Friday, October 10, 2008 23:30 Russian »  
RusUSA.com - russian portal
   Home News Yellow Pages Shopping Classifieds Fun Chat Forum America  

Forums » Money and Finance »

Annual IRS Intimidation Season

Money and Finance

New Topic     Switch view
Annual IRS Intimidation Season  
Author Message
Sheriff
Admin
4081 posts
View Profile for Sheriff author
 posted 2/9/2005 4:57:11 PM         Reply to Post reply
 
What you might want to know about IRS:

--------

Dear Reader,

Each year for the 30 years that I've been writing about taxes, the US Internal Revenue Service sends out a barrage of press releases during the three months prior to the annual income tax filing date of April 15th.

Many of these press notices are announcements about successful prosecutions of tax evaders -- all carefully timed to coincide with the first three months of the year when folks are working on their taxes or having them done by their accountants. Because tax prosecutions are relatively rare, an unquestioning news media dutifully picks up the press releases and runs them with large headlines.

The purpose of this annual exercise, of course, is to remind the rest of us that cheating on our taxes can result in some time in Club Fed.

Criminal prosecutions for tax evasion are only worthwhile to the IRS because of this publicity value. They take a long time and usually cost the IRS far more in time and effort than the added penalties that can be collected. In addition, in a criminal prosecution the IRS has to be able to prove to a jury that the accused taxpayer knowingly and wilfully
failed to pay taxes that were owed. First, that means they must offer solid proof to a jury of other taxpayers that the accused taxpayer understood the law and what the law required of him. Second, they have to show that the taxpayer's failure to comply with the law was intentional and not due to a mistake or a result of having bad advice.

With the massive complexity of the US tax code, you can guess that making this case is not always easy. So the IRS picks the easy ones.

By contrast, if the IRS limits its efforts to pursuing civil tax cases (which impose no jail time), a jury is not required and the burden of proof generally shifts to the taxpayer, forcing him to prove that he has paid the correct amount of taxes. Penalties of up to 75% of the tax that should have been paid can be added to the amount of taxes the IRS claims is due, then interest is piled on top of that. So, from a practical point of view, the IRS prefers to focus on civil penalties and interest, rather than to pursue criminal prosecutions.

But the IRS continues to put a few people in jail each year just to remind the rest of us they can do that if they want to -- and if they can prove it.

Vernon K. Jacobs, CPA, CLU
E-mail: jacobs@offshorepress.com
Web site: http://www.offshorepress.com/
 
dan123
3418 posts
View Profile for dan123 author
 posted 2/12/2005 7:52:44 PM         Reply to Post reply
 
С IRS можно иметь дело, я пробовал. Тебе, Шериф светит пообщаться с ними в ближайшем будущем, если ещё не пришли.

Главное, играй по их правилам и выиграешь!

Могу помочь.

Reply     New Topic



Advertise on RusUSA.com
Contact:
Site search
Search internet
Site map
Rambler's Top100
©2008 LCube. All rights reserved.   RusUSA.com - Russian America.   Terms of Use