Federal

  • February 28, 2023

    Lawyer's $81M Estate Owes Gift Taxes, Tax Court Says

    The $81 million estate of a biotech lawyer who was married four times must pay $2.2 million in additional taxes, including taxes on gifts the lawyer made to seven women toward the end of his life, the U.S. Tax Court ruled Tuesday.

  • February 28, 2023

    Latino Workers, Feds' Settlement Over IRS Raid Gets Final OK

    A Tennessee federal judge will give final approval to a settlement resolving Latino workers' claims that agents from the IRS and U.S. Department of Homeland Security violated their constitutional rights during a 2018 raid on a meat processing plant, according to a court filing.

  • February 28, 2023

    Senate Tax Panel To Consider Affordable Housing Policy

    The Senate Finance Committee will hold a hearing March 7 on tax policy and affordable housing, the committee said Tuesday.

  • February 28, 2023

    US Seeks Sanctions Over Russian Gas Exec's Bank Records

    A Russian gas company executive facing federal trial on myriad tax and fraud charges, including hiding $93 million from the Internal Revenue Service, should be sanctioned if he continues to avoid handing over his Swiss bank records, the U.S. government told a Florida federal court.

  • February 28, 2023

    IRS Seeks Comments On Excise Tax Registration Application

    The Internal Revenue Service asked for comments Tuesday on an excise tax registration application form.

  • February 28, 2023

    IRS Taking Taxpayer Panel Applications Through March

    The Internal Revenue Service is accepting applications through the end of March for its Taxpayer Advocacy Panel, which works to improve customer service and identify issues that affect ordinary taxpayers, the agency said Tuesday.

  • February 28, 2023

    Justices Say Del. Can't Keep Abandoned MoneyGram Checks

    The U.S. Supreme Court handed a major victory Tuesday to about 30 states challenging Delaware over possession of about $300 million in abandoned MoneyGram checks, ruling that the checks are governed by federal law and therefore go to the challenging states.

  • February 28, 2023

    Justices Reject Higher Fines For Nonwillful FBAR Violations

    The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that the Bank Secrecy Act's $10,000 maximum penalty for the nonwillful failure to report foreign bank accounts applies per form and not for each account.

  • February 27, 2023

    IRS Lengthens Certain Lookback Periods

    The IRS said Monday it will disregard a period in 2020 and another in 2021 between April 15 of each year and the date of postponed tax filing deadlines for determining the start of lookback periods for some tax refund or credit determinations.

  • February 27, 2023

    Estate Loses Bid To Deduct Most Of $9M Settlement Payment

    A New York estate cannot deduct from its taxes most of the $9.2 million payment it received as part of a settlement, the U.S. Tax Court ruled in a decision published Monday.

  • February 27, 2023

    Sierra Club Asks EU To Cease Challenges To US EV Tax Credit

    The Sierra Club and 40 other groups on Monday urged the European Union to suspend its efforts at the World Trade Organization challenging the recent changes made to the U.S.-based electric vehicle tax credit.

  • February 27, 2023

    Mayo Clinic Looks To Cement Interest On $11.5M Refund Win

    The Mayo Clinic correctly calculated and showed that the U.S. government owes it more than $1.56 million in interest on the $11.5 million tax refund a Minnesota federal court awarded it, the organization told the court.

  • February 27, 2023

    10th Circ. Urged To Revisit Reviving Convict's Tax Penalty Bill

    The full Tenth Circuit should revisit a panel decision finding that the U.S. Tax Court wrongly nixed $43,000 in penalties owed by a man serving time in prison for tax evasion, he told the appeals court.

  • February 27, 2023

    Tax Court Grants Grocery Biz Over $1.7M In Costs Of Goods

    A California couple running a grocery business can subtract $1.7 million in costs of goods sold from their receipts for 2016 and a comparable share of their receipts in 2014 and 2015, the U.S. Tax Court said.

  • February 27, 2023

    Calif. Couple Owe IRS $1M For Co. Transfers, Tax Court Says

    A California couple owe the IRS more than $1 million after the U.S. Tax Court concluded Monday that transfers from a Cambodian construction company to the couple count as income and not loans for tax purposes.

  • February 27, 2023

    Global Min. Tax Treatment Of US Energy Credits Unclear

    Investors seeking to use new options for monetizing U.S. green energy tax credits don't yet know how those mechanisms will be treated by countries enacting the 15% global minimum corporate tax, tax professionals said.

  • February 27, 2023

    US Wants Man's Settlement Rewards To Pay $1.1M Tax Penalty

    The federal government is entitled to a former corporate officer's settlement rewards he received in litigation over the administration of his trusts in order to pay off his outstanding $1.1 million in employment tax penalties, the U.S. told a Florida federal court.

  • February 27, 2023

    ArentFox Schiff Adds Ex-Sen. Richard Burr Staffer In DC

    ArentFox Schiff LLP has added to its government relations team a former Capitol Hill legislative assistant who most recently worked with former Republican Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, the firm said.

  • February 24, 2023

    Global Tax Plan May Not Spell The End Of Digital Measures

    The core of an international tax pact centers around an agreement for countries to eliminate digital measures in exchange for new corporate taxing rights, but the proposed implementation plan has raised questions about whether this trade-off will occur in practice.

  • February 24, 2023

    Nev. Retiree Owes $1.1M In Foreign Bank Penalties, US Says

    A retired shipping industry professional owes approximately $1.1 million in penalties for willfully failing to file reports of his foreign financial accounts, the U.S. said in Nevada federal court.

