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Yearly Archives: 2020

IRS Urged Taxpayers To Consult Tax Lawyer Before Oct. 15 as it Expands Enforcement Focus on Abusive Micro-Captive Insurance Schemes


With the Oct. 15th filing deadline quickly approaching, the Internal Revenue Service encouraged taxpayers to consult a Tax Attorney if they participated in a micro-captive insurance transaction.

The IRS encourages any taxpayer who has continued to engage in an abusive micro-captive insurance transaction to not anticipate being able to settle its transaction with the IRS or Chief Counsel on terms more favorable than previously announced settlement offers and that any potential future settlement initiative that the IRS may consider will require additional concessions by the taxpayer.

With This in Mind, the IRS Encourages Taxpayers To

Consult  with An Experianced Tax Attorney 


if They Participated in a Micro-Captive Insurance Transaction. 

These taxpayers should seriously consider exiting the transaction and not claiming deductions associated with abusive micro-captive insurance transactions, just like many other taxpayers did who were contacted by the IRS in March and July 2020.

For those taxpayers that do not exit the transaction and continue taking such deductions, the IRS will disallow tax benefits from transactions that are determined to be abusive and may also require domestic captives to include premium payments in income and assert a withholding liability related to foreign captives. 

The IRS will also assert penalties, as appropriate, including the strict liability penalty that applies to transactions that lack economic substance under sections 7701(o) and 6662(i).  

The IRS Office of Chief Counsel Will Continue to
Litigate These Abusive Transactions in Tax Court!

This summer, the IRS issued a new round of section 6112 letters to material advisors who filed with the IRS pursuant to Notice 2016-66. In addition, the IRS has deployed 12 newly formed micro-captive examination teams to substantially increase the examinations of ongoing abusive micro-captive insurance transactions.

Also, as part of IRS’s continued focus in this area, the IRS has become aware of variations of the abusive micro-captive insurance transactions.  Examples of these variations include certain Puerto Rico and offshore captive insurance arrangements that do not involve section 831(b) elections.

These variations appear to be designed and marketed with the express intent of avoiding reporting under Notice 2016-66 and yet perpetuating in some cases the same or similar abusive elements as abusive micro-captive insurance transactions.  

The IRS is aware of these abusive transactions and is actively working to counter their proliferation.  

The IRS cautions taxpayers that, to the extent they engage in variations of abusive micro-captive transactions that are substantially similar to Notice 2016-66, they must be disclosed.  Otherwise, the IRS will impose penalties for the failure to disclose.

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

Things You Should Consider When Receiving an IRS Cryptocurrency Letter

On August 2, 2019 we posted IRS Letters to Virtual Currency Owners Regarding Back Taxes, where we discussed that the Internal Revenue Service has begun sending letters to taxpayers with virtual currency transactions that potentially failed to report income and pay the resulting tax from virtual currency transactions or did not report their transactions properly.

"Taxpayers Should Take These Letters Very Seriously By Reviewing Their Tax Filings and When Appropriate,
Amend Past Returns And Pay Back Taxes,
Interest And Penalties,"
Said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig.

Now according to Law360, the Internal Revenue Service has been mailing three different types of letters to holders of virtual currencies like Bitcoin and reviews important considerations for cryptocurrency users who have received such a letter from the IRS.

The three different letters sent by the IRS, to coinbase members and other individuals holding virtual investments. The letters sent by the IRS included:

  • IRS Letter 6173: Notice that requests a response from the taxpayer about alleged noncompliance.
  • IRS Letter 6174: Notice that requests taxpayer review their return and, if necessary, file an amended return
  • IRS Letter 6174-A: Notice that there is a potential misreporting of virtual currency transactions and IRS may follow-up with enforcement actions

These cryptocurrency audits are targeted at individuals who have owned bitcoin (BTC), ethereum (ETH), litecoin (LTC), ripple (XRP), Zcash (ZEC), darkcoin/dash (Dash), and more.

