WASHINGTON (Associated Press) — Some 7,500 international tax dodgers have applied for
an amnesty program that promises no jail time and reduced penalties for
tax cheats who come forward, the Internal Revenue Service announced
Wednesday.
The tax dodgers were hiding money in more than 70
countries and on every continent except Antarctica. Accounts ranged
from just over $10,000 to more than $100 million.
Response to the program has been unprecedented, IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman said.
"The whole idea of this program was to get people in and get them on the right side of the law," Shulman said.
The
IRS long has had a policy that certain tax evaders who come forward
before they are contacted by the agency usually can avoid jail time as
long as they agree to pay back taxes, interest and hefty penalties.
Drug dealers and money launderers need not apply. But if the money was
earned legally, tax evaders can usually avoid criminal prosecution.
Fewer
than 100 people apply for the program in a typical year, in part
because the penalties can far exceed the value of the hidden account,
depending on how long the account holder has evaded U.S. taxes.
In
March, the IRS began a six-month amnesty program that sweetened the
offer with reduced penalties for people with undeclared assets. The
program was extended once, until Thursday. Shulman said it will not be
extended again.
The program is part of a larger effort by the
Obama administration to crack down on Americans who evade U.S. taxes by
hiding assets in overseas accounts. In August, the U.S. and Switzerland
resolved a court case in which Swiss banking giant UBS AG agreed to
turn over details on 4,450 accounts suspected of holding undeclared
assets from American customers.
Shulman said the IRS is stepping
up efforts to track the flow of illicit money from Europe to Asia,
Central America and the Caribbean. The agency is also opening new
offices in Beijing, Panama City and Sydney to pursue criminal cases.
Staffing is being increased at other offices, he said.
Shulman
said the IRS is still processing applications for the amnesty program.
It is too early to know how much money will be recovered, he said.
Shulman
said accounts included money from inheritances, profits skimmed from
U.S. companies and profits earned overseas. Some of the tax cheats had
single accounts while others had multiple accounts in different
countries. Some set up corporations to make it harder to identify them,
he said.
"These taxpayers are now back in the U.S. tax system," Shulman said.
Shulman
said the IRS will use information from the tax cheats who have come
forward to go after bankers and tax advisers who helped them hide
assets. The IRS is prohibited by law from disclosing the identities of
the tax cheats unless criminal charges are filed.
Tax advisers
have said the program, combined with the high-profile UBS case, has
generated a lot of calls from nervous tax dodgers. Shulman said
applications steadily picked up as the latest deadline approached.
Sen.
Carl Levin, D-Mich., applauded the IRS program but said Congress needs
to do more to crack down on international tax dodgers. Levin has worked
on the issue as chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations. He estimated the U.S. loses $100 billion a year in tax
revenue because of international tax cheats.
At least one advocacy group was unimpressed with the results of the IRS program.
"The
IRS needs to put away the celebratory firecrackers," said Dean Zerbe,
special counsel for the National Whistleblowers Center. "The amnesty
program has gotten at best a thimble of the offshore tax cheats."
The
center is unhappy with the way the IRS and the Justice Department
handled the case of UBS whistleblower Bradley Birkenfeld. In August,
Birkenfeld was sentenced to more than three years in federal prison,
even though prosecutors said the information he provided was crucial to
the UBS case.
Prosecutors gave the 44-year-old U.S. citizen
credit for voluntarily disclosing illegal tactics by Swiss banking
giant UBS AG and others. But they said Birkenfeld initially refused to
confess his own misconduct and hoped to collect a cash reward under
U.S. whistleblower laws.
Zerbe's law firm represents Birkenfeld in his claim for a reward from the IRS.
October 14, 2009 3:36 PM
By Stephen Ohlemacher
The Associated Press
PDF version of article
|