Saturday, April 4, 2026

Tax Court Sustains Deficiencies Equaling Restitution with No RBA (4/4/26)

In Thody v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2026-30, the Court sustained the deficiencies asserted against Thody with respect to the tax loss that had been subject to a restitution order against Thody in an earlier criminal tax prosecution. The Thody opinion can be viewed at TC No. 27415-21, here, at #50 dated 3/30/26 and GS here. Actually, the original notices of deficiency exceeded the amount in the restitution order, but the IRS conceded (pp.. 4-5) the excess deficiencies asserted in the notice of deficiency, so that with that concession, the amounts of deficiencies the IRS asserted in the case equaled the amounts in the criminal restitution order. The Court then sustained the deficiencies based on the evidence.

One unexplained apparent oddity is that the IRS did not make a restitution-based assessment (“RBA”) allowed by § 6201(a)(4). The Court offers no explanation and treats the case as a straight-forward deficiency case permitting Thody to contest the amounts. If the IRS had made the RBA in the same amounts, Thody could not have contested the amounts of the RBA. In that regard, the IRS can assert deficiencies in amounts exceeding the amounts of restitution, whether or not asserted in an RBA. I don’t know why the IRS conceded the excess amounts. The IRS may have known or believed that it could not sustain that excess, so that this would be a normal concession in a deficiency case. But, if as a straight deficiency case, the IRS could have sustained the excess deficiency amounts, there was no reason to concede them. The IRS may have conceded just to move the case to a prompt decision with less hassle. A related question is whether, once the IRS decided to concede the excess before the trial level consideration was concluded, the IRS could have made an immediate RBA which would preclude Thody from contesting the amounts. I am not sure that there is a statute of limitations on RBAs because I have not researched that issue. And I am not sure that the Court would have treated such a belated RBA as mooting the deficiencies case.

Moreover, the Court seems not to have not the distinction between a tax deficiency and restitution. Thus, at p. 3, the Court says that the Government reduced the restitution (not the RBA) to judgment. In doing so, the Court cites in fn. 4 the IRM for the purpose of suits to reduce tax claims to judgment is to extend the statute of limitations. The IRM provision, I think, relates to tax assessments rather than criminal restitution. Of course, if there is a statute of limitations on restitution (likely), the reason to reduce restitution to judgment may be for the same.

Thody made the argument that the payments he had made for restitution should reduce the amount of the deficiencies. The Court (pp. 7-8) did correctly find that Thody’s argument was incorrect. The Court notes that, although in collecting on any resulting deficiencies approved by the Tax Court, the IRS would have to credit the restitution payments against the tax liabilities.

This blog content is cross-posted on the Federal Tax Procedure Blog here.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Prominent Convicted Tax Shelter Lawyer Fails on Appeal in CDP Case Involving Restitution Based Assessments (4/1/26)

I start with a caveat: although this posting is on April 1, sometimes called April Fools Day, this is intended as a serious discussion.

In Daugerdas v. Commissioner, ___ F.4th ___ (7th Cir. 2026), CA7 here and GS here, the Court held that § 6201(a)(4)(A), which authorizes the IRS  to assess and collect restitution awarded in a criminal proceeding for unpaid tax, was a stand-alone collection authority unaffected by the payment schedule the district court imposed for the restitution behind the tax assessment. The assessment is sometimes called “restitution based assessment,” and acronymed to RBA which I use here. The holding seems like a straight-forward holding. But there are some issues lurking in the case that tax procedure enthusiasts may enjoy or at least understand.

First, I offer background worthy of note:

1. Daugerdas, a lawyer, is a notorious promoter of bogus tax shelters who was convicted. The Court says (pp. 2-3, emphasis supplied by JAT):

          In 2013 a federal jury in Manhattan found Daugerdas guilty of one count of conspiracy to defraud the IRS (18 U.S.C. § 371), one count of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341), four counts of client tax evasion (26 U.S.C. § 7201), and one count of obstructing the internal revenue laws (26 U.S.C. § 7212(a)). His sentence brought with it an obligation to pay restitution of $371,006,397 jointly and severally with his co-conspirators for the tax losses resulting from the fraud perpetrated on the U.S. Treasury. The district court established a schedule of payments requiring Daugerdas to pay 10% of his gross monthly [*3] income starting 30 days after his release from prison. The Second Circuit affirmed Daugerdas’s convictions and sentence. See United States v. Daugerdas, 837 F.3d 212 (2d Cir. 2016).

I have not tried to break down the components of the restitution amount. Specifically, I have not tried to determine whether the restitution relates to Daugerdas’ tax liabilities (he did make a whopping amount of gross income that he likely attempted to shelter with similar bullshit strategies) or includes in whole or in part the liabilities of other persons reporting on the basis of bullshit tax shelters he promoted with legal opinions and related services. I don’t know that the difference makes a difference in terms of the RBA.

I have written on Daugerdas several times on my Federal Tax Crimes Blog, here (the results are initially by relevance but may be sorted by date).