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Showing posts with label Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Justice. Show all posts

Friday, July 17, 2015

National Taxpayer Advocate's June 30, 2015 Report To Congress



Twice a year the National Taxpayer Advocate submits a report to Congress. The Advocate is required to submit these without prior review by the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, the Secretary of the Treasury or the Office of Management and Budget. A report was issued June 30, and it identified the objectives of the Advocate’s office for the upcoming fiscal year.

The National Taxpayer Advocate is Nina E. Olson. We have spoken of her before, and I am a fan.  


The following caught my eye:

The most serious problem facing U.S. taxpayers is the declining quality of service provided to them by the IRS when they seek to comply with their tax filing and payment obligations."

Given that this is a co-equal reason for the IRS to exist (the other being to collect revenue), this is a rather serious charge.

Consider the following:

·         The IRS hung up on approximately 8.8 million taxpayers during this year’s filing season. The IRS dryly refers to these as “courtesy disconnects,” ostensibly as proof that they too have read Orwell’s 1984.
o   This number was up from 544,000 hang-ups during the 2014 filing season.
·         Only 37% of people using toll-free lines were able to speak with a human being.
o   Down from 71% last year.
·          The IRS has announced that it will no longer answer any tax law questions at all.
·         The IRS will eliminate tax preparation altogether.
o   It used to maintain approximately 400 walk-in sites and helped taxpayers prepare around 500,000 tax returns annually.
·         The IRS answered only 17% of the calls from people whose account was blocked on suspicion of identity theft.
·         Don’t expect that hiring a tax professional will resolve the logjam. Professionals were able get through less than 50% of the time.

From the perspective of a practicing tax CPA, I found interacting with the IRS this filing season to be unpleasant, if not futile. I find myself with divided opinions: many of the examiners and officers I have met and worked with over the years are responsible and likeable enough. Gather them together however and you have an organization that has lost the trust and confidence of a sizeable number of taxpaying citizens.

Ms. Olson does point out that the IRS has been charged with additional tasks in recent years, such as pursuing foreign assets (FATCA) and "assisting" the American public with their health insurance (ObamaCare). There has simultaneously been a reduction in agency funding.The GAO has reported that IRS funding declined approximately $900 million since fiscal year 2010, for example, resulting in the elimination of approximately 10,000 full-time equivalent positions.

Let’s be frank: under this Congress there will not be – nor should there be – additional funding for an agency that has been weaponized for political purposes. Paul Caron, a Pepperdine tax law professor, maintains a count and compendium of IRS misbehavior at TaxProfBlog  (http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/irs-scandal). He is perilously close to 800 days and will likely exceed that count by the time you read this. If smoke indicates fire, then someone must have burned down the warehouse district to generate that much smoke.

Is there a solution? Yes, but it will probably have to wait until November, 2016. But you already knew that.


Friday, January 24, 2014

JPMorgan's Nondeductible Madoff Deal



On January 7, 2014, JPMorgan entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department. This is another payment in the ongoing Bernie Madoff saga, and the bank agreed to pay a $1.7 billion settlement as well as $350 million to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and $543 million to a court-appointed trustee.

Madoff kept significant balances with JPMorgan.  Banks are the first line of defense against fraud, but JPMorgan never filed suspicious activity reports with regulators, even though there were significant reservations as to when they became suspicious. The bank did not admit any criminal activity in the agreement, but it did allow that it missed red flags from the late 1990s to late 2000s.

What caught my eye was the following text from the following joint release by the Manhattan U.S. Attorney and FBI:
           
… JPMorgan agrees to pay a non-tax deductible penalty of $1.7 billion, in the form of a civil forfeiture, which the Government intends….”


This is unusual language.

The tax code provides a tax deduction for all of the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business.

And then the tax Code starts taking back. One take back is Section 162(f):

162(f) FINES AND PENALTIES.— No deduction shall be allowed under subsection (a) for any fine or similar penalty paid to a government for the violation of any law.

Let’s drill down a little bit into the Regulations:

This prohibition applies to any fines paid by a taxpayer because the taxpayer has been convicted of a crime (felony or misdemeanor) in a full criminal proceeding in an appropriate court.   The prohibition also extends to civil fines if the fines are intended by Congress as punitive in nature.

So, if fines are paid pursuant to a criminal case, then the taxpayer is hosed. However, if fines are paid pursuant to a civil case, there is one more step: are the fines punitive in nature?

Attorneys differentiate damages between those that are remedial and those that are punitive. A remedial payment is intended to compensate the government or another party – to “make one whole,” if you will. It is intended to restore what was disturbed, upset or lost, and not intended as penalty or lashing against the payer.

Let’s complicate it bit. There is a court case (Talley Industries Inc v Commissioner) that allows damages to be deductible if they are remedial in intent, even if labeled as a fine or penalty.

EXAMPLE: The NFL fines a player for unnecessary roughness. The NFL can call this a fine, but it is not a fine per Section 162(f) and will be deductible to the player involved.

You are seeing how this is fertile hunting ground for tax lawyers. Unless the payment is pursuant to a criminal case, odds are good that it is deductible.

Now remember that this agreement is Madoff related, and that there are hard feelings about JPMorgan’s involvement with Madoff over the years, and you can see why the Justice Department included the “nondeductible” language in the agreement.

Let’s take this a step further. Under Talley, JPMorgan could deduct the $1.7 billion on its tax return. Remember, it is not a fine or penalty under Sec 162(f) just because somebody somewhere called it as such.

Would JPMorgan be likely to do this?

This is a “deferred prosecution” agreement.  If JPMorgan did deduct the settlement, they might not have an issue with the IRS, but they would likely have a very sizeable issue with the Justice Department.