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September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns | International Tax Lawyer & Attorney News

On September 10, 2018, the IRS Large Business and International division (“LB&I”) announced the creation of another five compliance campaigns. Let’s explore in more depth these September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns.

September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Background Information

Since January of 2017, the IRS has been regularly adding more and more compliance campaigns. The compliance campaigns were created by the LB&I after extensive planning concerning the restructuring of its compliance enforcement activities. The IRS solution to the then existing enforcement problems was to move towards issue-based examinations and a compliance campaign process in which the IRS itself decides which compliance issues that present risk require a response in the form of one or multiple treatment streams to achieve compliance objectives. The idea is to concentrate the IRS resources where they are most need – i.e. where there is a substantial risk of tax noncompliance.

The new campaigns have been coming in batches. The IRS announced the initial batch of thirteen campaigns on January 31, 2017. Then, the IRS added another eleven campaigns in November of 2017, five in March of 2018, six in May of 2018 and five in July of 2018. The new campaigns announced on September 10, 2018, brings the total number of campaigns to forty five as of that date.

It is important to point out that the tax reform that passed on December 22, 2017, may impact some of these existing campaigns.

Five New September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns

Here are the new September 2018 IRS Compliance campaigns that should be added to the forty campaigns that were announced prior to that date: IRC Section 199 – Claims Risk Review, Syndicated Conservation Easement Transactions, Foreign Base Company Sales Income – Manufacturing Branch Rules, Form 1120-F Interest Expense & Home Office Expense and Individuals Employed by Foreign Governments & International Organizations. All of these campaigns were selected by the IRS through LB&I data analysis and suggestions from IRS employees.

September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns: IRC Section 199 – Claims Risk Review

Public Law 115-97 repealed the Domestic Production Activity Deduction (“DPAD”) for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017. This campaign addresses all business entities that may file a claim for additional DPAD under IRC Section 199. The campaign objective is to ensure taxpayer compliance with the requirements of IRC Section 199 through a claim risk review assessment and issue-based examinations of claims with the greatest compliance risk.

September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Syndicated Conservation Easement Transactions

The IRS issued Notice 2017-10, designating specific syndicated conservation easement transactions as listed transactions requiring disclosure statements by both investors and material advisors. This campaign is intended to encourage taxpayer compliance and ensure consistent treatment of similarly situated taxpayers by ensuring the easement contributions meet the legal requirements for a deduction, and the fair market values are accurate. The initial treatment stream is issue-based examinations. Other treatment streams will be considered as the campaign progresses.

September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Manufacturing Branch Rules for Foreign Base Company Sales Income

In general, foreign base company sales income (“FBCSI”) does not include income of a controlled foreign corporation (“CFC”) derived in connection with the sale of personal property manufactured by such a corporation. There is an exception to this general rule. If a CFC manufactures property through a branch outside its country of incorporation, the manufacturing branch may be treated as a separate, wholly owned subsidiary of the CFC for the purposes of computing the CFC’s FBCSI, which may result in a subpart F inclusion to the US shareholder(s) of the CFC.

The goal of this campaign is to identify and select for examination returns of US shareholders of CFCs that may have underreported subpart F income based on certain interpretations of the manufacturing branch rules. The treatment stream for the campaign will be issue-based examinations.

September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns: 1120-F Interest Expense & Home Office Expense

Two of the largest deductions claimed on Form1120-F (US Income Tax Return of a Foreign Corporation) are interest expenses and home office expense. Treasury Regulation Section 1.882-5 provides a formula to determine the interest expense of a foreign corporation that is allocable to their effectively connected income. The amount of interest expense deductions determined under Treasury Regulation Section 1.882-5 can be substantial.

Similarly, Treasury Regulation Section 1.861-8 governs the amount of Home Office expense deductions allocated to effectively connected income. Through its data analyses, the IRS noted that Home Office Expense allocations have been material amounts compared to the total deductions taken by a foreign corporation.

This IRS campaign addresses both of these Form 1120–F deductions. The campaign compliance strategy includes the identification of aggressive positions in these areas, such as the use of apportionment factors that may not attribute the proper amount of expenses to the calculation of effectively connected income. The goal of this campaign is to increase taxpayer compliance with the interest expense rules of Treasury Regulation Section 1.882-5 and the Home Office expense allocation rules of Treasury Regulation Section 1.861-8. The treatment stream for this campaign is harsh – issue-based examinations only.

