Tax Evasion is one of the more common white collar crimes charged in federal court. If you, or your company, are under investigation by the criminal division of the IRS, you need to reach out to competent tax evasion attorneys to protect your interests. The tax evasion attorneys at Odom, Davis & Hobson have an active practice defending clients in a variety of criminal tax matters.
Tax evasion is criminalized under 26 U.S.C. § 7201 of the Internal Revenue Code. This section makes it a criminal act to:
Willfully attempt in any manner to evade or defeat any tax imposed by this title or the payment thereof.
Tax evasion is a felony offense that carries a maximum term of imprisonment of 5 years per count and a fine up to $250,000 for individuals and $500,000 for corporations. These fines are in addition to any taxes owed for the taxable year.
The tax evasion statute outlines two separate avenues for prosecution: 1) attempting to evade the assessment of taxes and 2) attempting to evade the payment of a tax. The difference in the two methods of prosecution comes down to timing. Overt acts which occur before taxes have been assessed will fall under the “assessment” theory. Overt acts which occur after taxes have been assessed will fall under the “payment” theory.
This concept is illustrated by the following example. Let’s assume a taxpayer makes $1,000,000 in a business transaction. Instead of placing that profit in his business account in the United States, the owner deposits the check in an account located in the Seychelles Islands. If he does not declare that income to the IRS, he has committed two offenses – filing a false return and attempting to evade the assessment of his taxes.
Let’s change the facts slightly. Instead of depositing the money in the Seychelles Islands, the taxpayer deposits the money into his United States account. He then accurately declares the income to the IRS. The IRS assesses his tax liability, but the owner fails to make payments to the government. Knowing the IRS is going to come for their payments, the owner then moves the balance of his accounts to a bank account located in the Seychelles Islands. Under this scenario, the owner has not filed a false return or attempted to evade the assessment of taxes. He has attempted to evade the payment of a tax by moving the funds out of the IRS’ reach.
It is important to note that it is not required that the government prove the tax had been assessed prior to the overt act for attempted evasion of payment. If a defendant fails to file a tax return, the tax deficiency will occur by operation of law.
Below is an elemental breakdown of the two forms of tax evasion.
Crimnal Tax Evasion Attorneys – Evasion of Assessment
The following elements outline what the government must prove to convict a taxpayer for attempting to evade the assessment of a tax:
- An attempt to evade or defeat a tax or payment of tax;
- Additional tax due and owing; and
- Willfulness
Attempting to Evade Assessment Element
This element requires proof of an affirmative act by the taxpayer for the purpose of attempting to evade or defeat the assessment of a tax. Passive neglect of a statutory duty is insufficient to meet this element. The following are common examples of overt acts of evasion in federal prosecutions:
- Filing a false return or false amended return
- Failure to file a return plus an overt act of evasion
Prosecution under this prong is guided by the Supreme Court’s decision in Spies v. United States. I have written an article dedicated to this subject that you can review here. Generally speaking, failing to file a return alone cannot support a conviction for tax evasion under the assessment prong. The government is required to show a failure to file plus a separate overt act of evasion. Some examples of these overt acts include: keeping two sets of books, making false invoices, concealing sources of income, making transactions outside the normal recording process, making false statements to federal agents relating to finances, consistent patterns of overstating deductions, concealing banks accounts offshore, and structuring cash transactions.
Structuring is its own separate offense under Title 31 of the United States Code. Structuring involves breaking down a large transaction into parts that will not trigger the reporting requirements of the Bank Secrecy Act. The main reporting requirement is triggered when a cash transaction has a total value of $10,000 or more. If multiple transactions are found for $9,995, the government can use that evidence for criminal charges under either the structuring statute or as an overt act for evasion.
It is important to note that the language “for the purpose of evading” has been broadly construed by the Courts of Appeals. A taxpayer cannot defend himself against tax evasion by merely showing a legitimate purpose for the overt act. If attempting to evade government assessment plays any role in the motive, the government can meet this element of the offense.
Tax Due and Owing Element
The government must prove the existence of a tax deficiency. This concept is probably best illustrated with an example. If a taxpayer moves substantial money overseas in February, and then files a return disregarding those funds, it would appear the taxpayer attempted to evade the assessment of taxes. If those funds were taxable income to the criminal tax defendant, it would be a clear case of tax evasion. However, if the funds were a gift from the defendant’s father, prosecuting the defendant for evasion would be inappropriate.
