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Tax Shelters In 2005 Action and inaction at the Treasury and in Congress.

Alphabet Soup SILOs, BOSS and son, and other denizens in the zoo of shelters.

Tax Advisers Under Attack Major tax and accounting firms were the target of judicial attack in 2005.
Tax Shelters In 2006 Honours are even so far in 2006, but the Congress is as busy as ever churning its wheels.
Tax Shelters A brief review of the place of tax shelters in the American tax landscape.


Tax Shelters In 2005

In August, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., and Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn. introduced a bill in the Senate to combat what they termed 'abusive tax shelters and uncooperative offshore tax havens used by businesses and individuals to dodge payment of their US taxes'.

Levin and Coleman had introduced a similar bill in 2004, The Tax Shelter and Tax Haven Reform Act, S. 2210, which was read twice and referred to the Committe on Finance, where it died in December, 2004. The 2004 bill was very similar to the new one. Although it was unsuccessful, some of its provisions made it into law by being attached to other pieces of legislation, including stronger penalties for failing to report interests in foreign financial accounts, civil fines for tax practitioners such as accountants and attorneys who violate specified standards of practice, stronger penalties for failing to register or provide to the IRS required information regarding a potentially abusive tax shelter, and stronger penalties for failing to maintain a list of participants in potentially abusive tax shelters.

The 2004 bill also sought to stiffen the penalties imposed on abusive tax shelter promoters from $1,000 per offense to a penalty equal to 150% of the promoter’s profits from selling the abusive shelter. The penalty has since been raised to 50%, but did not go as far as provided in the Levin-Coleman bill. The Senators said: “The penalty increase enacted by Congress in 2004 was a significant improvement over prior law, but letting promoters of abusive tax shelters keep 50% of their ill-gotten gains doesn’t make sense. Congress needs to take stronger action by denying persons who promote tax cheating not only all of their illegal profits, but also requiring their payment of a stiff fine on top of that.”

For the last three years, Levin and Coleman, the senior Democrat and Chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations respectively, have been pursuing an investigation into tax shelters developed, marketed, and carried out by accounting firms, banks, investment advisors, and lawyers.

“These tax advisors are getting hundreds of millions of dollars in fees, while robbing the U.S. Treasury of billions of dollars in revenues each year,” said Levin. “We need to strengthen the laws and enforcement mechanisms to stop promoters of abusive tax shelters. We also need to take stronger measures to stop use of offshore tax havens for tax dodges.”

“Abusive tax shelters and uncooperative tax havens undermine our tax system, forcing honest taxpayers to pay more than their fair share,” Coleman said. “We need to give honest, hardworking Americans a better deal – by cracking down on those who choose not to pay their fair share in taxes.”

The Tax Shelter and Tax Haven Reform Act of 2005 proposed the following measures, among others, to clamp down on tax abusers:

  • Increase penalties to 150% on persons who promote abusive tax shelters or knowingly aid or abet taxpayers to understate their tax liability. Currently, promoters face only a 50 percent penalty, and aiders and abettors face a maximum penalty of $10,000.
  • Prevent abusive tax shelters by prohibiting tax advisors from charging fees linked to alleged tax savings, mandating examination procedures to identify banks contributing to abusive tax shelters, encouraging whistleblowers who report tax schemes, and authorizing the IRS to work with federal agencies like the SEC and bank regulators to strengthen abusive tax shelter enforcement.
  • Clarify and codify the economic substance doctrine and by strengthening the penalties for tax transactions lacking economic substance.
  • Authorize the Treasury to publish an annual list of uncooperative tax havens, and by ending U.S. tax benefits and requiring greater disclosure for taxpayers transferring funds to such uncooperative tax havens.

Like its 2004 predecessor, the 2005 bill appears to have died in the Finance Committee.

In September, Minnesota offered a voluntary compliance program for taxpayers who had participated in potentially abusive tax shelters and transactions as determined by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

By participating in this program, taxpayers can avoid substantial new penalties authorized under a new Minnesota law, said Minnesota's Department of Revenue. Minnesota expected the program to generate $57 million in additional tax revenue during 2006 and 2007.

