Avoiding Criminal Tax Charges ..and Prison
Facing criminal tax charges would surely be a horrific nightmare for anyone so unfortunate to be so accused. Just the mere allegation and subsequent investigation can have very damaging emotional, financial, and reputation effects even where the wrongly accused is later found innocent.
If you or your CPA, EA, tax preparer, or bookkeeper merely even suspect that you might be subject to a criminal or civil tax fraud investigation you would be very wise to immediately consult with an experienced criminal tax attorney. Proper criminal tax defense representation is indispensable in helping you mitigate the potentially devastating consequences surrounding a criminal tax investigation or alleged charges of tax fraud, tax evasion, embezzlement, or failing to file tax returns.
Decisions that you take during the course of a tax audit can rapidly transform a simple examination into a full blown CID criminal tax investigation. Lying or being evasive, intentionally delaying, being rude and non-respectful, nervous body language, and sweating profusely, can all be interpreted as indicia of tax fraud during a civil examination.
These indicia, or more commonly referred to in the profession as “Badges of Tax Fraud”, are covertly and mentally tallied by civil tax examiners in determining whether to make a referral to the Criminal Investigation Division of the IRS or in a decision to access a civil fraud penalty.
Examples of Badges of Tax Fraud:
- Maintaining inadequate records or destroying records
- Failing to file tax returns
- Providing implausible or inconsistent explanations during civil examination
- Concealing assets during collection of tax liabilities or examination
- Failing to cooperate with tax authorities
- Displaying belligerent, rude, or disrespectful behavior to an IRS agent
- Excessive dealing in cash
- Filing false returns
- Intentionally underreporting or omitting income
- Overstating deductions or claiming false deductions
- Hiding or transferring income with relatives or related entities
- Keeping false records of your income or “second set of books”
- Falsifying books or records “forgery”
- Claiming fake dependents
- Falsely claiming credits
- Arranging affairs for the sole purpose of tax avoidance in a manner that lacks economic substance
- Prematurely destroying records
- Taking positions on a return that are “more likely than not” to be disallowed if discovered without sufficient disclosure
In my honest opinion the most dangerous part of a civil tax audit is the very real possibility that the IRS civil tax auditor upon suspecting that fraud may have occurred, because of his assessment of the Badges of Fraud that he or she suspects are present, might request a consultation with a fraud referral specialist whose sole job it is to covertly assist the examining agent in working up your case for referral to CID.
A substantial majority of reported convictions in criminal tax cases involve taxpayers who cooperated fully early in the civil examination, without properly trained tax counsel, and either lied or made damaging admissions to civil examiners, or worse yet, to CID special agents.
Moreover, CID agents have the advantage during the first interview with a taxpayer in that they have reviewed tax returns, they have spoken with the civil examining agent and possibly with a fraud referral specialist and they know the direction and scope of the investigation, consequently unrepresented taxpayers are at a distinct disadvantage.
What is at Stake where Tax Fraud May Have Occurred?
The stakes where Badges of Fraud exists in a taxpayer’s fact pattern going into a civil tax audit or CID criminal investigation range from at best, a civil tax fraud penalty, equal to 75% of the additional tax owed as adjusted in the civil tax audit, plus interest on the penalty back to the original filing date of the return being audited. To at worst, up to 5 years in jail, coupled with fines as high as $500,000, plus the costs to the government of prosecuting you for each separate crime.
The IRS historically obtains convictions in over 80% of their criminal tax cases. The average sentence imposed by the federal government for Tax Crimes is forty-eight months. I am not talking “Club Fed” here, complete with a golf course, but rather I’m talking about a real high security prison, surrounded by barbed wire, complete with overcrowded barred cells. Because the stakes or so high, it is imperative that you consult an experienced criminal tax defense attorney in order to exponentially increase your odds of avoiding such a potentially life altering array of punishments.
I am most effective at minimizing the odds of a client facing criminal tax exposure when clients engages me early in a civil investigation before a criminal investigation is even started. It is a well known fact that the vast majority of criminal prosecutions originally arise as referrals from civil examinations. The IRS Criminal Investigation Division trains each examining agent to be their eyes and ears and be on the lookout for Badges of Fraud that come to light during routine civil examinations.
Therefore, the best defense to avoiding criminal charges, is to minimize the risk of a criminal referral out of a civil examination. My training as an Attorney, a CPA and my Master’s Degree in Taxation coupled with over 20 years of real world tax controversy representation, including sitting on the California State Bar Tax Procedure and Litigation Committee, lends itself extremely well to limiting your criminal tax exposure and to minimizing the potential damage if this exposure materializes into a CID Criminal tax investigation.
