Fluent in English, Spanish & Italian | 888-882-9243

call us toll free: 888-8TAXAID

Category Archives: From Live Blog

IRS Criminal Tax Bulletin Highlights Recent Rulings

The IRS Nov. 18 posted to its website an issue of the Criminal Tax Bulletin, published by the Criminal Tax Division of the Office of Chief Counsel, which summarizes notable federal appellate rulings addressing criminal issues between April and September 2011.

Among the decisions summarized in the bulletin were the 9th Circuit's rulings that the Fifth Amendment Privilege Is Inapplicable to Subpoena for Foreign Bank Records.
 
In re Grand Jury Investigation M.H. v. United States, 648 F.3d 1067 (9th Cir. 2011), the Ninth Circuit held that foreign bank account records required to be kept under the Bank Secrecy Act (“BSA”) fall within the Required Records Doctrine, thus rendering the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination inapplicable to a subpoena for these records.

Read more at: Tax Times blog

IRS Identifies Gift Tax Non-Filers Using State Property Records

Read more at: Tax Times blog

As National Debts Pile Up, Tax Evaders Face Greater Scrutiny

NY Times-London- Disputes are raging from Athens to Washington about how to reduce government debt without further damaging already weak economies.  But there is at least one thing on which global leaders seem to agree: cracking down on tax havens and tax evasion would help. 

Tax evasion and compliance was on the agenda of the meeting of the Group of 20 countries in Cannes amid hope that the economic crisis has given policy makers new impetus to push for a coordinated attempt to hunt for some of that offshore wealth. 
Assets held offshore by individuals worldwide have probably almost doubled from $11.5 trillion six years ago, according to the Tax Justice Network, a nongovernmental organization. 
Efforts to go after tax evaders range from investing in technology and hiring tax officers to working with the O.E.C.D. to reach agreements governing tax havens. 
Whatever steps are taken, policy makers agree that it takes international cooperation and initiatives by individual countries to reduce tax evasion.




Read more at: Tax Times blog

Willful Failure to File FBARs – What if you Really Did not Know?

BNA - Over the past three years, the U.S. government has intensified its pursuit of taxpayers who fail to pay taxes on money held in foreign bank accounts; this includes a massive increase in criminal investigations and prosecutions.

While “willfulness” is generally recognized to be a high legal standard requiring proof that the accused acted in conscious violation of a known legal duty, IRS's published guidance and filed actions suggested the IRS believed it could do more with less.

But two recent cases—an FBAR case out of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia and patent infringement case out of the U.S. Supreme Court—call both assumptions into significant question.

FBAR enforcement will continue to be a powerful tool for IRS. But in cases where knowledge is a contested issue, the government will have to do more than it has previously done. Cases based upon what a taxpayer should have known or could have discovered based on knowledge of a substantial risk will not satisfy the standards established by Williams and Global-Tech.

If you really did not know, you really did not know.

Read more at: Tax Times blog

Live Help