The program, which follows similar programs conducted in California and Illinois, gave residents who have used abusive tax shelters until Jan. 31 to amend their tax returns without facing new penalties passed during the 2005 special legislative session.

Under the voluntary compliance program, taxpayers can escape the newly created penalties, which authorize the department to assess stiff punishment on taxpayers who participate in, or promote, tax avoidance schemes. After the six-month window of opportunity, the department will officially step up enforcement efforts in the area.

"These abusive shelters typically have no business or economic purpose, and are employed only to reduce taxes," said revenue commissioner Dan Salomone, in a statement. "If you've participated in one of these shelters, this is your last chance to make things right. The stakes will be much higher later."

The Internal Revenue Service has determined the types of transactions and shelters that are potentially abusive. Taxpayers must disclose their participation in these transactions and amend their state returns or face substantial penalties, including nondisclosure penalties as high as $100,000 for individuals and $200,000 for businesses.

To participate in the compliance initiative, taxpayers must complete Form VCI, Voluntary Compliance Initiative Agreement, amend their state tax returns, and pay any additional tax and interest due. Information on the new legislation and the voluntary compliance program is available at www.taxes.state.mn.us.

In October, the US Internal Revenue Service announced a broad-based, limited-in-time opportunity for taxpayers to come forward and settle an array of transactions the IRS considers abusive.

Taxpayers who undertook these deals had until January 23, 2006 to submit their settlement papers to the IRS.

The initiative identified 21 transactions eligible for the program. Consisting of both listed and non-listed transactions, they include a wide cluster of schemes involving funds used for employee benefits, charitable remainder trusts, offsetting foreign currency option contracts, debt straddles, lease strips and certain abusive conservation easements.

All eligible transactions carry the same settlement terms except the applicable penalty level.

“People entered into these deals often at the behest of lawyers and accountants peddling flaky tax products,” explained IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson, continuing:

“Times have changed. The IRS has acted to shut down these deals, as has the Congress, in passing stiffer disclosure requirements and promoter penalties last fall. We’re offering taxpayers a quick, quiet and cost effective way to put these deals behind them.”

The IRS has now identified more than 4,000 taxpayers involved in these 21 transactions, and continues to uncover additional participants through tax return examinations and the agency’s promoter audit program.

Under the settlement terms, participants, both individuals and companies, will be required to pay 100 percent of the taxes owed, interest and, depending on the transaction, either a quarter or a half of the penalty the IRS will otherwise seek. There will, however, be penalty relief for transactions disclosed to the IRS or where the taxpayer got a tax opinion from an independent tax advisor.

Despite the stream of adverse announcements on tax shelters, the industry was in fact alive and well, and in November 2005 a report by the US federal government spending watchdog highlighted the continuing risk to the tax system of complex, so-called 'abusive' tax sheltering schemes, which it noted are now being sold through smaller, less accountable outlets.

"Recent trends indicate that the tax shelter population will continue to expand to small- to mid-sized corporations where issues will be more difficult to identify and examine," the Government Accountability Office observed in a report on its financial audit of the Internal Revenue Service.

The GAO went on to note that tax shelter promoters are migrating from the large accounting firms to businesses that specialize in tax matters.

These so-called 'boutique promoters', the GAO observed, are "less compliant in their business registrations and less stable in the business operations" and are consequently more difficult for the authorities to pursue for information or penalties.

Moreover, the GAO found that promoters of tax shelters are continuing to modify their products to stay one step ahead of the IRS. It also found that the number of fraudulent tax refund claims continues to rise and now stands at a five-year high.

"For the 2005 processing year, the IRS identified approximately $451 million of fraudulent refund claims for individuals," the GAO reported.

BACK TO TOP

 

Tax Shelters In 2005 Action and inaction at the Treasury and in Congress.

Alphabet Soup SILOs, BOSS and son, and other denizens in the zoo of shelters.

Tax Advisers Under Attack Major tax and accounting firms were the target of judicial attack in 2005.
Tax Shelters In 2006 Honours are even so far in 2006, but the Congress is as busy as ever churning its wheels.
Tax Shelters A brief review of the place of tax shelters in the American tax landscape.

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