Obtaining an experienced criminal tax attorney is imperative when faced with strategic decisions such as whether to speak freely and candidly with a civil tax examiner or Criminal Investigation Division (CID) Special Agent or whether to remain silent. Only a criminal tax attorney is specifically trained to advise you on when to avail yourself of the powerful constitutional protections afforded by the fifth amendment protection against self incrimination and forth amendment protection against unreasonable searches and seizures in the tax arena. The hardest element for the government to prove, and thus the weakest part of their case, is that your actions were intentional. Consequently, I will use these constitutional protections in an effort to prove that you were not intentionally fraudulent.
At some point during a civil examination or criminal investigation you will ordinarily find yourself explaining your previous actions regarding your return to an IRS agent. If you know for a fact that you, or perhaps an overzealous tax preparer, substantially understated income, overstated deductions and or falsely claimed credits for example, (See Examples of Badges of Fraud above) then it is imperative that you consult a criminal tax attorney before your initial communication with the examining IRS agent. An experienced criminal tax attorney will coach you on what you should and should not say, they will make you conscious of the fact that IRS auditors are trained to observe your body language and demeanor, they will help you visualize the situation such that you do become so nervous that you wind up inadvertently incriminating yourself. Because it is a crime in and of itself, to lie or mislead a federal agent. You really only have two choices when faced with an interview by and IRS agent. 1. Say nothing 2. Tell the truth.
Taxpayers who find themselves faced with a alleged charges of tax fraud, tax evasion, or other tax controversy, whether they know it or not, are in urgent need of a highly trained and experienced criminal tax defense attorney. My experience and education dictates that garnering a head start on the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) or other taxing authority when faced with criminal tax charges is imperative to securing any advantage possible under the circumstances. Having sufficient time to conduct an independent investigation into the positions taken on the returns in question, time to research legal and defense options specific to the client’s fact pattern, time to interview potential witness, time to review the effected accounting and financial records for badges of fraud, all help minimize the client’s exposure to being convicted of a tax crime. A sufficient head start can be the difference between facing misdemeanor rather than felony charges, or better yet facing no charges at all.
How Does a Government Entity Decide to Pursue a Criminal Tax Charge?
The final decision to prosecute a criminal tax case is the culmination of a lengthy and complex administrative process which affords experienced and qualified criminal tax counsel ample opportunities to attempt to present an effective defense. Tax Crimes are first investigated by the Criminal Investigation Division (CID) of the Internal Revenue Service. CID uses a variety of criteria in selecting cases for investigation, the heaviest weight is placed, however, on how likely a prosecution is to result in a conviction.
Any recommendations by CID to prosecute an alleged tax crime are then reviewed by the District Counsel of the IRS. If the IRS District Counsel approves the recommendation, the case is then referred to the Tax Division of the Department of Justice. If after reviewing the case the Tax Division makes a recommendation to prosecute, the case is referred to the U.S. Attorney for possible prosecution if accepted by the U.S. Attorney’s office. Effective criminal tax counsel can effectively argue that factors such as poor health, family problems, emotional problems est. that tend to create sympathy for the taxpayer and thus make it unlikely that the taxpayer would be convicted are present, and thus prosecution may be declined at any point in this lengthy process by effective tax counsel.
Examples of Available Defenses and Mitigation Techniques:
Defense counsel may attempt to convince CID or Grand Jury investigators that his or her client is much more valuable to them as a witness against other potential or actual targets than as a criminal tax defendant.
- Statute of Limitations: Arguing the statute of limitations for the specific tax crime has tolled.
- Establishing Deceit on the Part of a Civil Examiner: Defense counsel can endeavor to establish that an examining agent affirmatively misled the taxpayer about whether there was an ongoing covert criminal tax investigation and that this deceit was a material factor in the taxpayer’s decision to give information to the examining agent when the taxpayer had a valid Fourth Amendment right not to. Courts have held that his type of deception will invalidate a taxpayer’s consent to the examination of his records and make the examination an unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
- Techniques Available During the Criminal Investigation: Monitoring and anticipating the course of an investigation in the hopes of limiting, or where possible, eliminating potential criminal tax exposure. To this end, potential witnesses can be interviewed by tax defense counsel, or an investigator hired by counsel, before a CID special agent has made contact. Defense counsel will warn taxpayers under CID investigation that statements made to business associates, friends, his accountant, or an investigator may be passed on to the CID special agent because they are not privileged communications.
