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IRS Releases Inflation Reduction Act 1-year report card Including Efforts To Pursues High-Income Individuals Tax Evaders

The IRS released its report on efforts it's made, pursuant to its increased funding provided a year ago in the inflation reduction act.

Included in this report was an account of their successes in ensuring high-income taxpayers pay taxes owed.

The IRS is working to ensure high-income filers pay the taxes they owe. Prior to the Inflation Reduction Act, more than a decade of budget cuts prevented IRS from keeping pace with the increasingly complicated set of tools that the wealthiest taxpayers use to hide their income and evade paying their share. The IRS is now taking swift and aggressive action to close this gap.

  • Pursuing tax-evading millionaires. In recent months, IRS Criminal Investigation has closed a lengthy list of cases in which wealthy taxpayers have been sentenced for tax evasion, money laundering and filing false tax returns. Instead of paying taxes owed, these evaders spent money owed to the government on gambling, vacations and luxury goods.
  • Making delinquent millionaires pay up. In recent months, IRS closed about 175 delinquent tax cases for millionaires, generating $38 million in recoveries. IRS will continue to pursue millionaires who do not pay their taxes as the agency ramps up enforcement capabilities through the Inflation Reduction Act. Examples of schemes IRS is now pursuing include:

    • High-dollar scheme exploiting Puerto Rico. IRS recently identified about 100 high-income individuals claiming benefits in Puerto Rico without meeting the residence and source rules involving U.S. possessions. These wealthy individuals are attempting to avoid U.S. taxation on U.S. source income, and IRS expects many of these cases to proceed to criminal investigation.
    • Pension arrangements in Malta. As part of IRS' effort to pursue unlawful offshore tactics, the Department of Treasury and IRS in June issued proposed rules that define Maltese personal retirement schemes used to avoid U.S. taxes as listed transactions. IRS is working to identify taxpayers who are improperly using Malta-U.S. Treaty rules to improperly claim exemptions. Inflation Reduction Act resources will enable IRS to detect those who leverage these offshore schemes.
    • Cracking down on millionaire non-filers. The IRS continues to intensify work around wealthy individuals who do not file tax returns. These are particularly egregious cases where instead of filing their taxes and paying taxes owed, these individuals used the money to make lavish purchases. In one recently closed case, an individual used funds owed to the government to purchase a Maserati and Bentley. IRS is continuing to work with law enforcement partners to hold these individuals accountable.

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Read more at: Tax Times blog

Yes Yet Another FBAR Penalty Being Dropped Based Upon Bittner

According to Law360, a New York federal judge approved an $80,000 settlement in a $330,000 dispute between a woman and the federal government over improperly reported overseas accounts. The case is U.S. v. Bouskila, case number 2:21-cv-04243, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York.

Cecile Bouskila will pay the $80,000 settlement as well as 1% annually accruing interest from the date of the amount-due notice, a 6% annually accruing late-payment penalty from 90 days after that notice and other post-judgment interest, according to the order

The Internal Revenue Service Had Previously Assessed
$330,000 In Penalties For Bouskila's Failure To Timely
File Reports Of Foreign Bank And Financial Accounts,
Or FBARs, From 2004 Through 2011.

In March, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a separate case that the $10,000 maximum penalty dictated by the Bank Secrecy Act is applicable per annual form, rather than per account. Bouskila had previously argued that sentiment, claiming that she was liable for a maximum penalty of $80,000.

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Legal Basis for Abatement!

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Deadline To File TC Petition is Midnight EST on the Last Day To File & TC Dismisses 11 Second Late e-Filed Petition

In Sanders, (6/20/2023) 160 TC 16, the Tax Court dismissed a pro se taxpayer's petition because it was e-filed late. The taxpayer encountered technical difficulties with the court’s electronic filing platform DAWSON. However, DAWSON was accessible to the public on the taxpayer's last day to file and since he filed his petition 11 seconds late, his petition was untimely.

The court rejected the taxpayer's argument that DAWSON was inaccessible him on the last day for filing. 

Under Tax Court rules, when a "filing location" is inaccessible to the public, a taxpayer may have additional time to file a petition. Under Code Sec. 7451, a filing location is the Tax Court Clerk's office, or "any online portal made available by the Tax Court" for e-filing petitions.

Inaccessibility isn't defined in Code Sec. 7451. However, the Tax Court found that while inaccessibility includes an outage of an electronic filing system, inaccessibility does not include user error or technical difficulties on the user's side. According to the court, the record showed that DAWSON was operational at all relevant times and the taxpayer logged in multiple times on the last day for filing his petition. Although the taxpayer's login attempt at 11:59:15 failed, another petitioner was able to file before midnight. This successful login showed that DAWSON was working properly.

The court also specifically rejected an amicus argument that the timely mailing rule should apply to electronically filed petitions. The timely mailing rule is an exception to the general rule that a document is filed when received. Under that rule, a document that is properly mailed before its due date, but received after that date, is considered filed on the date it was postmarked. The court previously held that the timely mailing rule doesn't apply to an e-filed petition in Nutt, (5/2/2023) 160 TC No. 10.

