Federal
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December 19, 2024
IRS Raises Standard Mileage Rate For 2025
The Internal Revenue Service will raise the standard mileage rate for business vehicles to 70 cents per mile in 2025, the agency said Thursday.
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December 19, 2024
9th Circ. Rejects Tomato Paste Cos.' Deductions For Upgrades
A Ninth Circuit majority affirmed on Thursday an Internal Revenue Service determination denying tax deductions for facility upgrades claimed by two tomato paste producers, with a dissenting judge criticizing the agency's reversal in rejecting the upgrade deductions it had previously approved.
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December 19, 2024
Atty Exits Denmark's $2.1B Tax Fraud Case After Settlement
A New York federal court removed an attorney from a $2.1 billion tax fraud suit after Denmark's tax authority settled with him on his involvement in the matter, according to recent filings.
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December 19, 2024
Denmark Says $500M Recovered In Dividend Tax Fraud Suits
Denmark's tax administration has recovered a total of 3.6 billion Danish kroner ($500 million) in money lost to suspected dividend tax refund fraud after entering settlements of civil cases in several countries in 2024, Denmark's tax minister announced.
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December 19, 2024
Top Federal Tax Policies Of 2024
In 2024, the U.S. Senate rejected a tax bill negotiated between the chairs of the House and Senate tax-writing committees, and on the regulatory front, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service pressed ahead with regulations implementing the Inflation Reduction Act. Here, Law360 looks at the most consequential developments in federal tax policy from the past year.
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December 19, 2024
5th Circ. Urged To Deny Tax Break For Doc's Captive Insurance
A physician who owns a network of urgent care clinics was correctly denied tax deductions along with his wife for over $1 million in premiums they paid to insurance companies they owned, the government told the Fifth Circuit, saying the captive arrangements didn't qualify as insurance for tax purposes.
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December 19, 2024
GAO Finds Direct File Pilot Successful, Suggests Upgrades
The Internal Revenue Service conducted a successful test run this past tax season of Direct File, a new online tax return preparation service for individual taxpayers, but the agency could do more to expand access to the program, the U.S. Government Accountability Office reported Thursday.
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December 18, 2024
Tax Shelter Defendant Charged In Investment Ploy
Federal prosecutors have accused two men, one of whom is already facing charges of promoting tax shelters, with wire fraud and money laundering in connection with their operation of a multimillion-dollar fraudulent investment fund, according to an indictment unsealed Wednesday in Colorado federal court.
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December 18, 2024
Dutch Bank Exec Gave IRS Good Tax Tip, DC Circ. Judge Says
D.C. Circuit judges grappled Wednesday with the denial of a whistleblower award to a late Dutch bank executive who tipped off the IRS to tax reporting schemes, with one judge saying during oral arguments that the executive appeared to have handed the agency "gift-wrapped" evidence of wrongdoing.
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December 18, 2024
Dem Senators Probe IRS Pick's Past With Retention Tax Credit
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden said Wednesday that he was investigating President-elect Donald Trump's Internal Revenue Service commissioner pick over his work promoting the fraud-riddled employee retention tax credit and had sent letters demanding information from two tax advisory firms he worked for.
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December 18, 2024
Man Must Pay $1.3M Tax After Losing Fight Over IRS' Timing
A Nevadan owes the Internal Revenue Service more than $1.3 million for 2006 after a federal court rejected his arguments that the agency failed to timely pursue its tax claim against him.
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December 18, 2024
Short-Term Funding Bill Would Keep $20B For IRS Frozen
The Internal Revenue Service would have $20 billion in Inflation Reduction Act funding remain temporarily frozen under a deal lawmakers struck to keep the government running until March 14.
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December 18, 2024
Upcoming IRS Regs Will Have Optional Amount B Pricing
The Internal Revenue Service announced Wednesday that is planning to propose regulations that will give corporations the option to price certain cross-border transactions using a simplified and streamlined approach under a new international tax framework known as Amount B.