September 2018 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Individuals Employed by Foreign Governments & International Organizations

Foreign embassies, foreign consular offices and international organizations operating in the United States are not required to withhold federal income and social security taxes from their employees’ compensation nor are they required to file information reports with the Internal Revenue Service. This lack of withholding and reporting often results in unreported income, erroneous deductions and credits, and failure to pay income and Social Security taxes, because some individuals working at foreign embassies, foreign consular offices, and various international organizations may not be reporting compensation or may be reporting it incorrectly.

This campaign will focus on outreach and education by partnering with the Department of State’s Office of Foreign Missions to inform employees of foreign embassies, consular offices and international organizations. The IRS will also address noncompliance in this area by issuing soft letters and conducting examinations.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Professional Tax Help

If you have been contacted by the IRS as part of any of its campaigns, you should contact Sherayzen Law Office for professional help. We have helped hundreds of US taxpayers around the world with their US tax compliance issues, and we can help you!

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!

Guilty Plea for Failure to Report Income from Undeclared UBS Account

On October 20, 2014, the Justice Department and the IRS announced that Menashe Cohen pleaded guilty in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Hampshire to filing a false federal income tax return for tax year 2009. In addition, Mr. Cohen has agreed to resolve his civil liability for failure to report his financial interest in the undeclared UBS account on a FBAR by paying a 50 percent civil penalty to the IRS based on the high balance of his ownership of the undeclared UBS account.

Main Facts of the Case

According to court documents, Mr. Cohen, an oriental carpet dealer, and his sister maintained an undeclared UBS account in Switzerland that had a balance of approximately $1.3 million. Mr. Cohen also maintained bank accounts in Israel and in Jersey, a British Crown dependency located in the Channel Islands off the coast of Normandy, France. It appears that the defendant did report the Israeli and Jersey account on his 2009 FBAR, but he failed to report his financial interest in the undeclared UBS account in Switzerland. In total, for tax years 2006 through 2009, Cohen failed to report approximately $170,000 in income earned from offshore bank accounts.

The actual guilty plea, however, is related only to the 2009 tax return where Mr. Cohen reported only $350 in interest income, when in fact he had received approximately $66,500 in interest from his undeclared UBS account.

Mr. Cohen faces a statutory potential maximum sentence of three years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000 at his January 26, 2015, sentencing.

Case Highlights

Mr. Cohen’s case is actually quite troubling because it involves a criminal pursuit of an owner with an undeclared UBS account even though many of the usual criminal facts are not present in the case.

There was no complex tax planning with an intention to conceal the ownership of the undeclared UBS account. The balance on the undeclared UBS account is on the milder side ($1.3 million is not a small amount of money, but the criminal cases tend to concentrate in the amount higher than $3 million); in this case, half of the undeclared UBS account was not even owned by Mr. Cohen, but his sister. Finally, the under-reported amount of interest from the undeclared UBS account was not such a large amount as to normally warrant criminal prosecution.

It appears that two factors steered this case toward criminal prosecution. First, partial FBAR reporting – the fact that Mr. Cohen reported two out of three accounts gave rise to the inference that he acted willfully with respect to his undeclared UBS account.

Second, it appears that the under-reporting of income might have involved all three accounts, not just the undeclared UBS account. If this was the case, then it might have a been a contributory factor in favor of the prosecution as well.

The Importance of the Case to Other Taxpayers With Undeclared Foreign Accounts

Mr. Cohen’s case with respect to his undeclared UBS account contains a strong warning to other US taxpayers with undeclared foreign accounts – it appears that the IRS is now willing to prosecute cases involving lower dollar amounts than in the past. While an undeclared UBS account has its special negative connotations in US tax enforcement, it does appear that there is a growing trend toward criminal prosecution of under-reported foreign income as long as the IRS is comfortable with being able to establish willfulness with respect to FBAR non-reporting.

This means that the taxpayers with balances under $1 million on their undeclared foreign accounts should not take the risk of criminal prosecution lightly. The exact probability of a criminal prosecution should be determined by an international tax lawyer based on the particular facts of a taxpayer’s case.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Professional Help with the Voluntary Disclosure of Your Foreign Accounts

If you have undeclared foreign accounts, you should contact Sherayzen Law Office for legal and tax help. We are a team of highly experienced tax professionals who will thoroughly analyze, determine the proper path of your voluntary disclosure, and prepare all of the necessary legal and tax documents. Once your voluntary disclosure is filed, our international tax firm will be there to defend your case against the IRS.

Contact Us Now to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation.