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Showing posts from April, 2024

New Case Shows Strategic Considerations in ‘Cooperating’ with IRS Audits

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  At some point during most audits, taxpayers will ponder whether, or to what extent, they should “cooperate” with the IRS. They also might ask what, exactly, cooperation means in a particular situation. These are critical questions to which many taxpayers lack clear answers, and this type of unawareness can lead to bad decisions. This article describes duties associated with foreign accounts, standards for reducing penalties, a new case in which taxpayers were stuck with higher sanctions because they failed to fully cooperate during a voluntary disclosure program, and other contexts in which cooperation has a significant effect on IRS disputes. 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 partner in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka.  He defends clients in tax audits, tax appeals, and Tax Court litigation, covering both domestic and international issues.

Tax Court Says ‘As Such’ Means Much: Early IRS Victory in Battle over SECA Taxes and Limited Partners

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Fighting over when owners of limited partnerships must pay self-employment taxes has lasted nearly five decades. This struggle is attributable to several things, including the absence of applicable regulations, rapid evolution of business entities, and more. Uncertainty has caused taxpayers to claim disparate tax positions and triggered several big-dollar cases. This article, just one in a series, explores the relevant rules, a long list of arguments advanced by taxpayers and the IRS in two pending cases, and the recent Tax Court ruling that it must apply a “functional test” to determine whether a partner in a limited partnership meets the relevant exemption. 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 partner in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka.  He defends clients in tax audits, tax appeals, and Tax Court litigation, covering both domestic and international issues.

More on IRS Strategies to Reopen Closed Assessment Periods

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The IRS has a limited period to enforce the rules, and taxpayers hope to go unnoticed until that opportunity has passed. Timing issues do not disappear, though, simply because taxpayers get selected for audit or approach the IRS pro-actively. Indeed, they might become more important than ever, because many interactions with the IRS involve extensions of assessment-periods, some voluntary, others compulsory. This article analyzes the divergent and surprising rules applicable to taxes, on one hand, and FBAR penalties, on the other. 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 partner in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka.  He defends clients in tax audits, tax appeals, and Tax Court litigation, covering both domestic and international issues.

Conservation Easement Settlement Initiatives in 2020 and 2024

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The IRS recently launched its second major effort to dispense with cases involving what it calls syndicated conservation easement transactions. In order for partnerships and their partners to make intelligent decisions, they first need to understand the context. This includes the types of challenges the IRS raises in easement disputes, the terms of the initial settlement introduced back in 2020, the terms of the current settlement launched in 2024, and the types of partnerships to which the current settlement might appeal. This article covers those topics and more. 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 partner in the Tax Controversy Section of Chamberlain Hrdlicka.  He defends clients in tax audits, tax appeals, and Tax Court litigation, covering both domestic and international issues.