- Entrapment: If tax defense counsel can prove that a government agent induced a taxpayer to commit a tax crime that the taxpayer otherwise would not have committed, the defense of entrapment may be available. However, merely allowing a taxpayer to continue criminal conduct that was already started is not entrapment. The key to this defense is that the disposition to commit the crime must come from the government agent and not the taxpayer.
- Block IRS Summonses: Defense Counsel can object to an agent’s summonses based on protections of confidentiality that may apply to tax advice given by a federally authorized tax practitioner to the taxpayer. However, this privilege may be properly asserted only in noncriminal tax matters before the IRS or in any noncriminal tax proceedings in federal court brought by or against the United States.
- Techniques Available During the Administrative Review of Criminal Investigation: During administrative review level of potential criminal prosecution cases, effective tax defense counsel has the ability to raise several defenses that if successful may cause case to be declined. These include lack of criminal intent, no tax due, defects in method of proof, dual prosecution, health, and the improbability of a conviction. A taxpayer may avoid prosecution by showing that he was previously prosecuted for substantially the same acts. The poor health of a taxpayer will not by itself prevent prosecution. However, if poor health and other factors creating sympathy for the taxpayer appear to make it unlikely that the taxpayer will be convicted are present, Defense Counsel can attempt to persuade the government that prosecution should be declined.
- Attempt to Prevent the Government From Proving Fraudulent Act(s) were Intentional: Proving that a taxpayer acted intentionally in violation of a known legal duty is a critical element of most of the government’s criminal tax cases and is therefore ordinarily the most difficult element for the prosecution to prove. In the absence of a confession or the testimony of an accomplice, intent usually must be established by circumstantial evidence concerning the taxpayer’s actions. The admissibility of circumstantial evidence is frequently a close question that criminal tax counsel can endeavor to suppress.
- Safeguard the Government’s use of Circumstantial Evidence: When the IRS relies on indirect or circumstantial methods of proof, guidelines established by the courts establish safeguards that must be complied with in the use of that circumstantial evidence. Effective tax counsel can ensure that these safeguards are complied with.
- Compromise: Under the law, statutory authority exists for the Secretary of the Treasury and the Attorney General to compromise criminal tax cases without prosecution. However, this authority to compromise criminal cases is rarely used because allowing a defendant to buy his way out of criminal prosecutions would in effect create separate systems of justice for the rich and the poor.
- Pleas: Historically, by far the vast majority of the criminal tax indictments brought result in pleas. Each U.S. Attorney is authorized to accept a plea of guilty to the major count of an indictment without prior approval of the IRS. Federal prosecutors are required to initially charge the most serious, readily provable offenses that are consistent with the defendant’s alleged conduct. Typically, once charges are brought, they will not be dismissed or dropped under a plea agreement unless the prosecutor has a good faith doubt about the government’s ability to prove a charge based on either a perceived legal or evidentiary weakness in the case. By contrast, the IRS does not typically settle civil tax matters as part of a plea agreement although it has the statutory authority to do so. This rational for this is to avoid the appearance that the IRS uses the criminal process to coerce the collection of civil tax liabilities. This policy does not prevent the defendant from agreeing to civil admissions, such as receiving unreported income or claiming fraudulent deductions, as part of the criminal plea agreement. Information that the taxpayer provides in a civil case may also be used in a criminal case against the taxpayer. Thus, cooperating with a criminal investigation with or without proper legal counsel may have unexpected drawbacks for the taxpayer.
If You Have Been Charged with a Tax-Related Crime
Contact me online or call 800.681.1295 to speak to me to discuss your case.
My Orange County tax law office is conveniently located in Irvine, next to John Wayne Airport. I also have offices in the Westwood area of West Los Angeles a short distance from the 405 freeway on Wilshire Blvd. Office hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, and later evening appointments are available by pre-arrangements. The office is open Monday through Saturday during tax season (February through April). Major credit cards are accepted.
Questions and Answers for Criminal Tax Representation
If you are facing criminal tax charges or have concerns that an eggshell audit or criminal tax investigation is looming or already underway against you or your small business, you likely already know how serious your situation is. The time is now to contact a dual licensed Criminal Tax Defense Lawyer & CPA to help you prepare your defense and assess options to protect your bottom line and your very liberty.
This starts with an understanding of the stages of an audit, criminal tax investigation, tax crime indictment, and prosecution, as well as the red flags that may pique the interest of the IRS or the California Franchise Tax Board (FTB), California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) and the Employment Development Department (EDD) and trigger the entire sequence. You should also know what is at stake when it comes to the various types of criminal tax charges, and how to evaluate plea deal offers as they come.
