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A Tax Evasion Chapter Ends As IRS Gets Tough

Expert Author Michael Rozbruch

After the deal almost fell apart, the Swiss parliament and Swiss bank UBS agree to provide data to the IRS, finally collapsing the world's most famous tax shelter.

With an historic deal on the brink of collapse, the Swiss parliament has approved the release of banking data to the Internal Revenue Service.

The deal, brokered in the wake of a Department of Justice investigation of Swiss banking giant UBS, pierces the Swiss banking veil and destroys a tax shelter so famous it has become a common pop-culture reference.

Now, UBS is in position to release the details of 4,450 offshore account holders suspected of evading U.S. income taxes.

For UBS, the decision to release the data came with significant arm-twisting from the U.S. government. In February 2009, UBS agreed to pay the U.S. government $780 million in order to put an end to criminal charges alleging the bank helped U.S. clients evade taxes.

For U.S. taxpayers engaged in tax evasion, the agreement with UBS and the Swiss government should come as startling news.

What was once considered an impenetrable veil -- a tax shelter so strong it had survived two World Wars and an international banking crisis -- is no more.

The IRS will soon obtain data and information on U.S. taxpayers who have evaded taxes for years, even decades. So if you have delinquent tax returns, this concerns you.

While it's true that Swiss banks tended to be the tax shelter of choice for the wealthiest of U.S. taxpayers, the UBS deal is just as important to those evading taxes through other means.

In short, the U.S. government's success in piercing the Swiss banking veil should prove finally that no tax shelter is safe.

Indeed, previous actions from the IRS support that conclusion.

Before the Swiss agreement, the U.S. government brokered a deal with the major credit card companies to provide information on clients who were linking their credit cards to offshore bank accounts, primarily in the Caribbean. At the time, a common tax-avoidance scheme was to funnel money into a Caribbean account, then use it to pay credit card bills full of purchases made in the United States.

The tax evaders who employed this scheme either came forward during the amnesty period or were prosecuted, just as the UBS account holders likely will be.

With a record deficit and a slow economic recovery, the federal government has made tax collection and enforcement a top priority. This year, the U.S. Congress approved a record $5.5 billion enforcement budget for the IRS.

That means the IRS will have even more agents this year to audit taxpayers and investigate tax cheats -- part of a three-year trend of putting more revenue officers on the streets.

So let's summarize:

The IRS stopped the use of credit cards linked to offshore accounts.

The U.S. Department of Justice pierced the Swiss banking veil.

Tax Resolution Services is a team of expert tax attorneys, CPAs, and Certified Tax Resolution Specialists who are here to help your IRS tax problems so that you can get the IRS tax relief you need. Give us a call today at 1-866-IRS-PROBLEMS for a free, no-risk tax resolution consultation or visit www.taxresolution.com .

Michael Rozbruch, one of the nation's leading tax experts, is a Certified Tax Resolution Specialist (CTRS), licensed CPA in the state of Maryland and the founder of Tax Resolution Services. He teams up with an expert staff of tax attorneys, CPAs, and tax relief professionals to help individuals and small businesses solve their IRS problems with tax liens, unfiled back taxes, offers in compromise, wage levies, tax relief, delinquent returns, tax debt installment plans, bankruptcy and protecting an innocent spouse from unfair tax burdens. Michael also shares valuable tax advice and information in his blog- Tax Resolution University

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