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1st US Prosecution for “FALSE” Expatriation Statement

On February 13, 2017 we posted US Taxpayers & Their Advisors Doing Jail Time for Failing to Declare Offshore Bank Accounts! where we discussed that the IRS hunt for offshore income and accounts continues unabated well beyond UBS; as evidenced by a former client of Credit Suisse Group AG who pleaded guilty to hiding $200 million from U.S. tax authorities.

Now according to DoJ this same US business administration expert, former client of Credit Suisse Group AG, has also pleaded guilty to Conspiring to Submit a False Expatriation Statement to the Internal Revenue Service.

A Rochester, New York emeritus professor of business administration pleaded guilty to conspiring with others to defraud the United States and to submitting a false expatriation statement to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), announced Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Caroline D. Ciraolo, head of the Justice Department’s Tax Division,after the plea was accepted by U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III.

 
According to documents filed with the court and statements made during the plea hearing, Dan Horsky, 71, is a citizen of the United States, the United Kingdom and Israel and was employed for more than 30 years as a professor of business administration at a university located in New York.

In 2008, Horsky's Foreign Company A was purchased by Company B for $1.8 billion in an all cash transaction.  Horsky received approximately $80 million in net proceeds from the sale of Company A’s stock, but disclosed to the IRS only approximately $7 million of his gain from that sale and paid taxes on just that fraction of his share of the proceeds. 

In 2008, and in subsequent years, Horsky invested in Company B’s stock using funds from his accounts at the Zurich-based bank and by 2013, his investments in Company B, combined with other unreported offshore assets, reached approximately $200 million.
 

“Despite his extraordinary wealth, Mr. Horsky concealed funds offshore, failed to report substantial income, conspired to submit false expatriation documents to cover up his fraudulent scheme, and evaded paying his fair share of tax,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Ciraolo. 

“The Department and its partners within the IRS are receiving a tremendous amount of information from a wide variety of sources, and we are using that information to pursue and prosecute individuals like Mr. Horsky, who violate our nation’s tax laws. 

Today’s Guilty Plea proves, once again, that taxpayers will Pay a Heavy Price when they choose to secrete funds in Foreign Bank Accounts to Evade Tax and Reporting Obligations.”

 

In 2013, the individual who had nominal control over Horsky’s accounts at the Zurich-based bank conspired with Horsky to relinquish the individual’s U.S. citizenship, in part to ensure that Horsky’s control of the offshore accounts would not be reported to the IRS.  In 2014, this individual filed with the IRS a false Form 8854 (Initial Annual Expatriation Statement) that failed to disclose his net worth on the date of expatriation, failed to disclose his ownership of foreign assets, and falsely certified under penalties of perjury that he was in compliance with his tax obligations for the five preceding tax years.
 
Horsky also willfully filed false 2008 through 2014 individual income tax returns which failed to disclose his income from, and beneficial interest in and control over, his Zurich-based bank accounts.  Horsky agreed that for purposes of sentencing, his criminal conduct resulted in a tax loss of at least $10 million.  In addition, Horsky failed to file Reports of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBARs) up and through 2011, and also filed false FBARs for 2012 and 2013.

“Conspiring to defraud the government with an elaborate scheme to underreport taxable income is unlawful. 
Mr. Horsky’s plea today serves as an important reminder that IRS-CI is Committed to Bringing to Justice those who Shirk their Federal Income Tax Responsibilities.”   

                

Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 10, 2017.  Horsky faces a statutory maximum sentence of five years in prison, as well as a period of supervised release and monetary penalties.  As part of his plea agreement, Horsky paid a penalty of $100 million dollars to the U.S. Treasury for failing to file and filing false FBARs, which is separate from any restitution that the court may order.

The IRS' hunt for Offshore Income and Accounts continues unabated and is Intensifying.

For those who don’t come forward before they are found, being found can be awfully painful. See e.g. list of UBS criminal convictions, so far.


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with Unreported Foreign Bank Income?

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Read more at: Tax Times blog

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