This is a fascinating report of a tax investigation in
process against two very prominent billionaires, Robert Brockman and David
Smith. David Voreacos & Neil
Weinberg, Billionaire Robert Smith Fighting U.S. Criminal Tax Inquiry (1)
(BloombergLaw 8/21/20), here. This is an ongoing
investigation, so charges may never be brought and, if they are, the shape of the charges are uncertain.
What caught my eye and, I think may be of interest to
readers of this blog is the following discussing divorce proceedings between Smith
and his estranged wife:
Experts on
both sides of the divorce pored over the family finances. In 2014, Smith
approached the IRS seeking amnesty from prosecution under a program used by
more than 56,000 Americans who failed to report offshore assets, according to
two of the people familiar with the matter. Through the program, the IRS
collected more than $11 billion in back taxes, fines and penalties, while
learning who enabled offshore tax evaders.
But the IRS
rejected Smith, according to people familiar with the matter. The agency
typically turned down taxpayers if it already knew they had undeclared offshore
accounts.
Now, I don’t know but assume that, because of the
specificity (although limited), the investigators are correct about his attempt
to go into the voluntary disclosure program and being rejected. The article does not state whether Smith
attempted the OVDP or Streamlined or OVDP with Streamline transition. The Streamlined Procedures were adopted in
2014 the year that the article indicates he approached the IRS. Of course, if Smith’s tax underpayment and
FBAR failure to file (or file correctly) are the subject of a criminal
investigation, the IRS must now think him willful which would have in 2014 disqualified for the Streamlined Procedures (even the Transition). But, if the IRS already had Smith on the
radar screen knew when he attempted to join OVDP, he would have been disqualified
as the article notes.
We don’t know whether he was disqualified from OVDP because of
already being on the radar screen or he attempted Streamlined (either direct or
through transition from OVDP) and was rejected because his nonwillful certification was inadequate.
Of course, if he attempted Streamlined via OVDP transition and was
rejected, he still could have solved his criminal problem by staying in OVDP
and not opting out.
Some unanswered questions and surely there must be
more questions. And the statutes of limitations
may be an issue since one would assume that the targets of the investigation have kept their income
tax filings current and, within a range, proper, at least in the case of Smith
who knew when he was rejected (in 2014) that he had potential criminal issues.