| |
|
Indianapolis Indiana Lawyers
Wills, Trusts, Estates and Complex
Litigation, Living Trust, Living Will, Probate, Corporate & Securities
Law, International Business Law Immigration, Real Estate, Estate Planning
& Administration
5 Trusts which The IRS considers suspect
|
Please
select an underline link below
to view information on specific trusts.
Article from
MSN
MoneyCentral
Capitol Connection
5 trusts the IRS doesn't trust
The IRS is cracking
down on five types of trusts now deemed illegal. From 'charitable'
to 'final' trusts, the feds are targeting these tax-evading schemes.
By Tom Woodruff
The Internal Revenue Service has lost its
faith in trusts. For the past year, the criminal investigations unit
of the IRS has looked into one of the most popular ways for
individuals and corporations to shield income from taxation as
potentially illegal tax dodges.
The unit concluded recently that it plans
to target five specific types of trusts for potential prosecution.
The IRS especially wants to get those people and organizations that
sell these trusts through cold-calling and high-pressure sales
tactics and promise potential clients that they can all but
eliminate their annual tax liabilities.
Of the 3 million active trusts in the U.S.
today, about 200,000, or 6%, are considered "highly suspicious,"
according to the IRS. About 10,000 of these are in their active
"audit stream" and about 500 currently are being considered for
criminal prosecution. Even though exact estimates are not available,
IRS bean counters say that revenue lost to the federal government
each year due to the fraudulent trust run into the billions of
dollars.
Even if you are just a buyer of one of
these trusts, you can face fines and jail, according to Dennis
Crawford, the IRS' director of National Operations for Criminal
Investigations.
"If we can develop sufficient intent and
knowledge on the part of the person who purchased, they are subject
to criminal prosecution," said Crawford. Even if you can prove that
you had no knowledge that the trust that you purchased was illegal,
you would still be subject to income tax and penalties.
Most have nothing to fear
Not all trusts are being targeted by the
IRS, and the government says that most trust holders have nothing to
fear. Millions of individuals and businesses use trusts to set aside
funds for certain individuals, corporations or organizations and are
not the focus of this campaign.
The trust arrangements that concern the
IRS ignore the true ownership of assets or the substance of
transactions. According to the IRS, promoters of these illegal
trusts claim that they allow the owners to retain full benefit of
business or personal assets while reducing or eliminating taxes. The
arrangements often involve more than one trust. A person may, for
example, put business assets in an unincorporated business trust,
transfer its business equipment to an equipment trust, place his
home in a family residence trust, and set up a foreign trust to hold
the other trust units and to receive trust income. In other words,
it's a "family of trusts" that the IRS says are created solely to
evade taxes.
The IRS is warning you to be suspicious of
arrangements that claim to make personal living expenses deductible,
to create charitable deductions for payments benefiting you or your
family or that otherwise result in you having to pay no tax while
not changing your control over your assets.
The IRS says promoters of these
arrangements advertise "investment seminars" or "tax seminars" in
local media, such as radio personal-finance shows and the Internet.
The trusts, says the IRS, may have names that refer to
constitutional issues, fairness, equity or patriotic themes, but
often have names that are similar to common business organizations
and legitimate trusts.
Five types of trusts are targets
The Criminal
Division of the IRS has identified five types of trusts that it will
target in the upcoming year. If someone tries to offer you one or
more of the following, expect that you may become the subject of an
IRS investigation:
-
The Business Trust.
The owner of a business transfers the
business to a trust (sometimes described as an unincorporated
business trust) in exchange for units or certificates of
beneficial interest, sometimes described as units of beneficial
interest or UBIs (trust units). The business trust makes payments
to the trust unit holders or to other trusts created by the owner
(characterized either as deductible business expenses or as
deductible distributions) that purport to reduce the taxable
income of the business trust to the point where little or no tax
is due from the business trust.

t o p
-
The
Equipment or Service Trust.
The equipment trust is formed to hold
equipment that is rented or leased to the business trust, often at
inflated rates. The service trust is formed to provide services to
the business trust, often for inflated fees. Under these
arrangements, the business trust claims to reduce its income by
making allegedly deductible payments to the equipment or service
trust. The equipment or service trust also may attempt to reduce
or eliminate its income by distributions to other trusts.

t o p
The
Family Residence Trust.
The owner of the family residence
transfers the residence, including its furnishings, to a trust.
The trust claims the exchange results in a stepped-up basis for
the property, while the owner reports no gain. The trust claims to
be in the rental business and purports to rent the residence back
to the owner; however, in most cases, little or no rent is
actually paid.

t o p
The
Charitable Trust.
The owner transfers assets to a
purported charitable trust and claims either that the payments to
the trust are deductible or that payments made by the trust are
deductible charitable contributions. Payments are claimed to be
made to charitable organizations; however, in fact, the payments
are principally for the personal, educational, living or
recreational expenses of the owner or the owner's family. For
example, the trust may pay for the college tuition of a child of
the owner.

t o p
The Final
Trust.
In some
multi-trust arrangements, the U.S. owner of one or more fraudulent
trusts establishes an additional trust (the "final trust") that
acts as the trust for the others and receives all income from the
other trusts. A final trust often is formed in a foreign country
that imposes little or no taxes on the trust. In some
arrangements, more than one foreign trust is used, with the cash
flowing from one trust to another until the money ultimately is
distributed or made available to the U.S. owner, purportedly
tax-free. The IRS says this is nothing more than a
money-laundering scheme.
|

t o p
|
|