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1st Taxpayer Victory in a “Willful” FBAR Penalty Case!

On September 20, 2017, the Eastern District of Pennsylvania issued an important taxpayer friendly opinion regarding the "willfulness" standard in FBAR penalty matters. 

In Bedrosian v. United States, Case No. 2:15-cv-05853-MMB (E.D. Pa., Sept. 20, 2017), the court held that the government had not met its burden in proving that Bedrosian had willfully violated FBAR reporting requirements. 

This opinion could have a major effect on future IRS decisions in the offshore compliance arena and may cause some taxpayers, to seek a more aggressive approach in addressing prior non-compliance.

This is a Big Win for Taxpayers!


Bedrosian represents yet another loss, after Pomerantz and Hom, for the government, where the court ruled that the IRS failed to meet the burden for proving a willful FBAR penalty violation.

In U.S. v. Williams, (CA 4 2012),  the Fourth Circuit, overturning the district court's finding, held that the taxpayer was liable for a willful violation the FBAR reporting requirement.

In U.S. v. McBride, (DC UT 2012), the district court found that the taxpayer was liable for a willful violation the FBAR reporting requirement.


In U.S. v. Bohanec, (DC CA 2016) 118 AFTR 2d 2016-6757, the district court found that the taxpayer's failure to timely file a FBAR was willful where, among other things, he refused to give the foreign bank his home address, never informed his tax preparer that the account existed, never asked for any professional advice on any requirements regarding the account, stopped employing a bookkeeper or keeping any books after opening the foreign bank account, and made several misrepresentations under penalty of perjury when he applied to participate in IRS's Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP).


Bedrosian Challenges FBAR Based Upon Illegal Exaction.

An illegal exaction claim involves money that was “improperly paid, exacted, or taken from the claimant in contravention of the Constitution, a statute, or a regulation.” (Norman v. U. S., (Fed. Cir. 2005) 429 F.3d 1081) Where a taxpayer is able to establish that he paid taxes that were improperly collected by the government, he succeeds on such a claim.

Arthur Bedrosian is a U.S. citizen who has had a successful career in the pharmaceutical industry over the past several decades, including as Chief Executive Officer at Lannett Company, Inc., a manufacturer and distributor of generic medications. In the early '70s, he opened a savings account with a bank in Switzerland; at some point, at least as early as 2005, a second account was added.

Throughout the decades that Bedrosian maintained the Swiss accounts, he did not prepare his own tax returns and instead had his accountant do so. Bedrosian did not inform the accountant of the bank accounts until the 1990s, because, he stated, the accountant never asked about them. When informed, Bedrosian indicated that the accountant told him that he had been breaking the law for the past 20 years by not reporting the accounts. He also said that the damage was already done, that Bedrosian should do nothing, and that the issue would be resolved on Bedrosian's death when the assets in the Swiss accounts would be repatriated as part of his estate and taxes would be paid on them then. Based on this advice, as well as his fear that he would be penalized for his years of noncompliance, Bedrosian did not report either Swiss account on his tax returns until 2007, when the accountant died and he hired a new accountant.

Bedrosian filed a federal income tax return for 2007 that reflected, for the first time, that he had assets in a foreign financial account in Switzerland. He also filed a FBAR for the first time in 2007. But, he only reported the existence of one of his Swiss accounts (which had assets totaling approximately $240,000) and did not report the other account (which had assets totaling approximately $2.3 million). Bedrosian did not report any of the income that he earned on either Swiss account on his 2007 return.

Sometime after 2008, the Swiss bank told Bedrosian that it would be providing his account information to the U.S. government. Around this time, prior to the government's initiation of its investigation, Bedrosian hired an attorney to look into his reporting obligations for the Swiss accounts. In August 2010, he filed an amended 2007 federal return on which he reported the approximately $220,000 of income he had earned from the Swiss accounts; he also filed an amended FBAR for 2007, on which he reported both bank accounts. Although Bedrosian took this corrective action before the government began its audit, he did not do so until after IRS had discovered the existence of the two accounts.

IRS initiated its investigation of Bedrosian in April 2011, with a focus on tax year 2008. Beginning then, Bedrosian engaged with IRS cooperatively, providing them with all documentation requested. The investigation culminated in a case panel of IRS agents recommending that Bedrosian be penalized for nonwillful violations of the FBAR reporting requirement and that the case against him be closed. For reasons unclear in the record, the case wasn't closed but instead was re-assigned to another IRS agent, who conducted her own review and concluded that Bedrosian's violation had been willful.

On July 18, 2013, IRS sent Bedrosian a letter stating that it was imposing a penalty for his willful failure to file the FBAR form for tax year 2007. The proposed penalty was $975,789, 50% of the maximum value of the account ($1,951,578), the largest penalty possible under the regs.

Bedrosian filed suit in the district court alleging illegal exaction, i.e., that an unwarranted penalty was imposed on him; IRS counterclaimed for full payment of the penalty, as well as accrued interest on the penalty, a late payment penalty, and other statutory additions to the penalty. Both parties sought summary judgment.

Have Undeclared Income from an Offshore Bank Account?
 
 
Been Assessed a 50% Willful FBAR Penalty?

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


Read more at: Tax Times blog

Good Luck Trying to Call the IRS!