If You Believe You’re A Target Of A Cryptocurrency Tax Investigation From The IRS, Then You Should Immediately Contact A The Tax Attorneys at Marini & Associates, PA
 Before Disclosing Anything To The Government!


The IRS is getting a lot of its information about cryptocurrency users from virtual wallet provider Coinbase Inc. A California federal judge told Coinbase in November 2017 that it must hand over information on accounts with transactions greater than $20,000 and must provide the taxpayer ID, name, date of birth and address for the accounts.

Letter 6174 and Letter 6174-A each notify a taxpayer that the IRS has information regarding the taxpayer's account or accounts that contain virtual currency, explains activities that can trigger tax reporting obligations and does not require a response.

“Although both letters explicitly state, ‘You do not need to respond to this letter,’ Letter 6174-A warns recipients that additional correspondence about potential enforcement activity may follow,” according to Ziering. “Among other things, these letters are meant to put taxpayers on notice of the applicable rules, which would make further noncompliance a more serious issue.”

But Sarah E. Paul, a partner at Eversheds Sutherland, said that even though no response is required for Letters 6174 or 6174-A, the recipient should read the letter and reporting requirements, review his or her tax return for errors and if any are found correct them with the IRS through an amended return or delinquent return.

“You can't get the letter, ignore it and throw it in the trash,” she said. “You have to read it and review your return, at a minimum.”

Ziering said it is important to be aware that unlike the IRS offshore voluntary disclosure program, which provided leniency and had well-defined penalties for voluntarily declaring unreported offshore income, it is unclear what the penalties will be for disclosing unreported cryptocurrency transactions.

Think About Attorney-Client Privilege.

Letter 6173 is different from the other two letters because not only does it require a response, but in it the IRS says for one or more years between 2013 and 2017 the government has not received a federal income tax return or schedule reporting the recipient's virtual currency transactions. The letter instructs the recipient to either send in a statement of facts, signed under penalty of perjury, explaining what happened, file a delinquent tax return or file an amended return.

“If you get a Letter 6173, the best practice would be to consult with an accountant if you didn't have one before and also with an attorney to decide how you're going to respond to the letter, because there are three different options and a decision has to be made with which one you have to take,” Paul said.

“If you take option three, which is write a statement of facts explaining your position and make that statement of facts under penalty of perjury, you're really going to want to consult with an attorney before doing that.”

A letter recipient should not only consider seeking the help of an attorney but also think about talking to an accountant about filing or correcting tax returns, Paul said. However, if conversations occur between an attorney, accountant and client, it is crucial to think about how to protect the communications through attorney-client privilege, she said.

Attorney-client privilege, which protects the confidentiality of communications between lawyers and clients, generally does not extend to third parties. However, in 1961 the Second Circuit extended the attorney-client privilege to a third party in a case called U.S. v. Kovel , in which the court found that third-party communications are confidential if done to obtain legal advice.

In order for communications with a third-party accountant to fall under that protection, the accountant has to be engaged by the attorney to assist the attorney and not the client, Paul said. Establishing such a relationship would require an engagement letter between an attorney and the accountant, she said.

But legal advice must also be sought in order to extend the privilege, she said. So if, for example, the client decides to amend a tax return and the accountant is paid to simply amend the return, that would be pure accountancy that cannot be cloaked with privilege, she said.

“The idea is to exchange the privilege of the discussions between all three, client, attorney and accountant, so the conversations will be protected by the privilege even though you have a third party who's not a lawyer,” Paul said.

Consider Initiating a Voluntary Disclosure

A voluntary disclosure, which is a petition to the IRS that discloses tax noncompliance in exchange for avoiding criminal charges, may be appropriate in addition to responding to a letter or filing amended or delinquent returns.

