I have written before on the Brockman multi-year tax evasion scheme. See here. Brockman was indicted but, before he could be tried, he died, thereby resolving the criminal case without a verdict of guilty or not guilty.
The civil case was settled with entry of the Tax Court
decision in Brockman Estate v. Commissioner (T.C. Case No. 764-22 Dkt. #
33 Order Dtd. 12/23/25), here.
The decision document addresses the deficiencies and civil fraud penalties under § 6663. As is the
nature of decision documents, the decision document does not address the
interest on the tax and the penalties. The principal amounts of deficiencies
and penalty are major, aggregating $750 MM; the interest which I roughly
calculate to 12/24/25 at $782MM brings the total due to over $1.5 billion. I
prepared a spreadsheet which I offer for review and download here.
(Note that the interest calculations are rough and ready but should be in the
ballpark.)
One small error in the Tax Court decision document is that
the 2006 civil fraud penalty (§ 6663) is stated as $35,00,000.00 which I infer
to be $35,000,000.00.
Obviously, given the numbers in the spreadsheet there is a
facial anomaly because for the years 2006 and 2015 the civil fraud penalty
amount exceeds 75% of the deficiency. I suppose there can be an explanation.
There was a jeopardy assessment which may have applied some of the tax, but
more likely there may have been an advance payment(s) that reduced the deficiency
amounts (but not the civil fraud penalty amount). I just have not dug into that
issue.
This blog entry is cross-posted on my Federal Tax Procedure
Blog here.