Federal

  • March 22, 2024

    Businessman Indicted Over Hiding Of $20M In Swiss Accounts

    A Brazilian-American businessman accused by the government in a criminal complaint of hiding $20 million from the Internal Revenue Service over 35 years by using Swiss bank accounts was indicted by a federal grand jury in Miami and charged with tax evasion, according to a Florida federal court.

  • March 22, 2024

    Stock Buyback Tax Regs Imminent, Treasury Official Says

    Proposed regulations on the federal stock buyback tax will be released imminently and will address feedback on a rule designed to prevent foreign companies from avoiding the tax using U.S. affiliates, a Treasury official said Friday.

  • March 22, 2024

    IRS Opens Bonus Energy Credits To More Offshore Wind Sites

    The Internal Revenue Service unveiled guidance Friday that would allow more parts of offshore wind facilities to qualify for the bonus production and investment tax credits that provide incentives for clean energy projects being built in so-called energy communities.

  • March 22, 2024

    LA Atty Who Repped Rodney King Charged With Tax Evasion

    A Los Angeles attorney who represented Rodney King in a civil case against the city of Los Angeles after King was severely beaten by police has been hit with federal tax evasion charges.

  • March 22, 2024

    3rd Circ. Says Tax Court Has Power To Tackle Debt Offset Case

    A woman whose tax refunds were withheld by the Internal Revenue Service for five years to satisfy what the agency said was her underlying tax liability will get another chance to convince the U.S. Tax Court that the government was wrong, the Third Circuit ruled Friday.

  • March 22, 2024

    IRS Pauses Worker Retention Credit Disclosure Program

    The Internal Revenue Service is suspending its voluntary disclosure program for improperly claimed employee retention credits, the agency announced Friday.

  • March 22, 2024

    Married Doctors Owe Feds $2.9M In Taxes

    A Connecticut physician couple must pay $2.9 million in back taxes, interest and penalties plus statutory additions after a federal court ruled they failed to produce enough evidence to challenge the accuracy of the U.S. government's tax assessments against them.

  • March 22, 2024

    Ariz. Says Federal Tax On Rebates Contradicts IRS Guidance

    A decision by the Internal Revenue Service to impose federal income tax on rebates issued last year by Arizona violates the agency's own recent guidance, the state told a federal court, saying a preliminary injunction against the tax would not unduly burden the agency.

  • March 22, 2024

    Holland & Knight Hires Caplin & Drysdale Member In DC

    Holland & Knight LLP has boosted its Washington-based tax team, hiring a Caplin & Drysdale Chtd. member who first joined his former firm 25 years ago from the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

  • March 22, 2024

    US Unlikely To Move On Hungary Tax Treaty, Official Says

    Hungary's low corporate tax rate and other policies will likely prevent the U.S. government from resuming negotiations on a stalled 2010 tax treaty after terminating its existing Hungarian treaty in early 2023, an IRS official said Friday.

  • March 22, 2024

    IRS Steadily Returning To Pre-Covid Levels, TIGTA Says

    Internal Revenue Service initiatives have reduced some — but not all — document processing back to pre-pandemic levels, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration said in a report.

  • March 22, 2024

    Weekly Internal Revenue Bulletin

    The Internal Revenue Service issued its weekly bulletin Friday, which included rules for businesses substituting certain tax forms.

  • March 21, 2024

    Treasury Hoping Pillar 2 Guidance Favors R&D Tax Credits

    The U.S. Treasury Department is looking for future administrative guidance on the international minimum tax agreement known as Pillar Two to give favorable treatment to U.S. research and development tax credits, but it will likely come with guardrails, a Treasury official said Thursday.

  • March 21, 2024

    Tax Court OKs Collection After Man Fails To Provide Records

    A Georgia man cannot challenge a tax collection action after failing to provide financial records proving he cannot pay a liability, the U.S. Tax Court ruled Thursday.

  • March 21, 2024

    GOP Sens. Push Yellen To Commit To TCJA Extension

    Senate Finance Committee Republicans on Thursday pushed Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to commit to extending provisions in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, including the law's child tax credit expansion and the corporate and individual tax cuts.

  • March 21, 2024

    Man Faces Penalty After Debating Job Status, Tax Court Says

    A Georgia man is responsible for a frivolous filing tax penalty after questioning his employment status, the U.S. Tax Court affirmed Thursday.

  • March 21, 2024

    UN Could Enhance Global Tax Agenda Setting, Officials Say

    The United Nations could play an important role in shaping the agenda for global tax negotiations so it better reflects the priorities and concerns of developing countries, a variety of tax officials said Thursday during a conference.

  • March 21, 2024

    7th Circ. Won't Let Admitted Fraudster Ditch $1.3M Restitution

    A woman who admitted to wire fraud in connection with a three-person scheme to file hundreds of false tax returns owes $1.3 million in restitution to the government, the Seventh Circuit ruled Thursday, rejecting the woman's claim that the amount was miscalculated.

  • March 21, 2024

    IRS Proposes Exceptions For 3rd-Party Summons Notices

    The IRS proposed rules Thursday that would allow some exceptions to a requirement that the agency notify taxpayers within 45 days before issuing summonses to third parties in tax assessment and collection cases, including for certain time-sensitive examinations.

  • March 21, 2024

    Wyden Probes Swiss Bank's Ties To Billionaire Under Scrutiny

    The Senate Finance Committee's Democratic majority launched an inquiry into Swiss bank Pictet Group's involvement with a U.S. billionaire under criminal investigation, raising questions about the bank's deferred prosecution agreement and $123 million fine by the U.S. Justice Department, committee Chairman Ron Wyden announced Thursday.