In November the IRS made an update to Internal Revenue Manual procedures for delinquent taxpayers to disclose domestic or international noncompliance. Typically those who decide to initiate a voluntary disclosure are willful violators and want to avoid criminal charges.

To initiate a voluntary disclosure, a client must first request preclearance from the IRS Criminal Investigation division and promptly submit all documents using a Form 14457. The form requests information about the noncompliance in a narrative that lays out the facts, circumstances, entities, related parties and any professional advisers involved.

David W. Klasing, who founded the Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing, and said he counted Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonym for the people or person who created Bitcoin, as one of his clients, said a voluntary disclosure might be more appropriate for clients who had more than $30,000 of owed taxes, because that larger amount could trigger jail time due to criminal sentencing guidelines.

The Coinbase summonses gave the IRS information on wallet accounts with transactions greater than $20,000, but Klasing said he was more concerned when the amount of taxes due exceeded $30,000, and at that amount he would advise a client to consider initiating a voluntary disclosure.

“I don't think the government will criminally prosecute someone unless they can put them in jail for at least a year,” he told Law360.

 “The larger the number, the more concerned I am, because the amended return in and of itself can be viewed as criminal admission,” which is why initiating a voluntary disclosure may be appropriate, he said.

Examine Foreign Wallet Cryptocurrencies

Even those who did not receive letters should be put on notice to properly report cryptocurrency transactions and make sure cryptocurrencies held in foreign wallets are properly disclosed through any relevant informational returns, such as Reports of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts.
“To the extent there are U.S. taxpayers holding virtual currency on foreign exchanges, there can also be foreign reporting requirements,” according to Rebecca M. Stork, an associate at Eversheds Sutherland. "Taxpayers may have to file an FBAR in such cases.”

In July 2018 the agency's Large Business and International Division launched a cryptocurrency campaign to address noncompliance through outreach and examinations, which could mean the government might be looking for additional tax noncompliance for cryptocurrency held in foreign wallets.

More recently the U.S., along with Canada, the U.K., the Netherlands and Australia, said they were working together to combat “enablers” of international tax evasion and crime that involves cryptocurrencies and were continuing to share information with one another. The countries created an alliance, the Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement, or J5, last year.

“I do think that information is going to be shared of this type and probably is already being shared by the members of the J5, which makes considering compliance — whether you have an FBAR requirement — even more important,” according to Paul.

Just because one receives a letter from the IRS to act on potential domestic cryptocurrency tax issues does not mean that person is off the hook for cryptocurrency held in wallets abroad, but it is difficult to advise without knowing the facts, Stork said.

“I think ultimately the takeaway I'd tell a taxpayer, if they wanted a 5 cent answer, is did you hold any currency at any time, at any point, on an exchange that was not based in the U.S.?” she said. “If so, you probably should consult with an attorney or an accountant who is intimately familiar with FBAR requirements.”


Cryptocurrency Compliance Investigations May Also Turn Into Larger, Criminal Tax Investigations. 

These Situations Can Be A Massive Intrusion Into Your Personal And Professional Life And Your Accountant Could Be Compelled To Tell The IRS Everything You’ve Told Him Or Her Because The “Accountant-Client Privilege” Does Not Extend To Criminal Investigations Or State Tax Proceedings.

However, the “attorney-client privilege” can help shield you while preparing your defense. The government cannot compel the testimony of confidential communications between you and your tax attorney so long as the attorney was not involved in the matters leading up to the government’s criminal tax investigation.

Have a Virtual Currency Tax Problem?

Value Your Freedom?

Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A. 
 
 for a FREE Tax Consultation 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 Posted Marijuana Industry Frequently Asked Questions on its Website

The IRS posted Marijuana Industry Frequently Asked Questions on its website:

My business is a marijuana dispensary that I operate in compliance with my state's laws. The federal government considers this an illegal activity. Do I have the same income and employment tax filing obligations as any other business?