The IRS will receive more than 95 million calls this year. They expect to answer about 60% of them during the current filing season. After that, the number is estimated to decline to 40%.  Figure in the calls with questions about the new tax law and the answer rate may be even lower. And that projection was made before lawmakers rewrote the tax code in December.

The number of calls is likely to spike, if prior tax law changes are any indication. After Congress passed economic stimulus legislation in 2008, the IRS was “deluged” with more than 150 million telephone calls from taxpayers, a 125 percent increase from the previous year, according to the report.

This is a huge problem for people receiving threatening letters from the IRS who want to make arrangements to pay their tax debt. 

Some Wait on Hold for 2 Hours before a Recording Announces That There Will Be a "Courtesy Disconnect"
and to Call Back Later!  

 

 
One of the many reasons people hire our Experienced Tax Attorneys, is to take care of their tax problems so that they do not have to deal with the IRS. 
 
 
Our Tax Law Firm is able to File
Your Forms ELECTRONICALLY
and STOP the IRS from
Levying Your Wages or Your Bank Account!

  

Contact the Tax Lawyers at 

Marini & Associates, P.A. 

 
 
for a FREE Tax Consultation





Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243

 

 
 
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Read more at: Tax Times blog

Corporate Tax Cuts Mostly Going to Share Buybacks Not JOBS!

While the name of the 2017 Tax Act was "Tax Cuts and Jobs Act," it doesn't appear like the corporate tax cuts are creating many US Jobs.

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was supposed to spur hiring and investment at companies as the maximum corporate tax rate was slashed from 35 to 21 percent, according to Republican proponents. But Democrats point to evidence that many major corporations are instead using the savings to buy back their own stock.

Major corporations have authorized $200 billion in share buybacks in the two months since the passage of the new tax law while more than 55,000 American workers have been laid off, according to Senate Democrats. Democrats slam Republican tax cut for $97 billion wave in corporate share buybacks.

  • A new report from Democratic senators says companies have repurchased $97.2 billion in stock since Jan. 1.
  • That figure dwarfs a number that Republicans have been touting: $2.5 billion in bonuses that companies have announced in response to the new tax law.

 

“These numbers prove that the bulk of the savings from this bill aren’t trickling down into higher wages, but into bigger gains for giant corporations and the wealthy,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., in a statement.

Cisco Systems, for example, announced plans this month to buy back $25 billion in shares, while Wells Fargo said in January it would buy back 350 million shares, valued at $22.5 billion. According to a survey of Morgan Stanley analysts, only 13 percent of tax cut savings will go towards worker compensation, while 43 percent will go to wealthy shareholders and executives via buybacks and dividends. To date, corporations have spent more than 30 times as much on buybacks alone as on bonuses and pay raises.

“Just a few hours ago, corporations crossed the $200 billion mark in stock buybacks this year,” said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., the ranking Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, on the Senate floor Wednesday. “Stock buybacks are windfalls that drive up the value of investment portfolios for CEOs and high-flyers. And they’re coming in at a rate 30 times greater than worker bonuses—30 to one! They’re on pace to double the amount from the first quarter of last year.”

He pointed out that the wealthiest 10 percent of earners own 84 percent of all the stock held by Americans. “So when it comes to these buybacks, a huge majority of families are on the outside looking in,” said Wyden. “Moms and dads balancing the rent, the grocery bill, the cost of gas and electricity, they don’t get much of anything out of a corporate handout that gets swallowed up by windfalls for big-time investors.”

Republicans counter that they are hearing from constituents that they are using the tax cuts to increase hiring and investment in their businesses.

“I also got to spend time with local businesses in Wisconsin last week, learning about how the tax reform law is making them better and making them much more competitive. It’s really something,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., during a press conference Tuesday.

“These small businesses told me that tax reform is enabling them to increase capital investments in their people, in their equipment, in their training. I’ve talked to many business leaders, small businesses who are now confident they can go take a risk and expand employees, expand operations, giving bonuses, giving raises, adding to the benefits. This is what area are seeing all over the country. Wages for hardworking Americans are increasing and paychecks are getting bigger. And this is all thanks to tax reform, and people are actually noticing it.”

Confused on How These Tax Cuts Can Benefit You!
 
Contact the Tax Lawyers at 
Marini & Associates, P.A.  
 
 
for a FREE Tax Consultation
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243


Sources:

AccountingToday

CNBC

New York Times

Read more at: Tax Times blog

IRS Creates New Landing Page Regarding Tax Reform Resources for Tax Professionals

To help the tax community understand the recent Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), the IRS has created a landing page on IRS.govhighlighting provisions of the new law. 

Major tax reform was approved by Congress in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) on December 22, 2017. The IRS is working on implementing this major tax legislation that will affect both individuals and businesses.
 

The New Page Includes a "One-Stop" Listing of Legal Guidance, News Releases and Frequently Asked Questions Related to the TCJA.

The page will be frequently updated. 

The IRS will provide information and guidance to taxpayers, businesses and the tax community as it becomes available.

Tax Advisors should check this page for updates and resource regularly

We Can Advise on How These Tax Cuts Can Benefit You!
 
Contact the Tax Lawyers at 
Marini & Associates, P.A.  
 
 

for a FREE Tax Consultation
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243



Read more at: Tax Times blog

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