Most criminal tax violations involve failing to file a return or providing false return information. A taxpayer risks incurring serious penalties, including jail time, for failing to file a return, supplying false or fraudulent returns or information, encouraging or counseling tax evasion, and failure to pay estimated taxes.
Federal authorities file most criminal tax charges. However, California also has laws prohibiting both individual and corporate tax evasion and fraud and its own robust criminal tax investigation resources. Tax law is a specialized area of practice. It is important for the practitioner to be familiar both with the applicable tax laws and the criminal statutes & procedure where a taxpayer is targeted for failure to follow those laws. Rather than trying to take this all on yourself, we urge you to reach out to one of the Dual Licensed Criminal Tax Defense Lawyers and CPAs at the Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing. Learn more about the benefits of our range of services, numerous locations, client prioritization, and experience by calling (800) 681-1295 today.
Representing a taxpayer or entity that is the subject of a criminal tax investigation requires specialized education, training and experience and a keen understanding of the internal investigative procedure of the IRS and California taxing authorities. At the Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing, we pride ourselves on having a long track record of success in this area. Oftentimes, a general criminal defense lawyer or an accountant may think there is not much that can be accomplished prior to the indictment of the client. In fact, the opposite is true, for there is much that can be done to defend a subject of a criminal tax investigation, eggshell, or reverse eggshell audit before indictment and in our opinion the highest odds of avoiding criminal tax prosecution are achieved when we are hired early in the investigation stage of an actual or merely potential criminal tax issue. Ideally, the criminal tax defense attorney will be hired early on for their knowledge of tax law and theory and familiarity with the internal workings of the Service. The goal would be to close the criminal tax investigation or high-risk audit without prosecution and without the corresponding extremely negative publicity surrounding an indictment.
The Start of the Criminal Tax Investigation
The IRS uses many sources of information to lead them to begin the investigation into a potential tax fraud case. Criminal investigations can be initiated from within the IRS when a revenue officer or civil tax auditor detects possible fraud. In addition, special agents also receive tips from disgruntled friends or family members, newspaper articles, and large cash transactions. The government has made it very lucrative to become a tax fraud whistleblower and turn in individuals and companies that are involved in financial crimes. Those tipsters are now entitled to a reward in the form of a percentage of the taxes collected as a result of the tip. In some cases, these rewards total in the millions of dollars—quite an incentive!
When the source is an IRS auditor or collection agent involved in the investigation of a civil violation, it is difficult to determine when the special agent of the IRS’s criminal investigation division (CID) should get the referral for the criminal investigation. The Internal Revenue Manual requires employees to stop civil investigations on discovering firm indicators of fraud. Firm indicators of fraud are affirmative acts of fraud by an individual or business. Once a revenue agent establishes firm indicators of fraud, that agent must cease all work on the civil audit, prepare a Form 2797, Referral Report for Potential Fraud Cases, provide the form to their supervisor, and receive approval to refer the case to CID.
Once they receive the initial information, special agents must analyze the information and make a determination as to whether a financial crime has been committed. This is the “primary investigation.” A primary investigation is an investigation of individuals where there is believed to be a violation of tax laws, and there is a potential for prosecution. If, after the primary investigation, the agent determines that the information supports a criminal act, the information must be presented to the special agent’s front-line supervisor to review. If the front-line supervisor agrees that the information supports a possible financial crime, the supervisor must seek the approval of the special agent in charge (SAC) to initiate a subject criminal investigation (SCI). An SCI is initiated on an individual or entity alleged to be in noncompliance with the laws enforced by the IRS and having criminal prosecution potential. The object of an SCI is to gather pertinent evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a violation of the laws enforced by the IRS.
Criminal investigations are not always initiated based on a referral from an auditor or collection agent. In some cases, the investigation begins with CID. These investigations are referred to as “general investigations.” A general investigation is a study, survey, canvassing, or coordination activity related to a group, an activity, or a CID program/sub-program to identify possible noncompliance with the laws enforced by the IRS.
When Should I Accept a Plea Agreement for Criminal Tax Charges?
In many cases, the prosecution may approach a criminal tax defendant with an offer of a plea agreement. The virtue of a plea agreement is that both sides avoid the costs and difficulties associated with going to court. Meanwhile, the prosecution secures a conviction, while the defendant often gets off with lighter fines and may even avoid jail time.