Yes. Income from any source is taxable. Internal Revenue Code § 61(a). The Supreme Court has long held that income from illegal sources is taxable and is not exempt from taxation. James v. United States, 366 U.S. 213, 218 (1961). More recently, federal courts have consistently upheld Internal Revenue Service determinations that state compliant marijuana dispensaries have taxable income. E.g., Olive v. Commissioner, 792 F.3d 1146 (9th Cir. 2015); Feinberg v. Commissioner, 916 F.3d 1330 (10th Cir. 2019); Beck v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2015-149. Similarly, illegal businesses have no exemption from their employment tax obligations.

If I can't fully pay the amount I owe, are payment plans available that I can afford?

If you can't pay the amount you owe in full, you may qualify for one of several options available to help taxpayers pay their balance over time or to temporarily delay collection until your financial situation improves. Visit the following links for more information about:

  • Payment Plans - To meet your taxpayer obligation in monthly installments by applying for a payment plan. Most taxpayers will qualify to apply for a payment plan online.
  • Temporary Delays of Collection - If you cannot pay any of your tax debt, you can request the IRS temporarily delay collection until your financial situation improves.

What penalties or additions to tax could a participant in the marijuana industry be subject to if adjustments are made during an income tax audit?

A participant in the marijuana industry is subject to the same penalties and additions to tax as any other business. A non-exhaustive list of penalties and additions to tax that might apply include: additions to tax under 6651 if a return is filed late or payments are made late; a penalty for failure to make estimated tax payments if sufficient estimated tax payments are not made; accuracy related penalties; and, in cases of fraud, penalties under section 6663. See generally Alternative Health Care Advocates v. Commissioner, 151 T.C. 225 (2018).

Will penalties under section 6662 be proposed if an audit ends with the IRS proposing adjustments for a participant in the marijuana industry?

Penalties will be considered on a case by case basis. The Tax Court has previously upheld a negligence penalty under section 6662 where a participant in the marijuana industry failed to keep adequate books and records. See Olive v. Commissioner, 139 T.C. 19 (2012), aff'd, 792 F.3d 1146 (9th Cir. 2015). The Tax Court more recently upheld section 6662 penalties when petitioners did not prove they had reasonable cause for significant omissions of income on their returns. Alternative Health Care Advocates v. Commissioner, 151 T.C. 225 (2018); Richmond Patients Group v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2020-52.

I operate a business that consists of selling marijuana. Can I claim deductions to determine my taxable income?

Internal Revenue Code section 280E disallows all deductions or credits for any amount paid or incurred in carrying on any trade businesses that consist of illegally trafficking in a Schedule I or II controlled substance within the meaning of the federal Controlled Substances Act. This applies to businesses that sell marijuana, even if they operate in states that have legalized the sale of marijuana, because trafficking marijuana remains illegal under the federal Controlled Substances Act. United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Co-op., 532 U.S. 483 (2001). Accordingly, section 280E disallows all deductions or credits for a business that sells or otherwise traffics marijuana. N. California Small Bus. Assistants Inc. v. Commissioner, 153 T.C. 65 (2019).

Section 280E does not, however, prohibit a participant in the marijuana industry from reducing its gross receipts by its properly calculated cost of goods sold to determine its gross income. The Internal Revenue Service takes the position that section 280E-affected taxpayers must calculate their cost of goods sold pursuant to Internal Revenue Code section 471 and the associated Treasury Regulations. Generally, this means taxpayers who sell marijuana may reduce their gross receipts by the cost of acquiring or producing marijuana that they sell, and those costs will depend on the nature of the business. For more detail, see Chief Counsel Advice 201504011 PDF (released 1/23/2015).

Accordingly, a marijuana dispensary may not deduct, for example, advertising or selling expenses. It may, however, reduce its gross receipts by its cost of goods sold, as calculated pursuant to Internal Revenue Code section 471.

What do I need to do for cash payments over $10,000 concerning information returns?

