Tax Evasion: How good people get tricked into making themselves guilty HD

21.06.2018
Contact 888-477-4258 How to make tax evasion amnesty unnecessary. Before I devoted my practice to tax, I was a criminal defense attorney. I had a pretty decent record of success. In law school, as an intern, I overturned a criminal conviction! Seriously I was hot stuff! But criminal law left me unfulfilled. And unfortunately, as you might imagine, I could do a great job for a client and get a conviction overturned or negotiate a favorable plea, but there was a significant chance that my innocent little angels would later picked up for another violation. Maybe even later that afternoon. So I felt kind of useless, trying to swim upstream. If you deal with criminal law, you have to deal with criminals. And criminals really don’t have a lot of positive things going on. So I was really good at what I did, but really miserable. So when my dad and I moved into tax in 2006, it was a huge relief. Our clients were good people who made mistakes. Understandable mistakes if you ask me, as the US tax code is the most complicated thing in the history of history. So many of our clients became friends and we’ve shared business tips and it opened a world to be to some of the most dynamic truly awesome people. I have the best clients imaginable. And guess what, my associates and the team members all enjoy working with these best clients too. The office is kind of a happy place, despite the difficult task of finding solutions with the IRS and state taxing agencies. Yet, guess what? It is still rather important that I have my criminal law experience as the government loves to charge good people with tax evasion. And the more successful a person is, the more of an example the IRS wants to make out of them. Sensational press releases are part of the fear and intimidation of the US government. Press releases can only be sensation if the target has had some level of success. For us, because we know how this hypocrisy works, we do a pretty good job of avoiding indictments. In fact, any client who came to us before an indictment and listened very carefully to what we said, has avoided ever getting charged criminally. And we’ve had thousands of clients. My secret if you want to call it that is that we know there are two parts to every IRS criminal case. There is a civil part, and there is the criminal part. Now believe it or nor, neither side of the IRS is really good at communicating with each other. And we use this to our advantage. This is the reality the government is going against when trying to get a tax evasion conviction. It should be REALLY hard for them to do so. But it isn’t. Why? Correction: Contact number 888 477-4258 Because many criminal attorneys don’t understand the civil side, and many civil tax attorneys, CPAs enrolled agents and other tax professional don’t understand the criminal side. I want to explain to you the reason why everyone falling into this avoidable trap. Typically when your client is under criminal investigation

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