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December 18, 2024
IRS Pushes Some Retirement Plan Min. Distributions To 2026
The Internal Revenue Service updated the effective date to January 2026 — instead of next year — for when some must start to withdraw the required minimum amount of funds from several types of individual retirement accounts that were amended by a December 2022 retirement savings law.
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December 17, 2024
CORRECTED: Ineligible Calif. Securities Atty Accused Of Tax Crimes
A Southern California securities attorney currently ineligible to practice law has gone over five years without filing any personal federal income tax returns, the U.S. Department of Justice alleged in announcing a recently unsealed indictment against the lawyer on Tuesday.
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December 17, 2024
Texas Judge Won't Pause Block Of Corp. Transparency Law
A Texas federal judge on Tuesday denied the government's request to stay his nationwide block of a corporate transparency law while an appeal is pending, saying his view that Congress lacks the constitutional authority to enact the legislation is likely to prevail at the Fifth Circuit.
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December 17, 2024
Biz Group IDs Clean Fuel Production Registration Issues
The process of registering as a clean fuel producer in order to be eligible to claim the associated tax credit under the Inflation Reduction Act has proved to be confusing because of a number of practical issues, a group representing the U.S. biogas industry said in a letter released Tuesday.
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December 17, 2024
IRS Extends Accounting Change Waiver Eligibility To 2024
The Internal Revenue Service again adjusted a previous notice Tuesday to modify certain procedures for obtaining automatic consent of the agency commissioner to change methods of accounting for expenditures paid or incurred in taxable years beginning after 2021, extending them for another year.
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December 17, 2024
Payment To Ex-Wife Not Deductible Alimony, Tax Court Says
A man's $35,000 payment to his ex-wife from stock proceeds is not deductible because it qualifies as a division-of-assets payment and not alimony, the U.S. Tax Court ruled in a bench opinion released Tuesday.
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December 17, 2024
US Seeks Foreclosure To Pay 'Survivor' Winner's $3.3M Taxes
A federal magistrate judge should have recommended allowing the U.S. government to foreclose on two properties it claims are controlled by a winner of the "Survivor" TV series who owes $3.3 million in taxes, the government told a Rhode Island federal court.
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December 17, 2024
NY Urges Justices To Pass On IBM, Disney Royalty Tax Fight
The U.S. Supreme Court should decline to hear appeals by IBM and Disney that claim New York state's tax treatment of royalties received from foreign affiliates resulted in unconstitutional discrimination against interstate commerce, the state told the court Tuesday.
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December 17, 2024
IRS Corrects Proposed Admin Requirements For Direct Pay
The Internal Revenue Service issued a correction Tuesday to proposed regulations laying out administrative requirements for tax-exempt entities to elect out of their partnership status in order to take advantage of new rules enabling direct cash payment of clean energy tax credits.
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December 17, 2024
Ex-Pol Can't Shake Fraud Rap Over Jury's Racial Makeup
A Massachusetts federal judge denied a Vietnamese-American former state senator's bid to undo his conviction for unlawfully accepting unemployment assistance and filing a false tax return, rejecting claims that jury selection was tainted by "racial animus" on the part of prosecutors.
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December 17, 2024
Magic Runs Out For Tax Pro Who Stiffed IRS Out Of $145M
A New York City tax preparer who earned the nickname "the magician" while depriving the IRS of $145 million in revenue copped to tax evasion on Tuesday before a Manhattan federal judge.
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December 17, 2024
IRS Finalizes Expanded 'Coverage Month' For Premium Credit
The Internal Revenue Service finalized rules Tuesday that will expand the definition of a coverage month for purposes of computing the health insurance premium tax credit.
