In United States v. Nadji (D. Colo. Case No. 1:22-cv-02070), CL dkt entries here, the Government filed an FBAR collection complaint on 8/15/22. The complaint is here. The complaint requests (¶ 55, p. 8) judgment
for $23,102,381 in willful FBAR penalties, $2,631,772.60 in accrued and assessed late payment penalties, and $877,257.53 of interest, plus costs of collection, pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3717, as of August 11, 2022. The United States is entitled to recover $26,611,411.13, plus interest, penalties, and costs accruing from August 11, 2022.
According to the complaint:
1. The amounts are significant.
2. Nadji was born in Iran in 1944. While educated in part in the U.S., he “moved back to the United States and became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1992.”
3. Nadji was wealthy, deriving his wealth from an Iranian engineering company he owned 100%. Nadji paid no tax on income from the company, either in the U.S. or Iran.
4. He had interests in four foreign bank accounts from 2009 to 2012.
5. During those years, his U.S. returns were prepared by a tax preparer in Colorado. However, he did not disclose his foreign accounts to the tax preparer.
6. In 2014, he entered the 2014 OVDI, disclosing the four accounts and filing delinquent FBARS for 2008-2012. The complaint has a table listing the amounts Nadji reported on the FBARS for the high balances in each account for the years and aggregating the high balances for each year.
8. Based on the amounts reported in the FBARs, the IRS calculated the willful penalties for each year. According to my calculations, the IRS calculated the penalty amount for each year based on the method described in IRM 4.26.16.5.5.3(2). (06-24-2021), Penalty for Willful FBAR Violations – Calculation, here. I think that is not materially different from the corresponding prior IRM provision when Nadji’s penalty was assessed on 8/27/20.
11. Added 8/18/22 4:00 pm: The IRM methodology for allocating the FBAR penalty amount determined on the single year high amount (subject to limitations based on the amount permitted under the statute for each year) will result in a penalty never exceeding the amount of the penalty permitted for each year based on the amount in the account on the reporting date. In other words, the methodology will never be more than permitted by the statute for each year and will often, even usually, be less than that. The statute permits a less than maximum penalty in each willful open year, thus the IRS allocation methodology will often, even usually, be less than the IRS could assert in each year or in the aggregate for all years. I just don't know how that produces an abuse of the discretion conferred to the agency (the IRS by delegation from FinCEN).
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