying the tax law with integrity and fairness to all.

Our mission promotes voluntary compliance by focusing on renewed presence, ensuring public transparency, taking enforcement action every time it’s appropriate, and informing and empowering taxpayers.

STRENGTHEN COMPLIANCE ACTIVITIES

Take enforcement action every time it is appropriate (consider COVID-19 impact). 

  • Take action to mitigate risks of non-compliance and evolving threats. 
  • Expand use of all civil penalties including those used infrequently. 
  • Use the badges of fraud to identify and develop civil and criminal fraud cases.

LEVERAGE TECHNOLOGY AND DATA ANALYTICS

Use research and data analytics to propose solutions for non-compliance, emerging issues, and better serve and understand the public.

Expand SB/SE digital and virtual service options to improve the taxpayer experience and foster voluntary compliance.

DEVELOP OUR WORKFORCE

Hire a diverse workforce with the skills and abilities necessary to meet our business goals. Supply all employees with the training necessary for a highly skilled workforce reducing the chances of business disruption. Safeguard the health and safety of employees while still delivering mission-critical functions.

Have an IRS Tax Problem?


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


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243

Read more at: Tax Times blog

We Can Help You Eliminate Your $25,000 Late Form 5472 Penalties for $5000 Per Penalty!

On April 10, 2019, we posted US Taxpayers Are Receiving Automated Penalty Assessments For Late Filed Form 5471's & 5472's - We Can Help!  where we discussed that whave been receiving a many calls from businesses who have received penalty notices regarding late filed or non-filed Form 5471 & 5472's and that we discussed ways to defend against these automatic assessments and request penalty abatement including the Reasonable Cause Defense and First-Time Offender Abatement (FTA) Defense.


On November 3, 2020 we posted, New $25,000 Penalty for Not Reporting SMLLC with Foreign Owner Now Being Assessed by the IRS, we where we discussed that the IRS has now issued final regulations and they treat a domestic disregarded entity wholly owned by a foreign person as a domestic corporation separate from its owner, but only for the reporting, record maintenance and associated compliance requirements that apply to 25% foreign-owned domestic corporations under Code Sec. 6038A. and that for Tax Years beginning after December 31, 2017, the TCJA Act increased the late filed Form 5472 penalty to $25,000 From $10,000 for Each Return that must be filed.

We have had great success in requesting penalty abatements for these automatic late filed Form 5472 $25,000 penalty assessments!

We Can Help You Eliminate Your
$25,000 Late Filed Form 5472 Penalties
for $5,000 Per Penalty!

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

IRS Makes It Easier To Set Up Payment Agreements; Offers Other Relief To Taxpayers Struggling With Tax Debts EnglishEspañol

The Internal Revenue Service on November 2, 2020 announced in IR-2020-248 a number of changes designed to help struggling taxpayers impacted by COVID-19 more easily settle their tax debts with the IRS.

Taxpayers who owe always had options to seek help through payment plans and other tools from the IRS, but the new IRS Taxpayer Relief Initiative is expanding on those existing tools even more.

The revised COVID-related collection procedures will be helpful to taxpayers, especially those who have a record of filing their returns and paying their taxes on time. Among the highlights of the Taxpayer Relief Initiative:

  • Taxpayers who qualify for a short-term payment plan option may now have up to 180 days to resolve their tax liabilities instead of 120 days.
  • The IRS is offering flexibility for some taxpayers who are temporarily unable to meet the payment terms of an accepted Offer in Compromise.
  • The IRS will automatically add certain new tax balances to existing Installment Agreements, for individual and out of business taxpayers. This taxpayer-friendly approach will occur instead of defaulting the agreement, which can complicate matters for those trying to pay their taxes.
  • To reduce burden, certain qualified individual taxpayers who owe less than $250,000 may set up Installment Agreements without providing a financial statement or substantiation if their monthly payment proposal is sufficient. 
  • Some individual taxpayers who only owe for the 2019 tax year and who owe less than $250,000 may qualify to set up an Installment Agreement without a notice of federal tax lien filed by the IRS.
  • Additionally, qualified taxpayers with existing Direct Debit Installment Agreements may now be able to use the Online Payment Agreement system to propose lower monthly payment amounts and change their payment due dates.

Installment Agreement options are available for taxpayers who cannot full pay their balance but can pay their balance over time. 

The IRS Expanded Installment Agreement Options To Remove The Requirement For Financial Statements And Substantiation


 In More Circumstances For Balances Owed Up To $250,000 If The Monthly Payment Proposal Is Sufficient.

The IRS also modified Installment Agreement procedures to further limit requirements for Federal Tax Lien determinations for some taxpayers who only owe for tax year 2019.

In addition to payment plans and Installment Agreements, the IRS offers additional tools to assist taxpayers who owe taxes:

  • Temporarily Delaying Collection — Taxpayers can contact the IRS to request a temporary delay of the collection process. If the IRS determines a taxpayer is unable to pay, it may delay collection until the taxpayer's financial condition improves.
  • Offer in Compromise — Certain taxpayers qualify to settle their tax bill for less than the amount they owe by submitting an Offer in Compromise. 
  • Relief from Penalties — The IRS is highlighting reasonable cause assistance available for taxpayers with failure to file, pay and deposit penalties. First-time penalty abatement relief is also available for the first time a taxpayer is subject to one or more of these tax penalties.

