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International & Offshore

Offshore Asset Protection - Where We Are Now
The current status of Offshore Asset Protection. A lot has changed since the 1990s.

IRS Warns on Abusive Offshore Tax Avoidance Schemes
The IRS has warned about Abusive Offshore Tax Avoidance Schemes, including Limited Liability Companies owned by non-resident alients, offshore deferred compensation arrangements, fictitious or overstated invoicing to foreign entities, foreign factoring of accounts receivables, abusive "captive" insurance arrangements where there is no real spreading or shifting of risk, shifting of income via offshore private annuities, offshore internet businesses, offshore wagering, and repatriation of funds into the U.S. via offshore credit cards and offshore debit cards.

Tax Haven Abuses: The Enablers, The Tools and Secrecy pdf

IRS Guide to Abusive Offshore Tax Avoidance Schemes
An Abusive Scheme Toolkit for External Stakeholders

Hiding Money Offshore
Secret Offshore Bank accounts and why it is NOT a good idea.

Patriot Act
An act to deter and punish terrorist acts in the U.S. and around the world, to enhance law enforcement investigatory tools, and other purposes.

Treasury Department Form TD F 90.22-1
Required to be used by U.S. persons to report interests in financial accounts held abroad.

Reinvoicing / Transfer Pricing
Establishing an intermediary company offshore to divert profits. The IRS has some of its strongest powers to fight these structures.

Offshore Jurisdictions


Offshore Planning Terms

  • Offshore Private Placement Deferred Variable Annuity
    (OPPDVA or more commonly "Swiss Annuity")

    A variable annuity with annuity payments initially deferred that is offered by a foreign insurance company on a private placement basis, and which are typically customized to the specific needs of the policyholder.

  • Offshore Private Placement Variable Universal Life Insurance
    (OPPVULI or more commonly "Offshore PPLI")

    A variable universal life insurance policy that is offered by a foreign insurance company on an private placement basis, and which is highly customized for the specific needs of the policyholder.

  • Repatriation Order
    An order to the debtor to bring assets back within the jurisdiction of the court; if the debtor does not do so, typically the court will order the debtor incarcerated for contempt.

 

     

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NAVIGATION

 

 

Some Important Warnings from the Internal Revenue Service

Abusive Offshore Tax Avoidance Schemes:
Talking Points

Schemes

The Abusive Tax Scheme Program is concerned about taxpayers who exploit secrecy laws of offshore jurisdictions in an attempt to conceal assets and income subject to tax by the United States.

Some different types of entities and schemes being used in Abusive Offshore Tax Schemes include:

1. Foreign trusts

2. Foreign corporations

3. Foreign (offshore) partnerships, LLCs and LLPs

4. International Business Companies (IBCs)

5. Offshore private annuities

6. Private banking (U.S. and offshore)

7. Personal investment companies

8. Captive insurance companies

9. Offshore bank accounts and credit cards

10. Related-party loans

Abusive schemes usually create structures that make it appear a nonresident alien or foreign entity is the owner of assets and income, when in fact and substance, true ownership remains with a U.S. taxpayer.

Taxpayers may utilize a variety of devices to conceal transfers of money or other property to a foreign entity, where the income it generates may be hidden. The simplest method of diverting income is sending skimmed income to an offshore account or entity. Other methods used to transfer money or other property offshore include the use of payments disguised as deductible expenses (for example, rents or purchases) that are paid to entities controlled by the taxpayer and generally located in a tax haven jurisdiction.

Taxpayers may fabricate sales of property to a foreign entity that they control, perhaps in exchange for a note of which they do not expect repayment. This gets title to the property - and its future earnings - offshore. In some cases, taxpayers may purchase nonexistent equipment from a tax haven corporation controlled by a related entity. Taxpayers then often improperly claim depreciation on payments really made to themselves.

Once money or title to property is moved offshore, the taxpayer can continue to manage it with ease using sophisticated means of communication and funds transfers. Some tax haven banks, trust companies, attorneys, and accountants operate virtual factories making false documents to create paper trails to confound auditors. A taxpayer or his foreign representative can easily create front corporations inside or outside the United States to carry out the taxpayer's instructions. For example, one Cayman banker explained how his bank could credit checks made payable to U.S. dummy corporations to a customer's offshore account. These dummy corporations are set up for that purpose so that the checks would clear through the offshore bank's correspondent account at a U.S. bank with no evidence the funds were credited elsewhere.