  • February 24, 2023

    FBAR Violations Not Willfull In $4.3M Case, Calif. Woman Says

    An engineer and business owner didn't recklessly underreport her foreign holdings, she told a California federal court in a filing that opposed the government's $4.3 million tax case against her.   

  • February 24, 2023

    Fla. Couple Skip Trial In Tax Court, Lose Case

    A Florida couple who claimed they shouldn't have to pay their $15,000 tax bill because they were cheated by a contractor failed to properly prosecute their case in the U.S. Tax Court by not showing up for trial, the court said Friday in tossing the case.

  • February 24, 2023

    OMB Done Reviewing Virtual Currency Broker Reporting Rules

    A division of the Office of Management and Budget completed its review of proposed rules for virtual currency sales brokers' information reporting, the agency said on its website.

  • February 24, 2023

    Mass. Money Manager Gets 9 Years For Gambling Client Funds

    A Boston-area investment adviser who admitted to stealing millions of dollars from clients to support a ruinous gambling habit has been sentenced to more than nine years in prison, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts.

  • February 24, 2023

    IRS Extends Deadlines For Disaster Victims In Calif., Ga., Ala.

    The Internal Revenue Service said Friday that it would push certain tax deadlines back to Oct. 16, from the previous extended deadline of May 15, for taxpayers affected by disasters in some parts of California, Georgia and Alabama.

Expert Analysis

  • Navigating CARES Act Social Security Tax Deferral Payments

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    Attorneys at Morgan Lewis examine Internal Revenue Service guidance on payment of employer-share social security tax deferrals due Jan. 3 under the Coronavirus Aid Relief and Economic Security Act, and offer tips for avoiding costly underpayment and late deposit penalties.

  • Tech Improvements That Can Help Gov't Tackle FOIA Backlog

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    Government agencies can implement effective technological solutions that will help them address the growing backlog of Freedom of Information Act requests, and avoid costly noncompliance litigation, by taking steps to identify agency-specific needs, develop cohesive strategies and obtain leadership buy-in, say Ken Koch and Erica Spector at KPMG.

  • IRS Memo Helps Clarify Research Credit Filing Requirements

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    A recently published Internal Revenue Service chief counsel memorandum offers long-awaited guidance about information requirements for taxpayers seeking research credit refunds and provides helpful notice of the agency’s litigating position where credits are denied, say Deborah Roth and Brian Coddington at Source Advisors.

  • Questions To Ask If Doing Business In A Corruption Hot Spot

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    Businesses facing new scrutiny after the U.S. Department of Justice's recently announced task force for combating human trafficking in Central America, the release of the Pandora Papers and continuing fallout from 2019's Panama Papers, should address compliance risks by having employees ask three questions about every transaction, say attorneys at White & Case.

  • New DOJ Corporate Crime Approach May Deter Self-Reporting

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    Deputy U.S. Attorney General Lisa Monaco's recent unveiling of a tougher white collar enforcement approach at the U.S. Department of Justice — focusing on corporate recidivism and compliance monitors — could result in companies being less willing to self-report wrongdoing or enter into resolutions with the government, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Infrastructure Bill May Limit Cryptocurrency Loss Deductions

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    If enacted, provisions in ​President Joe Biden's ​​infrastructure bill would broaden a rule meant to prevent the harvesting of tax losses​, causing every cryptocurrency investor ​who wants to deduct a loss to consider whether it is worth cashing out to fiat currency and waiting 30 days before reinvesting to take a loss deduction, says Andrew Leahey at Hunter Creek Consulting.

  • The Infrastructure Bill Should Not Target Cryptocurrency

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    Congress should excise a provision in the pending infrastructure bill that would require anyone who accepts $10,000 in cryptocurrency for goods or services to report the transferring party's personal information to the Internal Revenue Service — this would be unnecessary, ill-advised and possibly unconstitutional, says James Burnham at Jones Day.

  • Opportunity Zone Regulations Require More Fine Tuning

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    Problems with the latest revisions to the qualified opportunity zone investment rules reinforce a recurring theme of regulatory hiccups that may prevent investors and communities from actualizing the program's potential benefits, unless we have more guidance, says Mitchell Goldberg at Berger Singerman.

  • Preserving Disgorgement Tax Deductibility In SEC Settlements

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission recently added language to its enforcement orders that could affect a settling party's ability to deduct certain disgorgement payments, but proper planning can help them satisfy Internal Revenue Service prerequisites, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • How The Global Tax Agreement Could Backfire For Biden

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    If the $3.5 trillion spending package fails, the federal tax code will not conform to the recent 15% global minimum tax agreement spearheaded by the U.S., which would embarrass the Biden administration and could lead to retaliatory tax measures by other nations, says Alex Parker at Capitol Counsel.

  • Tax-Exempt Orgs, Beware This 403(b) Plan Compliance Pitfall

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    A recent Internal Revenue Service publication puts 403(b) retirement plan sponsors on notice about a contribution aggregation compliance failure often identified in audits of government and tax-exempt entities, but risk can be minimized by ensuring plan documents and communications address the issue directly, say Greg Needles and Michael Gorman at Morgan Lewis.

  • Pandora Papers Reveal Need For Greater Tax Enforcement

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    The recent Pandora Papers leak is a reminder of the importance of transparency laws and proper funding for enforcement efforts against tax evasion as bad actors increasingly operate in the shadows, says Daren Firestone and Kevin Crenny at Levy Firestone.

  • Telehealth Providers Must Beware Of Fraud As Industry Grows

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    A recent fraud charge against a telehealth executive highlights the rise we're seeing in telefraud scams during the industry's pandemic growth, and there are some steps that all health providers should take to stay clear of potentially illegal arrangements, says LaTawnda Moore at Dinsmore.

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