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Showing posts from April, 2022

Depriving Partnerships of Access to the Independent Office of Appeals: Old and New IRS Challenges to Conservation Easements

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The IRS continues to challenge partnerships that donate conservation easements, implementing extreme enforcement techniques as part of the process. As this article explains, the newest tactic is depriving partnerships of their general right to seek reconsideration by the Independent Office of Appeals before engaging in long, expensive, complicated tax litigation. To maximize their chances of prevailing against the IRS, taxpayers must remain hyperaware of the evolving enforcement tools. Read the full article here. About Hale E. Sheppard HALE E. SHEPPARD, Esq. (B.S., M.A., J.D., LL.M., LL.M.T.) is a Shareholder in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka and Chair of the International Tax Group.

Disputing FBAR Penalties: Mendu Case Clarifies How Much Taxpayers Must Pay to Play

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Substance is important, but procedure is often king when it comes to disputes with the IRS. This is what taxpayers facing large penalties for not reporting foreign accounts have discovered. FBAR duties are not contained in the tax code, yet the quintessential tax agency, the IRS, audits potential violations and asserts penalties. Such disconnect has sparked a number of questions, most of which center on whether FBAR penalties can be treated as a “tax” for certain purposes. This article examines origins of the FBAR, delegations of power, key tax provisions, and four noteworthy cases providing guidance on how, when, and where to fight FBAR penalties. Read the full article here. About Hale E. Sheppard HALE E. SHEPPARD, Esq. (B.S., M.A., J.D., LL.M., LL.M.T.) is a Shareholder in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka and Chair of the International Tax Group.