Trades or Business, including marijuana related businesses, must comply with IRC § 6050I and the regulations thereunder. These businesses must report cash receipts greater than $10,000, in a single transaction and/or related transactions.

The business(es) must also:

  • Develop policies and procedures reasonably designed to identify and report cash receipts as required.
  • Include in their policies and procedures the requirement to obtain and verify certain customer information to ensure the information included on the report is accurate and complete.
  • Retain copies of forms filed for a period of five years. Depending on the type of business, other regulatory requirements may exist regarding how long certain documents must be retained.

More information can be found at About Publication 1544, Reporting Cash Payments of Over $10,000.


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


Read more at: Tax Times blog

2nd Circ. Affirms UK Lawyer's Conviction of Aiding Clients in US Tax Evasion

On  November 26, 2018 we posted Decade Of Dodging US Taxes Gets UK Lawyer 20 Months in Prison where we discussed that English lawyer Michael Little was set to 20 months in prison on November 20, 2018 for helping the children of a deceased investor dodge taxes on their $14 million inheritance over a decade and for failing to pay his own taxes, ruling also that the former Royal Marine lied as he testified in his own defense.

U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel ordered Little, 68, to report to federal prison on Feb. 19. The sentence came in well below a request by prosecutors for a prison term in the range of 10 to 12 years as contemplated by official guidelines.

Evasion Unpunished Breeds More Evasion,” The Judge Said, Saying Little’s Tax-Dodging Was Born f Greed And Arrogance But Adding He Was Unlikely To Offend Again

Upon Leaving Custody.

Judge Castel held off on the government’s request to order Little to pay roughly $4.4 million of restitution. Little contests the amount, and the matter will be briefed in coming weeks.

Now according to Law360, the Second Circuit ruled on September 30, 2020 upholding a lower court, the sufficient evidence existed to convict a U.K. attorney on charges he helped the children of a dead investor avoid taxes on their $14 million inheritance, 

The attorney, Michael Little, failed to support his argument on appeal that the lower court's jury instructions didn't match the charges in his indictment, a panel of judges ruled.
Little was sentenced to 20 months of incarceration and a one-year term of supervised release. He was also ordered to pay $4.4 million in restitution to the U.S. government.
Little appealed on various grounds. He argued that the jury instructions were so different from his original indictment that they violated his Fifth Amendment rights by amending the indictment.

The indictment had described Little's crime as assisting in the preparation of fraudulent Forms 1040 or Forms 706, the estate tax return. The court instructed the jury to determine whether Little had prepared fraudulent Forms 3520, which reports receipt of foreign gifts.

The Second Circuit disagreed. To prevail on a constructive amendment claim, defendants must show that the terms of an indictment are altered by the presentation of evidence and jury instructions, the court said. They must modify "essential elements" of the offense to the point that a defendant is indicted on one offense and convicted of another, the court said. The statute criminalizing aid in filing a false 1040 also criminalizes filing a false 3520, it said.
Little also argued his indictment charged him with failing to file a foreign bank account report for at least one bank in the Channel Islands, but the jury instructions referred to a second foreign account in the U.K. The court rejected that argument as well, finding the "essential element" of the offense was the same.
As for his failure to file FBARs, Little said evidence that he willfully failed to file the reports was insufficient. He had merely misunderstood a complex tax code, the attorney argued.
The court, however, said Little was an experienced attorney with a quarter-century of experience conducting international financial transactions. A reasonable juror could conclude his failure to comply with the law was willful, the decision said.
While agreeing with the lower court on most the merits of the case, the appeals court struck down part of the lower court's order of restitution. The trial court lacked the authority to order restitution immediately upon judgment, the Second Circuit said, citing U.S. v. Adams . 
The U.S. and U.K. governments also agreed that the U.S. had the authority to tax Little's income only for the years 2005 through 2008. The court vacated the finding that Little owed $134,000 and ordered the lower court to recalculate the amount.

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

 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

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