  • March 21, 2024

    Quintairos Prieto Taps Atlanta Atty To Lead New Tax Group

    Quintairos Prieto Wood & Boyer PA said it had created a tax division that will be led by an Atlanta-based partner who has guided clients on civil and criminal tax law, reinforcing its national expertise in litigation, regulatory and corporate law matters.

  • March 21, 2024

    H&R Block Challenges FTC Judges In False Ad Battle

    H&R Block asked a Missouri federal court to stop administrative law judges from overseeing a Federal Trade Commission proceeding that accuses the tax preparation company of deceptive advertising, claiming the judges have job protections that unconstitutionally shield them from presidential oversight.

  • March 21, 2024

    Senate Bill Seeks To End Tax-Free Merger Treatment

    A bill introduced Thursday in the U.S. Senate would end manipulation of the Internal Revenue Code that allows certain corporate mergers to be tax-free.

  • March 21, 2024

    IRS Tweaks Proposed Partnership Treatment Rules

    The Internal Revenue Service issued a correction notice Thursday fixing a reference in proposed regulations about the treatment of related people within partnerships.

  • March 21, 2024

    IRS Issues Fixes In Safe Harbor Regulations

    The Internal Revenue Service issued two correction notices Thursday to amend final regulations focused on certain safe harbor exceptions.

Expert Analysis

  • Key Takeaways From IRS Reversal On FDII Stance

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    The Internal Revenue Service's recent memo regarding allocation of deferred compensation expenses for purposes of foreign-derived intangible income is a departure from the agency's previous position and may have implications beyond the context of deferred compensation, say attorneys at Miller & Chevalier.

  • How To Address Research Expenditures Amid Uncertainty

    Taxpayers need to prepare for the significant technical and compliance challenges of following Internal Revenue Code Section 174's new rules for experimentation expenditure capitalization and amortization, notwithstanding the rules' unresolved legislative future, say tax advisers at Grant Thornton.

  • LeClairRyan Bankruptcy Highlights Pass-Through Tax Issue

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    A Virginia bankruptcy court's recent ruling in the case of defunct law firm LeClairRyan shows there may be serious tax consequences for pass-through entity partners who give up their ownership interest without following operating agreement exit provisions and updating bankruptcy court filings, say Edward Schnitzer and Hannah Travaglini at Montgomery McCracken.

  • Tax, Social Services And The Need For An IRS Overhaul

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    Revamping the Internal Revenue Service should start with visibly improving taxpayer experiences to help pave the way for other fundamental changes needed to address the recent drop in audit numbers, personnel losses, burdens of its increasing expansion into social services and other problems, says Rice University fellow Joyce Beebe.

  • Key Legal And Regulatory Trends In Oil And Gas Transactions

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    Attorneys involved in oil and gas transactions must be aware of important legal and regulatory trends that have emerged recently, including issues surrounding hydraulic fracturing, climate change, pipeline tariffs and a resurgence of regulation under the Biden administration, say Justin Hoffman and Thomas Blackwell at Baker Botts.

  • Employer Considerations For Leave Donation Programs

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    As the battle for talent continues and workers return to the office, companies may consider allowing employees to donate accrued leave time to a shared bank, but employers should first review these programs' complex design issues to comply with state laws and avoid tax consequences, says Rebecca Hudson at Holland & Hart.

  • Crypto Cos. Should Prep For More IRS John Doe Summonses

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    In anticipation of new reporting requirements that will go into effect in 2024, cryptocurrency exchanges and custodians should inform themselves on the John Doe summons, a unique mechanism that allows the IRS to obtain expansive information about cryptocurrency transactions, say Shivani Poddar and Andrew Heighington at Herrick Feinstein.

  • Employer Travel Benefits Options For Abortion Care Post-Roe

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    Given the likelihood that Roe v. Wade will be overturned, and with the proliferation of state legislation restricting abortion access, employers may want to consider the legal implications of several options to expand travel reimbursement benefits for employees who seek abortion services, say Danita Merlau and Ben Conley at Seyfarth.

  • Global Tax Chiefs Should Look To US Whistleblower Programs

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    As the Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement develops its international whistleblower program to address tax evasion and money laundering schemes in new areas like cryptocurrency, it should take lessons from highly successful U.S. programs on which features to include and pitfalls to avoid, say Neil Getnick and Nico Gurian at Getnick & Getnick.

  • Crypto Investors May Face Increasing State FCA Tax Liability

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    Cryptocurrency investors who fail to report the state tax consequences of transactions are poised to encounter increased civil or criminal legal exposure as a growing number of states bring tax fraud under the purview of their whistleblower statutes, say attorneys at Brownstein Hyatt.

  • Justices' Boechler Ruling May Spell Tax Exceptionalism's End

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    By basing its decision on cases outside the tax arena, the U.S. Supreme Court treated Boechler v. Commissioner as an administrative law case rather than a tax case and stripped away the traditional lines of tax exceptionalism, says James Creech at Baker Tilly.

  • MORE Act's Possible Impact On State-Licensed Cannabis Cos.

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    The Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act, recently passed in the U.S. House of Representatives, would dramatically alter the federal legal landscape for state-licensed cannabis businesses in both positive and negative ways — from opening new marketing avenues to compounding tax burdens, say attorneys at the Law Offices of Omar Figueroa​​​​​​​.

  • 3 Contract Considerations For Renewable Fuels Trade

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    As renewable fuels continue to develop and contracts for their sale and purchase become more common in the energy industry, companies should think about negotiating several key issues when entering into offtake agreements for feedstock purchase transactions, says Nneka Obiokoye at Holland & Knight.

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