In Nutt, the Commissioner mailed a notice of deficiency to the Nutts on April 14, 2022, determining an income tax deficiency and an accuracy-related penalty for 2019. Notwithstanding the actual mailing date, the notice was dated April 18, 2022, and the notice stated that the last day to file a petition with this Court was July 18, 2022. That date was a Monday and was not a legal holiday in the District of Columbia.

The notice stated that the Nutts could “get a petition form and the rules for filing from the Tax Court’s website at www.ustaxcourt.gov, or by contacting the Office of the Clerk at . . . 400 Second Street, NW, Washington, DC 20217.”

The Commissioner also sent a letter dated June 7, 2022, to the Nutts in which he reduced the amount of the deficiency and reminded the Nutts of the July 18, 2022, deadline to file a petition in the Tax Court.

While residing in Alabama, the Nutts electronically filed their Petition. At the time of filing, the Court’s electronic case management system (DAWSON) automatically applied a cover sheet to their Petition. The cover sheet shows that the Court electronically received the Petition at 12:05 a.m. eastern time on

July 19, 2022, and filed it the same day. When the Court received the Petition, it was 11:05 p.m. central time on July 18, 2022, in Alabama.

The IRS filed a motion to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction, arguing that, unlike the rule governing tax return filings, the date a petition is treated as filed before the court is determined by the court’s time zone, rather than the taxpayer’s.

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Read more at: Tax Times blog

New Beneficial Ownership Information Requirement That Small Businesses May Not Know About

On August 7, 2023  we posted New Beneficial Ownership Information Requirement for Most Businesses Beginning January 1, 2024, where we discussed that neginning on January 1, 2024, many corporations, limited liability companies, and other entities created or registered to do business in the United States must report information about their beneficial owners, the persons who ultimately own or control the company, to the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).

Now according to Law360, the U.S. Treasury Department's financial crimes unit will start applying new reporting requirements for small businesses in about five months.

But Many Of The Roughly 32 Million Companies Affected By The Disclosure Rules May Not Yet Be Aware Of Them.

Final regulations from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network aim to expose anonymous shell companies by requiring reports of beneficial ownership information from small businesses, many of which may not work with attorneys or accountants who keep them informed about compliance obligations, according to specialists. Resource constraints may also hamper FinCEN's public outreach regarding the rules, which were finalized in September and will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2024.

Small businesses would likely be concerned about how to interpret terms such as "beneficial owner," according to Niles Elber, a member at Caplin & Drysdale. But most of them probably don't even know about FinCEN's reporting rules, he said.

"They're trying to get the word out and provide some guidance," Elber said, noting for example the FAQ posting in March. "But who in God's green earth is going to the FinCEN website?"


According to the final regulations, a beneficial owner is defined as any individual who meets at least one of two criteria: exercising "substantial control" over the reporting company, or owning or controlling at least 25% of the ownership interest of the company.

The rules exempt so-called large operating companies, which are defined as having more than 20 full-time employees in the U.S. and more than $5 million in gross receipts or sales on their federal tax returns. Businesses in heavily regulated industries, banking and securities, for example, are also exempt under the CTA.

Approximately 32.6 Million Companies Will Be Subject To
The Reporting Requirements In The First Year They're
In Effect And Approximately 5 Million New Companies
Will Fall Under The Rules Each Subsequent Year,
According To Estimates From FinCEN.

Candice Basso, a spokesperson for FinCEN, told Law360 that the Treasury unit has "conducted extensive outreach" to various stakeholders, including the small business community, to inform them about their reporting obligations and to better understand their questions and concerns. FinCEN is also working on an upcoming small entity compliance guide that will contain checklists to help reporting entities collect and report information on beneficial ownership, as well as a webinar that will describe the reporting process, she said.

Meanwhile, FinCEN's limited resources have raised questions about how selective the unit will be when enforcing penalties for noncompliance with the beneficial ownership rules.

FinCEN's potential limitations with informing small businesses about the beneficial ownership rules could leave certain education efforts to banks, but any outreach from financial institutions may depend on their own compliance obligations under the CTA.

Banks are currently subject to a customer due diligence, or CDD, rule that requires financial institutions to identify and verify the beneficial owners of companies that open accounts. The CTA requires FinCEN to revise portions of the CDD rule to bring it into conformity with the new legislation and the Anti-Money Laundering Act as a whole.

"I suspect that what's going to happen is banking is going to be the deputies that are going to have to break this news to most people," he said.

In the meantime, it's unclear what banks may do when they compare information that they collect under the CDD rule against information that their customers submit to the database or if banks try to make the comparison at all.

FinCEN proposed rules in December that spell out when governments and banks may be granted access to the beneficial ownership information submitted by small businesses. According to the regulations, banks can use the database only to facilitate CDD compliance.

Despite the challenges that FinCEN may face in educating millions of small companies about the rules, specialists say the CTA is designed to affect a broad range of businesses so it's more difficult for shell companies to evade detection.

This objective means that FinCEN should be "writing the rule broadly to include in their reporting as many corporate entities as possible while narrowly limiting the exemptions to the smallest possible set permitted by the law," according to the letter.

Quick added, "If you try to narrow it down too much, the people you're dealing with are very sophisticated and are going to find a way to get around it."

Have A Beneficial Ownership QuestionProblem?

     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

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