May 27, 2010

Offshore Tax Evasion Scheme to Defraud IRS Alleged in Indictment of Miami Beach Developers

A high priority for IRS Whistleblower cases is the abuse of offshore "tax havens" or offshore financial centers to conceal income from the IRS that is subject to U.S. taxation. Over drinks in Miami Beach recently with IRS agents who worked the massive UBS matter, I discussed some of the recent announced cases the IRS has made involving offshore abuses.

Using shell corporations and "nominee" entities established in the Cayman Islands, Switzerland, or a host of other countries that market "secrecy," those looking to conceal income from the IRS, or assets from potential creditors, have made offshore tax havens a booming business.

An interesting example of allegations of offshore tax violations was described in the Justice Department's announcement yesterday of the indictment of two Miami Beach hotel developers. Mauricio Cohen Assor and his son, Leon Cohen-Levy. They were charged with conspiring to defraud the United States and filing false tax returns. The government alleged as follows:

According to court documents, the two men and their co-conspirators used nominees and shell companies formed in tax haven jurisdictions, including the Bahamas, the British Virgin Islands, Panama, Liechtenstein and Switzerland to conceal their assets and income from the IRS. In order to further conceal their assets and income from the IRS, court documents state the men also provided false and forged documents to banks, opened bank accounts in the name of nominees, titled their personal residences and luxury vehicles in the name of shell companies, filed false and fraudulent tax returns, failed to file other tax returns, suborned perjury in a civil matter pending before the New York Supreme Court by directing individuals to testify falsely under oath, and induced other individuals to make false statements to federal law enforcement agents.

Both defendants are permanent resident aliens who, in 2000, received approximately $33 million from the sale of the New York Flatotel, according to the government. They transferred the proceeds using various Swiss bank accounts in the names of foreign nominee entities, including at least one "bearer share" corporation.

When bearer shares are used, the corporation's records do not list its owners, as the owners are whoever has physical possession of the stock certificates. As IRS Special Agent Scott Johnson testified by affidavit, "[b]earer share corporations are often used to hide the true ownership of assets because ownership records are not maintained and nominee officers and directors are often used to control the affairs of the corporation.'

Later, the defendants allegedly transferred the funds to accounts of nominee companies at that bank's New York location, and later to the escrow account of a Florida attorney. The government also alleged that defendants used the money to "fund a luxury lifestyle for themselves and for their family members."

Offshore tax abuse remains a great priority of the IRS, and thus is a major focus of many IRS Whistleblower claims. The new IRS Whistleblower Program recognizes that whistleblowers have an enforceable right to 15-30% of what the IRS recovers based on information whistleblowers provide.

The government's full press release is below:

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May 15, 2010

More Details of UBS Whistleblower Birkenfeld's Prosecution Explained in Washington Post

The Sunday, May 15, 2010 Washington Post will include more details on a perplexing question we have written about: how did UBS whistleblower Bradley Birkenfeld get himself prosecuted for a felony, and earn a prison sentence, while he sought to become an IRS whistleblower?

The story by David S. Hilzenrath explains more of the "dance" between Birkenfeld and prosecutors as he apparently partially told the government what he knew about wrongdoing at UBS.

Birkenfeld blew an opportunity to avoid prosecution for his own crimes when he failed to disclose them to the government, according to his sentencing transcript.

An obvious fact most critics of his prosecution seem to miss is that neither Birkenfeld nor his attorneys disputed the prosecutor's statements at his sentencing that Birkenfeld probably would have avoided any prosecution had he simply told the whole truth to prosecutors. His later protests ring hollow because--when it mattered most--he failed to dispute the damning evidence that demanded his prosecution.

By concealing his own wrongdoing, Birkenfeld apparently also allowed his former client Igor Olenicoff to escape a prison term when the government negotiated probation for him.

I represent many IRS whistleblowers--some with knowledge of tax violations larger than the more than $700 million that UBS agreed to pay the IRS--and yet I remain baffled why Birkenfeld simply did not disclose his own wrongdoing up front.

As the prosecutor acknowledged, Birkenfeld could probably have walked away a free man--and a considerably richer man with the IRS whistleblower rewards--had he simply told the whole truth.

Then again, in his "60 Minutes" interview Birkenfeld had no good explanation why he was carrying diamonds into the country in a toothpaste tube--even as he tried to convince the world of points he refused to make at his own sentencing.

Those facts say something about the credibility of his protests that the "sky is falling" for IRS whistleblowers. It is not falling, at least for the honest IRS whistleblowers willing to tell the whole truth. IRS whistleblowers who tell the truth need not fear, simply because Birkenfeld had the bad judgment to withhold the truth.

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May 4, 2010

Should SEC Whistleblowers Have Right to Share in Recoveries That They Cause?

Congress is at a crossroads in deciding whether there will be a meaningful SEC Whistleblower Program--for the first time.

At this morning's Offshore Alert conference in Miami, we heard from the SEC Chair's Senior Advisor Stephen Cohen on this subject, as well as insight from IRS Whistleblower Office Director Steve Whitlock on how the IRS Whistleblower Program is now designed to encourage whistleblower claims.

As we have observed previously about the bills that would create an SEC Whistleblower program, past experience shows that an enforceable right to a meaningful reward is essential to cause whistleblowers to come forward.

The SEC apparently resists guaranteeing whistleblowers a minimum percentage of dollars recovered, as evidenced by the House version of the bill that lacks this feature. The SEC’s Steve Cohen explained that the SEC does not wish to commit funds that might otherwise go to harmed investors. He nonetheless contended that the SEC’s proposal may be better for whistleblowers because it pays from a special fund designated for this purpose, based on sanctions imposed, not collected.

Compare the experiences of the Justice Department and the IRS, however. When each had whistleblower statutes that provided no meaningful right to a reward, whistleblower claims were small and few. We have written extensively about the dramatic successes of the False Claims Act since its rewards increased to meaningful levels in 1986.

Likewise, IRS Whistleblower Office Director Steve Whitlock described again today how large whistleblower claims have exploded since December 2006, when Congress doubled rewards to whistleblowers to 15-30%, and created an enforceable right to those rewards.

History proves that most whistleblowers simply will remain silent, without a right to meaningful rewards. The SEC will be dividing a small pie unless Congress again embraces this principle.

To protect investors, those with information about fraud must have every incentive to speak up--as early as possible--and to be heard. The Madoff debacle proved that point.

In our experience in representing whistleblowers in the financial industry, the Senate’s version of the SEC whistleblower changes is highly preferable. It creates a right to awards of 10-30%.

There are still glaring deficiencies, such as the provisions excluding auditors who have tried unsuccessfully to call attention to fraud within the organizations and auditing firms involved. It will be an interesting next few weeks as Congress debates the final result.

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