However, you should never enter into a plea agreement lightly. By pleading guilty, you are essentially giving up your right to go to trial and be presented with the evidence against you. You are also signing yourself up for a conviction, which will likely remain on your record. Some of the “promises” that a prosecutor might offer up in the arrangement cannot be guaranteed. For instance, if the prosecutor agrees to recommend a lesser sentence, the judge is free to disregard the recommendation and institute what they feel is warranted, leaving the defendant open to harsh sentences that could blindside them.
If you are approached by the prosecution with a plea agreement related to a tax crime, you should immediately bring it to the attention of your Criminal Tax Defense Attorney.
How Do I Evaluate and Hire a Criminal Tax Lawyer Near Me?
Choosing a Criminal Tax Attorney is a critical and impactful step in the course of any taxpayer’s interaction with state or federal agents. Ideally, the taxpayer will make their selection sooner rather than later, as early representation can help stave off some of the harsher consequences of tax audits, eggshell audits, criminal tax investigations, and criminal tax charges. However, it is just as important that you make the right selection. Therefore, you should consider some of the critical factors of effective representation provided below when determining where to go for your criminal tax defense needs.
Experience
Before beginning a relationship with a criminal tax attorney, you will want to ensure that they have the requisite history dealing with similar cases to what you are facing. Not every lawyer has the same experience advocating for clients in at both the tax preparation stage and the court room. It is important that the counsel on whom you rely has experience dealing with government agents such as IRS investigators to draw on to better your situation.
Priorities
The practice of tax law is about more than just dollars and cents. An effective criminal tax attorney will have an eye on how their client’s situation is affecting them personally and professionally. At the Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing, we value our clients’ liberty, financial growth, and emotional well-being above all else and will strive to make sure that all of your priorities are addressed throughout the course of the representation that we provide.
Range of Services
When you are building a relationship with your tax law representative, you will want them to be able to address both your immediate concerns as well as your long-term goals and any future issues that may pop up along the way. However, many criminal tax defense firms specialize in one or two areas and do not provide other services. This can leave clients having to go out and start the process all over again. Even after you find someone else who can help you with a new issue, you will have to go through your entire history again. This can be both time-consuming and ultimately more costly.
This is not the case when you come to the Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing for your criminal tax defense needs. Our Dual Licensed Tax Attorneys and CPAs bring a circumspect approach to the tax law representation that we provide so that our clients know that they can get whatever they need from one trusted source.
Location
There are a few different reasons why you may find it beneficial to have your Criminal Tax Attorney close to you geographically. Criminal tax issues may require a defendant’s representation to arrive by their side with little to no notice to defend them against overly aggressive federal or state agents. This may be particularly important in the case of an office or field audit, or if you are facing arrest for criminal tax charges. If you are dealing with state tax issues, you will want representation that is already well familiar with the intricacies of the local tax code so that you don’t have to spend money on the time they need to get caught up to speed.
Our Dual Licensed Tax Attorneys and CPAs practice at several offices located conveniently throughout the west coast, including Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Panorama City, Oxnard, Carlsbad, San Diego, Bakersfield, San Jose, San Francisco, Oakland, and Sacramento. This allows us to provide our clients with the in-person representation that their case may require from time to time without delay, inconvenience, or additional expense.
Let the Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing Defend You Against Criminal Tax Charges
We know that facing a criminal tax investigation can be harrowing for a client. At a fundamental level, the focus of our efforts always is to prevent a referral of the case for criminal investigation. To do that, we always obtain as much knowledge as possible about our client and his financial activities; we stay attuned to the revenue agent’s actions and the focus of the investigation, and we are always on the lookout to see when or if cooperation with the revenue agent fits our client’s best interests. Our experience has taught us that a good outcome will not ultimately be measured just in dollars and cents; it will be measured by whether our client retains his liberty.
The subject of a completed CID investigation has a 90% probability of being criminally charged and, if charged, a similar probability of being convicted. The fallout of tax investigation and conviction extends beyond the punishment metered out in the criminal case. Adverse collateral consequences typically result merely from being the subject of a CID criminal investigation, and significant legal disabilities always result from criminal conviction—whether by plea or after trial. The stigma of being under IRS criminal tax investigation is difficult to discount. When you contact the Dual Licensed Criminal Tax Defense Attorneys and CPAs at the Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing, you get a dedicated, resourceful partner in your pursuit of vindication for the tax crimes you’ve been accused of committing. To learn more about our services, call us today at (800) 681-1295 or schedule a reduced rate initial consultation online here.