I participated in a panel at the Texas State Bar Advanced Tax Law Seminar,
here. The topic was the offshore voluntary disclosure programs (OVDP and Streamlined). Dan is a major player with the IRS in these initiatives. Chad is a major player from the private bar. Chad's bio is
here. The written presentations provided attendees is attached
here, consisting of an outline by Chad Muller and Jack Townsend and an IRS Powerpoint which was presented by Dan Price during the panel presentation. [Note to readers: the update on 11/3/15 was providing a download link for the pdf of the presentations (both in a single pdf). If you download the pdf, you can work your way around the pdf with Acrobat's bookmark feature; if the bookmarks do not show on the left side, hit
and that should show the bookmarks.]
Here are some major points that I thought readers may be interested in. On some of these points, I expand with reasonable inferences from what was actually said. Anything said below should not be attributed to Dan unless I specifically attribute it to him.
1. OVDP is for the willful taxpayer. For that type of taxpayer, the inside OVDP penalties are a pretty good deal (relative to the panoply of penalties that might otherwise apply. Further, it is not just the willful taxpayer but the willful taxpayer who would be at risk of criminal prosecution or the devotion of IRS resources to investigate and impose the significant related income tax penalties and FBAR penalties. Thus, I infer, it is possible that there are some willful taxpayers who may not be good candidates for OVDP because they are at fairly low risk. For example, a taxpayer whose offshore income never exceeded $500 per year and tax never exceeded $150 per year. Although other factors must be considered, that profile of taxpayer is not at material risk on either count. That does not mean that other persons who are somewhere beyond the mid-point on the spectrum from nonwillful to willful should do OVDP. The facts and circumstances might show that, even though potentially willful, there are other factors that might mitigate against full bore penalties if the taxpayer does not join OVDP.
2. The IRS encourages nonwillful taxpayers to do streamlined if they otherwise qualify. Although there will be no closing agreement at the end and the willful certification and narrative will be reviewed, if the narrative supports the certification and there is no indication that the certification is incorrect, it is not likely to be scheduled for audit. However, other general audit techniques (such as DIF, etc.) might cause the return to be reviewed. But the general audit coverage rate is fairly low, so the taxpayer pursuing streamlined has relatively low chance of audit. But, there will be inherent uncertainty because no closing agreement is signed.
3. In the Streamlined Program (either SFOP or SDOP), the IRS has the burden of proof if it conducts an audit and desires to assert the FBAR penalty or the income tax civil fraud penalty. This is not like the Streamlined Transition where the taxpayer must persuade the IRS that he or she is nonwillful. In this sense, in Streamlined Transition, the taxpayer has a burden of proof which, if he or she fails to meet that burden, Streamlined will likely be denied.
4. In both Streamlined and Transition, the key is in the narrative in support of the nonwillful certification. Dan made the point that the narrative (and any supporting materials, such as affidavits, etc.) should be proportionate to facts presented -- such as significantly the amount of income and the amount of the deposits. I infer, for example, if the certification shows $100,000,000 in offshore deposits, more detail and support should be provided than $100,000 in offshore deposits. Zeros or, more precisely, digits matter.