"If you're having a tax issue, don't go silent. Please don't ignore the notice arriving in your mailbox," Guillot said. "These problems don't get better with time. We understand tax issues and know that dealing with the IRS can be intimidating," so hiring experience Tax Attorneys prevent you from having deal with the IRS while addressing and resolving your tax problems!

Have IRS Tax Problems?


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


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243) 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

The IRS Wealth Squad – The Super-Richest's Worst Nightmare

According to Law360, high-net-worth individuals may find themselves the focus of unwanted attention from the Internal Revenue Service. Last summer Douglas O'Donnell, the commissioner of the IRS Large Business and International, or LB&I, Division, announced the IRS would begin a new campaign initiating several hundred audits of high-net-worth individuals.

The new examinations will be conducted by a specialized group of examiners in the global high wealth industry group at LB&I nicknamed "the Wealth Squad." The Wealth Squad specializes in taking a holistic approach and examining the types of complex financial transactions and holdings that are more common among high-net-worth individuals.

As the Wealth Squad sends out notices to targeted high-net-worth individuals, professional advisers need to be prepared to develop an effective strategy for representing these clients through the audit process and beyond. That strategy includes making a high-level review of their clients' business and financial holdings, identifying potential issues, developing the roles that respective professional advisers will play during the audit, and how to best respond to requests for documents or interviews with their clients.

One of the most important items during the examination is to ensure that the taxpayer is protecting any privileged communications and preserving objections to the government's requests in the event of any future litigation. 

LB&I has an established examination process that outlines the phases of an LB&I examination and the steps that occur during each stage. Professional advisers should review the LB&I examination process to help them formulate their plan for representing their clients through the examination.

Among those campaigns are issues related to offshore holdings and foreign transactions; syndicated conservation easement transactions; Internal Revenue Code Section 831(b) captive insurance companies; private foundation abuses; and S corporation issues related to excess losses, built-in gains and shareholder distributions.

By identifying these issues early, professional advisers are able to identify other parties that may have information relevant to that issue and work to gather any relevant documents, ensuring they have adequate time to review the information and develop a strategy addressing the potential issue.

Upon identification of issues that may become a focus of the audit, a decision needs to be made as to who among the taxpayer's professional advisers is in the best position to handle the examination and interact directly with the IRS. Section 7521(c) grants the representative the right to handle any interview without the taxpayer present, absent a summons, and the professional adviser should limit direct interaction between their client and the examiner.

In large cases that are likely to end up in litigation, an attorney should be engaged early to help develop a strategy for the audit with an eye towards litigation. If there is any hint that anything in the audit could be construed as some form of fraud or misrepresentation by the taxpayer, everything must stop immediately, and the attorney who handles criminal tax defense needs will advise on how to proceed.

One of the most important aspects of an examination is to maintain privileges and preserve objections in the event of any future litigation. Section 7525(a)(1) extends limited protection to certain tax-practitioner communications for noncriminal tax matters if such communication would have been privileged if it were a communication between a taxpayer and an attorney. 

When An Attorney Has Been Engaged, The Parties Should Execute A Kovel Agreement To Extend The Attorney-Client Privilege To The Taxpayer's Nonattorney Professional Advisers.

Given the likely complexity of a high-net-worth taxpayer's business and financial holdings, there are likely to be a number of potential professional advisers to assist in the audit, each of whom should enter into a Kovel agreement to protect their audit-related communications.

Following the initial audit notification from the Wealth Squad, the examining agent is likely to begin making requests for documents related to the taxpayer and their business and financial holdings. Unlike a summons, an information document request has no statutory authorization outside of the general power of the IRS to examine returns.

However, timely responses to information document requests help establish cooperation and reduce the likelihood that the government will feel the need to issue a summons. It is important during this stage to maintain objections to any requests and preserve privileges.

Among the potential objections are that the requests are overly broad, unduly burdensome or vague, that the request has provided inadequate time to comply, or that the documents are not within the taxpayer's possession, custody or control.

If the requests come in the form of a summons, the government must be able to establish that it was issued for a proper purpose, that the information sought is relevant to an existing examination, that all administrative and statutory procedures have been satisfied, and that the information is not already in the possession of the IRS.

The IRS cannot compel taxpayers to waive privileges, however, any conduct by the taxpayer or their representative that is inconsistent with the maintenance of privilege can operate as a waiver.

The overarching goal while representing a high-net-worth individual in an audit is to cooperate with the examiner and the government's requests for documents while protecting your client by preserving objections and privileges. Cooperation does not mean waiving privileges, statutory limitations periods or other rights that protect taxpayers.

High-net-worth individuals receiving audit notifications from the Wealth Squad should be prepared for a thorough examination of their business and financial holdings that includes their personal information along with information from any entities in which they hold an interest, including any domestic or foreign corporations, partnerships, trusts or charitable foundations.

Using the resources published by LB&I, professional advisers can identify any potential issues that fall under one of LB&I's active campaigns and work to develop a strategy for addressing that issue throughout the LB&I examination process.

That strategy includes determining who is in the best position to serve as the face of the client in the audit. All communication should flow through that adviser and direct interaction with the client should be limited to the extent possible.

All of this should be done with an eye toward potential future litigation. While future litigation is all about offense, the audit is all about defense, protecting the client by preserving the client's privileges, objections, limitations periods and other statutory protections.

Are You Being Audited by the IRS Wealth Squad?

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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