IRS Mean Team
We crack down on the unfair policies of the IRS and can help you with everything from IRS audits to abusive tax shelters. National Offices of Lance Wallach - 516-938-5007
Lance Wallach - www.taxaudit419.com
Attorneys have been making big money suing accountants, financial planners, insurance agents, and insurance companies who were involved in various types of abusive programs. Insurance agents sold various types of plans the business owner used to take tax deductions. When the business owner gets audited and loses their tax deduction and has all kinds of penalties imposed, the business owner gets upset and usually sues the accountant, the insurance agent, and/or the insurance company. Attorneys have been making a fortune with these types of lawsuits. Be careful. My name is Lance Wallach. (516) 938-5007 if you have any questions.
Labels:
419e 412i plans,
IRS,
Lance Wallach
Lance Wallach - www.taxaudit419.com
The IRS may be coming after you for what is called a reportable transaction. A reportable transaction could be something as simple as a retirement plan with life insurance in it, a so-called 419 or welfare benefit plan, a 412i pension plan, captive insurance, section 79, things like that. If you're in a reportable transaction, the IRS is after you. We welcome your call at (516) 938-5007. My name is Lance Wallach. You may want to Google me. And I look forward to helping you.
Labels:
419e 412i plans,
IRS,
Lance Wallach
Lance Wallach Business Valuations
When you need a business valuation, why not use a teacher instead of a student? Myself and my associates, who are all attorneys and CPAs, have written the books on business valuations. Others read the books to obtain what is called continuing professional education credit so that they can maintain their licenses or their certifications. So why not use a teacher as opposed to one of our students when you need a business valuation done? I look forward to speaking with you at (516) 935-7346 or (516) 938-5007. Why not use the best instead of the rest?
Labels:
financial,
insurance,
IRS,
Lance Wallach
Supermodel gets 419e 412i IRS Audit
If you were in a 419e, 412i, sec 79 or captive insurance plan, you may owe the IRS hundreds of thousands of dollars in tax penalties under code 6707a of the IRS. If you sold such a plan or were the accountant for a company with one of these plans, you are liable for huge IRS fines as well. Call Lance Wallach's office today at 516-938-5007 before time runs out to help you. Or visithttp://taxaudit419.com for more info!
Labels:
419e 412i plans,
insurance,
IRS,
Lance Wallach
Will Your Municipal Bond or Your Life Insurance Company Still Have Value Next Year?
Investor protection with municipal bonds is so spotty that there is potential for much mischief.
Disclosure, that bedrock of fair securities markets, is the heart of the problem facing municipal investors. Municipal issuers often don't file the most basic reports outlining their operating results or material changes in their financial conditions.
Even though hospitals, cities and states that borrow money are required by their bond covenants to make such filings, nondisclosure among the nearly 60,000 issuers is common.
To keep reading, click here
Disclosure, that bedrock of fair securities markets, is the heart of the problem facing municipal investors. Municipal issuers often don't file the most basic reports outlining their operating results or material changes in their financial conditions.
Even though hospitals, cities and states that borrow money are required by their bond covenants to make such filings, nondisclosure among the nearly 60,000 issuers is common.
To keep reading, click here
Should you File, and then Opt Out?
There's been discussion of "opting out" of the program to take your chances in audit, but it's a topic fraught with danger. Now, however, there is guidance about opting out of the program that makes much of it transparent. Because of this late date it is recommended that you properly file FBARs and the 90-day request for amnesty extension. This is the first important step. If the forms are not done properly, you will have extensive problems and will not have to think about opting out. If your forms are properly done and filed, then your situation should be discussed with someone who is experienced in these matters.
Read the whole thing here
Read the whole thing here
Labels:
audit,
FBARs,
IRS,
Lance Wallach Expert Witness
FBAR Offshore Bank Accounts and Foreign Income Attacked by IRS
You may want to think about participation in the IRS' offshore tax amnestyprogram (called the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative). Do you want to play audit roulette with the IRS? Some clients think they are too small to be prosecuted. They are wrong.
To the average businessperson, only the guys with tens of millions secretly stashed in Swiss bank accounts get prosecuted. Don't tell that to Michael Schiavo. He was just prosecuted for hiding money in a Swiss account back in 2003. How much money does the IRS say he hid? A whopping $90,000. That's it.
But wait, there is more to the story. Schiavo attempted to do a quiet disclosure during the 2009 amnesty but instead of filling out the amnesty paperwork, he simply trusted that by coming forward voluntarily he could avoid criminal prosecution. He was wrong on all counts. Nothing is too small for the IRS, and nothing is too old.
Labels:
FBARs,
IRS,
Lance Wallach Expert Witness,
offshore taxes
Using VEBAs For Employer-Owners | LifeHealthPro
Imagine a program that allows large, flexible, tax-deductible contributions to accumulate and compound on a tax-deferred basis. Distributions are received at any age without penalties, regardless of the amount. Assets are protected from creditors' claims. There are income and estate tax-free survivor benefits. The program is fully insured and, by a favorable Letter of Determination, the Internal Revenue Service has granted a tax exemption to the Section 501(c)(9) trust.
The program also can acquire tax-deductible life insurance, provide funds to pay estate taxes and provide tax-deductible educational benefits for children.
These are some of the benefits of a Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Association (VEBA). VEBAs are tax-exempt trusts (or nonprofit corporations) that are described in Section 501(c)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. They require a letter of determination from the IRS granting tax exempt trust status. If the statutory requirements are met and the IRS issues a favorable Letter Of Determination, then, in general, the qualified cost of contributions by an employer to the VEBA that are ordinary and necessary expenses, are deductible for federal income tax purposes.
Labels:
IRS,
Lance Wallach Expert Witness,
VEBA
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