Tax Strategies

  • The Internal Revenue Service said that about 5.2 million retirees and disabled veterans who qualify for economic stimulus payments have not filed to claim the payments.

    June 22
  • A former UBS banker, Bradley Birkenfeld, pled guilty to conspiring with an American billionaire real estate developer, Swiss bankers and co-defendant Mario Staggl to help the developer evade paying $7.2 million in taxes by helping him conceal $200 million of assets in Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

    June 22
  • Milwaukee Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder reportedly owes the Internal Revenue Service a tax debt of $409,149, and the IRS has filed a lien against him to collect it.

    June 19
  • Charles Merrill, a self-made millionaire and cousin of the co-founder of Merrill Lynch, could end up serving three years or more in jail for not filing income taxes since beginning a tax protest in 2004.

    June 19
  • A group of eight midsized CPA firms has banded together to offer cross-border tax services in an effort to compete with larger firms.

    June 18
  • The House Ways and Means Committee has passed a bill aimed at forestalling the spread of the alternative minimum tax for another year.

    June 18
  • The Internal Revenue Service has granted an extension to victims of the Midwest floods so they will have more time to make their quarterly estimated tax payments.

    June 17
  • JK Harris, a firm that advertises its ability to help taxpayers solve their problems with the Internal Revenue Service for pennies on the dollar, has agreed to pay $1.5 million in restitution to former clients and change its advertising as part of an agreement with attorneys general in 18 states.

    June 17
  • The Research Claims Audit Techniques Guide: Credit for Increasing Research Activities Section 41 just released by the IRS is a great roadmap for practitioners of what to expect on an audit. Although the research credit has not been extended, it is expected to be. This guide issued by the Large and Mid Size Business Division (LMSB-04-0508-030) really shows how IRS will scrutinize research credit refund claims (RC claims), which have been designated a Tier I Issue, which in turn means they are of high strategic importance to LMSB and have significant impact on one or more industries. The guide is particularly geared toward those prepared under the most common approach being used, prepackaged RC claim studies. How those studies are typically done is explained in detail, as well as the potential problems that IRS sees with them. Eustace, T.C. Memo 2001-66, aff’d 312 F.3d 1254 (7th Cir. 2002) is cited as presenting a typical research credit claim involving an accounting firm study and a prepackaged submission. This is an extensive section in the guide on how an auditor should go about evaluating RC study-based claims and specific advice that an information document request (IDR) should be made for the engagement letter from the outside consultant conducting the study. Even the accompanying exhibits have great information, such as a 19-step checklist that the auditor should follow when reviewing the claim, a comprehensive mandatory research credit claims IDR, and even a check sheet to help deal with computational issues. I don’t get excited by every audit technique issued, but this captured my interest because it reminded me of a guide IRS put out a number of years ago on cost segregation. That guide was used by some practitioners as a blueprint on how to successfully conduct a cost segregation study that would withstand IRS review. Both that and the latest guide illustrate that as more professionals utilize studies as significant revenue generators by justifying the fees charged as a small percentage of the tax benefits obtained, IRS will adopt a uniform policy with regard to them. There is a great benefit to this as the audit technique guide is very informative and explains exactly what won’t and will pass IRS muster.

    June 16
  • The Internal Revenue Service violated some of its own legal requirements in some of the seizures of taxpayer property it conducted in the past two years, according to a new report.

    June 16