Gifts are not taxable to the receiver. The taxpayer may have moved the money to hide it from the IRS, but the overt act did not change the tax liability. Including those monies in his tax return would not change the tax due and owing. There would be no material loss to the government based on the taxpayer’s bank transfer. In this instance, the government could not meet this element of tax evasion.
It is important to note that this element is met when the overt act takes place. A criminal tax defendant cannot carry back net operating losses to eliminate the tax due and owing for a prior year.
Willfulness
This element is important in all criminal tax cases. Willfulness is analyzed thoroughly in a prior article that can be found here. In general, the government must prove the defendant knew of the legal duty required by the tax code and still chose to violate that duty. Ignorance of the tax code provides fertile ground for defensive theories in all criminal tax cases. This is true even if the defendant’s belief is entirely unreasonable.
Statute of Limitations
The tax evasion statute carries a six-year statute of limitations. The statute of limitations begins to run from the date the last affirmative act took place or the statutory date of the return, whichever is later.
Criminal Tax Evasion Attorneys – Evasion of Payment
The following elements show what the government must prove to convict a taxpayer under the payment theory:
- An attempt to evade or defeat the payment of the tax;
- An additional tax due and owing; and,
- Willfulness
The only element that separates tax evasion under the assessment and payment theories is the acts required to meet the “attempt to evade” element. Thus, we will only discuss the attempt to evade payment element in this section.
Attempting to Evade Payment Element
An affirmative act under this prong of the tax evasion statute usually involves removing/concealing assets from the IRS. Simply refusing to pay a tax debt is not an attempt to evade the payment of taxes. An overt act must be taken with the purpose of thwarting the collection efforts of the IRS.
The following lists common courses of conduct that meet the attempting to evade payment element:
- Concealing bank accounts in the name of others
- Placing other assets in the name of others
- False statements to agents relating to the payment
- Conducting all personal expenses in cash
The statute of limitations is six years for all tax evasion theories.
Odom, Davis & Hobson – Tax Evasion Attorneys
Our firm focuses on representing clients charged with, or under investigation for, a variety of criminal tax matters. Tax evasion is one of the more common statutes used by the government in criminal litigation. This offense overlaps greatly with tax fraud in the strategic defenses under the willfulness element and United States v. Cheek. It also provides unique defenses by requiring the government to prove an actual tax deficiency. This element is not present in classic tax fraud and creates an avenue for challenging the government’s case through creative accounting.
We have represented numerous clients under investigation for tax evasion, and have been successful moving these cases back into the civil division of the IRS. We take an aggressive approach with all of our clients. This approach requires a detailed review of the business, accurate tax calculations for the years in question, and laying out the issues in the government’s case early. Our goal in any criminal investigation is to divert the case back to the civil division and end the investigation before it leads to criminal charges.
If you are under investigation by the criminal investigations division of the IRS, or currently under criminal indictment, contact our firm. We are glad to discuss the case and lay out your options.
Below are a list of articles written by our tax evasion attorneys at Odom, Davis & Hobson:
1. The Failure of Constitutional challenges to the Federal Income Tax
2. The Distrust of Foreign Accounts – FBAR and Criminal Tax
3. Admit the Crime or Lose the Deduction
4. Methods to the Madness – Calculating Tax Deficiency
5. Spies v. United States – When Failure to File Becomes Tax Evasion
6. Criminal Tax Sentencing Statistics for 2017
7. The IRS Whistleblower Statute – Informant Awards
8. Criminal Tax Sentencing: Eye on the Tax Loss
9. Curtailing Judicial Discretion – Federal Sentencing (Part One)
10. Curtailing Judicial Discretion – Federal Sentencing (Part Two)
11. SCOTUS Narrows Obstruction in Criminal Tax Cases
12. IRS Investigations into the Crypto Market
13. New Kid on the Block: Criminal Tax and the Crypto Market
14. Cheek v. United States – Ignorance as Defense to Tax Fraud
15. Anatomy of a Criminal Tax Case: Part One
16. Anatomy of a Criminal Tax Case: Part Two
17. Double Jeopardy and Criminal Tax Litigation
19. Double Jeopardy and Criminal Tax
21. Statute of Limitations and Criminal Tax
22. IRS Guidance on Crypto Transactions – Part One
23. IRS Guidance on Crypto Transactions – Part Two
24.US Tax Program for Swiss Banks
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