Expert Analysis
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Mental Health First Aid: A Brief Primer For Attorneys
Amid a growing body of research finding that attorneys face higher rates of mental illness than the general population, firms should consider setting up mental health first aid training programs to help lawyers assess mental health challenges in their colleagues and intervene with compassion, say psychologists Shawn Healy and Tracey Meyers.
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The Trade And Tax Issues Behind US-Canada Digital Tax Clash
The new Canadian digital services tax recently went into effect despite objections from the U.S., a controversy that represents an unusual mix of trade and tax policy, and many companies have been pondering how it will affect their e-commerce businesses, says Damon Pike at BDO.
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Litigation Inspiration: Honoring Your Learned Profession
About 30,000 people who took the bar exam in July will learn they passed this fall, marking a fitting time for all attorneys to remember that they are members in a specialty club of learned professionals — and the more they can keep this in mind, the more benefits they will see, says Bennett Rawicki at Hilgers Graben.
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AI May Limit Key Learning Opportunities For Young Attorneys
The thing that’s so powerful about artificial intelligence is also what’s most scary about it — its ability to detect patterns may curtail young attorneys’ chance to practice the lower-level work of managing cases, preventing them from ever honing the pattern recognition skills that undergird creative lawyering, says Sarah Murray at Trialcraft.
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A Look At How De Minimis Import Rules May Soon Change
The planned implementation of executive actions focused on the de minimis rule as it applies to shipments means companies should use this interval to evaluate the potential applicability and impact of Section 301, Section 201 or Section 232 duties on their products, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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Ruling On Foreign Dividend Break Offers 2 Tax Court Insights
In Varian v. Commissioner, the U.S. Tax Court allowed a taxpayer's deduction for dividends from foreign subsidiaries, providing clarity on how the U.S. Supreme Court’s Loper Bright decision may affect challenges to Treasury regulations, and revealing a potential disallowance of foreign tax credits, say attorneys at Davis Polk.
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Why Now Is The Time For Law Firms To Hire Lateral Partners
Partner and associate mobility data from the second quarter of this year suggest that there's never been a better time in recent years for law firms to hire lateral candidates, particularly experienced partners — though this necessitates an understanding of potential red flags, say Julie Henson and Greg Hamman at Decipher Investigative Intelligence.
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Considering Possible PR Risks Of Certain Legal Tactics
Disney and American Airlines recently abandoned certain litigation tactics in two lawsuits after fierce public backlash, illustrating why corporate counsel should consider the reputational implications of any legal strategy and partner with their communications teams to preempt public relations concerns, says Chris Gidez at G7 Reputation Advisory.
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It's No Longer Enough For Firms To Be Trusted Advisers
Amid fierce competition for business, the transactional “trusted adviser” paradigm from which most firms operate is no longer sufficient — they should instead aim to become trusted partners with their most valuable clients, says Stuart Maister at Strategic Narrative.
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Avoid Getting Burned By Agencies' Solar Financing Spotlight
Recently coordinated reports and advisories from the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission maximize the spotlight on the consumer solar financing market and highlight pitfalls for lenders to avoid in this burgeoning field, says Mercedes Tunstall at Cadwalader.
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Tax Traps In Acquisitions Of Financially Distressed Targets
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Parties to the acquisition of an insolvent or bankrupt company face myriad tax considerations, including limitations on using the distressed company's tax benefits, cancellation of indebtedness income, tax lien issues and potential tax reorganizations.
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Navigating A Potpourri Of Possible Transparency Act Pitfalls
Despite the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network's continued release of guidance for complying with the Corporate Transparency Act, its interpretation remains in flux, making it important for companies to understand potentially problematic areas of ambiguity in the practical application of the law, say attorneys at Sidley.
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How Methods Are Evolving In Textualist Interpretations
Textualists at the U.S. Supreme Court are increasingly considering new methods such as corpus linguistics and surveys to evaluate what a statute's text communicates to an ordinary reader, while lower courts even mull large language models like ChatGPT as supplements, says Kevin Tobia at Georgetown Law.