Germany/U.S.A. Current legal, wealth and tax developments 2 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Germany/U.S.A. Current legal, wealth and tax developments 2 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 4 th Conference STEP Deutschland e.V. Germany/U.S.A. Current legal, wealth and tax developments 2 Bringing Non-Compliant U.S. Taxpayers Back into the System Michael G. Pfeifer Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered Washington, DC Scope of U.S.


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4th Conference STEP Deutschland e.V.

Germany/U.S.A.

Current legal, wealth and tax developments

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Bringing Non-Compliant U.S. Taxpayers Back into the System Michael G. Pfeifer

Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered Washington, DC

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Scope of U.S. Tax Reporting

  • Reporting by U.S. Citizens and Residents
  • Income tax return on Form 1040
  • Tax information returns – foreign activities
  • Foreign corporations – Forms 5471 and 8621
  • Foreign partnerships – Form 8865
  • Foreign „disregarded entities“ – Form 8858
  • Foreign trusts – Forms 3520 and 3520-A
  • Non-tax information returns
  • Foreign financial accounts – Form TDF 90-22.1 („FBAR“)
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Scope of U.S. Tax Reporting

  • Reporting by Nonresident Aliens
  • Income tax return on Form 1040NR
  • Effectively connected income
  • U.S. source income
  • Withholding tax certifications
  • Forms W-8BEN et seq.
  • Forms 1042 and 1042-S
  • Possible need of Tax Identification Numbers
  • ITIN – Form W-7
  • EIN – Form SS-4
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Current Offshore Enforcement Climate

  • Unreported Offshore Financial Accounts – the FBAR

Crisis

  • Bank Julius Baer and WikiLeaks.org
  • LGT Bank in Liechtenstein
  • Financial and tax reforms promised
  • UBS
  • Birkenfeld clients
  • Announced limitations on U.S.-related business
  • Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations Hearings
  • Possible enactment of Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act (S. 681)
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IRS Voluntary Disclosure Policy

  • 5 Key Conditions for Good “V.D.”
  • Legal source
  • Assets can’t derive from unlawful activity
  • Disclosure must be timely
  • Before IRS has opened civil or criminal file or is in receipt of third

party information

  • Disclosure must be complete
  • Taxpayer must file true and accurate amended or delinquent

returns; can’t correct past failures “selectively”

  • Good faith efforts to pay tax and interest due
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IRS Voluntary Disclosure Policy

  • Taxpayer must fully cooperate
  • Full audit unlikely but must comply fully with tax and related

filings, e.g., FBAR’s

  • No promise of immunity but generally no prosecution
  • Penalties frequently abated without show of “reasonable cause” if

good faith effort

  • Manner of proceeding
  • Depends on circumstances and seriousness of issues
  • Generally file 3 or 6 years of amended or delinquent returns
  • In serious cases, walk through with IRS (the “open kimono”)
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When Voluntary Disclosure Fails

  • Difference in burden of proof
  • Civil standard
  • IRS position presumed correct
  • Taxpayer must disprove by preponderance of evidence
  • Criminal standard
  • Taxpayer presumed innocent
  • IRS must prove each element of crime “beyond a reasonable doubt”
  • When civil case goes criminal everything must be reviewed!
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Related Developments

  • U.S. has enhanced “whistle-blower” program (and new

Whistle-Blower Office)

  • IRS has long rewarded informers providing good information on

taxpayers suspected of non-compliance

  • Generally takes years to develop; IRS tries to protect informers’

confidentiality; historically, rewards paid from collected proceeds might range from 1% to 15% with $10 MM “cap”

  • Under 2006 legislation, informer gets 15-30% for good information
  • n corporate taxpayer with > $2 MM in of taxes, penalties and

interest in dispute or individual taxpayer with > $200,000 of gross income

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Related Developments

  • New standards for tax preparers
  • Under 2007 legislation, tax preparer standard and penalties

increased

  • Preparer position must now generally be “more likely than not”

(i.e., > 50% chance of prevailing, if challenged)

  • With adequate disclosure, preparer standard back to “reasonable

basis” (i.e., 25% chance)

  • Taxpayer still has former “realistic possibility of success” standard

(i.e., one-in-three chance)

  • New standard applies to some information returns, if taxpayer

willfully understates tax or acts with reckless disregard of law

  • Congress, Treasury considering further change
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Bringing Non-Compliant U.S. Taxpayers Back into the System Michael G. Pfeifer

Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered One Thomas Circle, N.W., Ste. 1100 Washington, DC 20005 www.caplindrysdale.com (202) 862-5000 (202) 429-3301

U.S.