October 24, 2008

Tax Court Prepares for IRS Whistleblower Cases by Adopting New Proposed Amendments to Rules of Practice and Procedure

One of the hallmarks of the new IRS Whistleblower Rewards Program is that whistleblowers have an enforceable right to rewards, and can appeal the IRS Whistleblower Office's rewards decisions to the U.S. Tax Court.

The Tax Court has taken a step forward in issuing new proposed amendments to its Rules of Practice and Procedure to prepare for IRS whistleblower cases. The amendments are reprinted below.

A critical improvement is that the Tax Court has listened to concerns expressed by whistleblower attorneys about the need to allow whistleblowers to proceed "anonymously" and not reveal their identity publicly. The explanation of New Rule 340 would allow anonymous filings to endeavor to preserve confidentiality:

"Pursuant to section 7461(b)(1), the Court may issue protective orders, upon motion by a party or any other person and for good cause shown, to prevent or restrict the disclosure of trade secrets and other information. See Tax Court Rule 103(a). As result of this authority, in appropriate cases, the Court may permit a petitioner to proceed anonymously and seal the record in that case. See, e.g., Anonymous v. Commissioner, 127 T.C. 89 (2006). The Court contemplates that these generally applicable statutory provisions, Rule 103, and related case law, while they do not require the Court's records in all whistleblower actions to be sealed or require the Court to permit all petitioners in those cases to proceed anonymously, do provide authority for the Court to allow a petitioner to proceed anonymously and to seal the record when appropriate in whistleblower actions."

The full text is as follows:

Continue reading "Tax Court Prepares for IRS Whistleblower Cases by Adopting New Proposed Amendments to Rules of Practice and Procedure " »

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October 23, 2008

IRS Addresses Deductibility of Payments by Defendants to Settle False Claims Act Cases

In our former life as lawyers defending False Claims Act cases, our defendant clients had to consider whether the payments made to settle qui tam cases under the False Claims Act were deductible for tax purposes, and to what extent.

The IRS recently issued a paper on the subject: whether a defendant's payment to the Department of Justice to resolve False Claims Act allegations is "deductible in its entirety as a section 162(a) ordinary and necessary business expense, or includes non-deductible penalty amounts under section 162(f)."

This paper, LMSB-4-0908-045, is reproduced below:

Continue reading "IRS Addresses Deductibility of Payments by Defendants to Settle False Claims Act Cases" »

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October 10, 2008

With Wall Street Bailout, Whistleblowers to Reveal Fraud and Abuses Through IRS Whistleblower Claims and Qui Tam False Claims Act Cases?

Will the IRS Whistleblower Program and the False Claims Act be powerful weapons in redressing the fraud and abuse that led to the current financial crisis--and to the future fraud and abuse that is certain to target the "bailout" billions of taxpayer funds?

Fraud and abuse have never been in short supply. The ongoing financial crisis points to staggering amounts of past financial abuses that now threaten to wipe out Americans' savings, if not undermine the world economy.

Now, the federal government's stated plans to spend hundreds of billions of taxpayer funds for the "bailout"--largely because of the lack of past oversight--will create countless opportunities for more fraud against the taxpayers.

In the Savings and Loan debacle, a judge asked, "Where were the lawyers?" Where were those who could have spoken out and stopped those abuses before they caused ruinous harm?

Today, the toxic loans, collateralized debt obligations, and credit default swaps that infect our financial system raise a broader question: how many persons failed to speak out to try to stop their corrupting misuse?

Scoundrels depend on silence from others while they loot the public fisc. To stop the looting, Americans (and others) must stand up, and speak up.

Whistleblowers will be essential to minimizing the theft of the bailout billions, through the IRS Whistleblower Program and the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act, on which we have written extensively. Each allows private citizen whistleblowers to help the government recover taxpayer funds, and rewards the whistleblowers with what is typically 15-30% of the funds recovered.

It will be justice to see those whistleblowers courageous enough to speak up share in the government's recovery of the billions already lost, and the billions more of taxpayer funds that are about to be spent.

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