Lance Wallach is a nationally recognized expert, author, AICPA instructor and speaker.

  • "Protecting Clients from Fraud, Incompetence, and Scams" published by John Wiley & Sons
  • Mr. Wallach is the National Society of Accountant's Speaker of the Year and the author of numerous professional books, including:
  • "Avoiding Circular 230 Malpractice Traps and Common Abusive Small Businesss Hot Spots" by the AICPA - author/moderator Lance Wallach
  • The AICPA's "The team approach to Tax, Financial and Estate Planning."
  • "The CPA's Guide to Life Insurance" by Bisk CPEasy
  • "Wealth Preservation Planning" by the National Society of Accountants
  • "The CPA's Guide to Federal and Estate Gift Taxation" published by Bisk

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Professional Services

  • Every single one of our consulting CPAs, Lawyers and ex-IRS Agents has over 25 years of professional experience! We believe that no firm has more experienced audit pros than we do!!
  • IRS audit assistance and support
  • 419e and 412i plan defense
  • Plan reviews, evaluations and remediation
  • Expert witness testimony
  • Research and analysis of tax laws
  • Providing guidance for attorneys, CPAs and insurance professionals nationwide
  • Expertise on stock market, mutual fund and insurance losses
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America's leading authority & critic of most 412, 419's also defends life insurance professionals.

CSEA

CSEA

IRS Audits Focus on Captive Insurance Plans April 2011 Edition

The IRS started auditing § 419 plans in the 1990s, and then continued going after § 412(i) and other plans that they considered abusive, listed, or reportable transactions, or substantially similar to such transactions. If an IRS audit disallows the § 419 plan or the § 412(i) plan, not only does the taxpayer lose the deduction and pay interest and penalties, but then the IRS comes back under IRC 6707A and imposes large fines for not properly filing. Read full article here

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Backlash on too-good-to-be-true insurance plan


No Shelter Here                                                                            September 2011

 

By: Lance Wallach

During the past few years, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has fined many business owners hundreds of thousands of dollars for participating in several particular types of insurance plans.
The 412(i), 419, captive insurance, and section 79 plans were marketed as a way for small-business owners to set up retirement, welfare benefit plans, or other tax-deductible programs while leveraging huge tax savings, but the IRS put most of them on a list of abusive tax shelters, listed transactions, or similar transactions, etc., and has more recently focused audits on them. Many accountants are unaware of the issues surrounding these plans, and many big-name insurance companies are still encouraging participation in them.

Seems Attractive

The plans are costly up-front, but your money builds over time, and there’s a large payout if the money is removed before death. While many business owners have retirement plans, they also must care for their employees. With one of these plans, business owners are not required to give their workers anything.

Gotcha

Although small business has taken a recessionary hit and owners may not be spending big sums on insurance now, an IRS task force is auditing people who bought these as early as 2004. There is no statute of limitations.
The IRS also requires participants to file Form 8886 informing the IRS of participation in this “abusive transaction.” Failure to file or to file incorrectly will cost the business owner interest and penalties. Plus, you’ll pay back whatever you claimed for a deduction, and there are additional fines — possibly 70% of the tax benefit you claim in a year. And, if your accountant does not confidentially inform on you, he or she will get fined $100,000 by the IRS. Further, the IRS can freeze assets if you don’t pay and can fine you on a corporate and a personal level despite the type of business entity you have.

Legal Wrangling

Currently, small businesses facing audits and potentially huge tax penalties over these plans are filing lawsuits against those who marketed, designed, and sold the plans. Find out promptly if you have one of these plans and seek advice from a knowledgeable accountant to help you properly file Form 8886.
—Lance Wallach, National Society of Accountants Speaker of the Year and member of the AICPA faculty of teaching professionals, is a frequent speaker on retirement plans, financial and estate planning, and abusive tax shelters. www.taxaudit419.com, www.vebaplan.org, and www.section79plan.org
This article is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as specific legal or financial advice.