Representations of foreign entities may be entirely fictitious. An example involved the Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI), which recorded many large transactions with its Bahamas branch. In fact, BCCI had no charter in the Bahamas and no presence there. The Bahamas Branch was merely a "cyber bank", a separate set of books kept on a BCCI computer in Miami.

Some of the most popular methods of repatriating funds include:

1. Credit cards which simply draw on the U.S. taxpayer's offshore account

2. Loans from mystery offshore lenders

3. Loans from domestic lenders in amounts beyond the taxpayer's apparent borrowing power (may be secured by offsetting deposits of offshore funds)

4. Use of property titled to offshore entities at zero or below-market rental

5. Bogus transactions designed simply to transfer funds to or from offshore entities, such as sales of property to offshore entities in jurisdictions where it is unlikely the property will actually be used or sold

6. Gifts

7. Scholarships for taxpayer's children

8. "Payable Through" accounts

Schemes fall into two general categories:

1. Abusive schemes which exploit the way the U.S. taxes foreign persons as opposed to U.S. persons, and

2. Taxpayer's who take what they perceive to be a legally defensible position in a "gray" area.

Some schemes are designed to shelter current income from the taxpayer's existing business or investments, while others simply provide an offshore investment vehicle for income that has already been taxed. In either case, the mechanisms used allow the taxpayer to control assets transferred offshore and to hide the ultimate repatriation of the proceeds.

Promoters

Promoters of such schemes may offer comprehensive management services that include bookkeeping and return preparation. Or, the promoter may simply create initial documents that create a "paper shield" behind which the taxpayer/client can control everything.

Certain promoters are candid with their clients, acknowledging the scheme depends on fictitious arrangements designed to mislead the IRS. Others unscrupulously sell their clients on the idea that the arrangement legally permits avoidance of tax liability. Such promoters may point to case law and show the client how their arrangement avoids the pitfalls of previous schemes.

Keep in mind the promoter does not have to convince the IRS; just convince the client long enough to make the sale. Once a taxpayer has entered into an abusive scheme, it may be difficult to get out of it. Consequently, the taxpayer may rely heavily on the promoter for advice, and even representation, when confronted with an IRS examination.

The growth of Internet promotions has led increasing numbers of middle-income taxpayers into such arrangements. Even though the dollar amounts involved are usually smaller, the growth in numbers of taxpayers represents a serious compliance problem.

Tax Havens

Abusive offshore transactions generally involve foreign jurisdictions that offer financial secrecy laws in an effort to attract investment from outside their borders. These jurisdictions are commonly referred to as "tax havens" because, in addition to the financial secrecy they provide, they impose little or no tax on income from sources outside their jurisdiction.

It is difficult to quantify the amount of assets being held offshore or the rate at which the industry is growing. But it has been estimated that some $5 trillion in assets worldwide is held "offshore" in tax havens. Presumably, transfers from the U.S. represent a large share of this wealth. One authority has estimated the annual revenue loss to the U.S. at a minimum of $70 billion.

Tax haven service providers and their clients know their actions are veiled from tax authorities by banking and commercial secrecy laws and by lack of tax treaties or tax information exchange agreements. They create paper entities to disguise the real parties to the transactions, and many are willing to create false documents to disguise the real nature of transactions.

At least 40 countries aggressively market themselves as tax havens. Some have gone so far as to offer asylum or immunity to criminals who invest sufficient funds. They permit the formation of companies without any proof of identity of the owners, perhaps even by remote computer connection. Generally, though, such extremes are found in emerging nations where the stability and security of the financial, legal, and political systems is questionable.

The largest concentrations of assets are attracted to the stable, secure environments of the established tax havens - those that have existed a number of years, and enjoy the diplomatic protection of former colonial powers.

Conclusion

Citizens and residents of the United States are taxed on their worldwide income. To help prevent the use of offshore entities for tax evasion or deferral, Congress has enacted several specific provisions in the Internal Revenue Code. Some provisions trigger recognition of gains that would otherwise be deferred. Others deny deferral of tax on income moved offshore.

Though promoters of offshore schemes often advance technical arguments, which purport to show that their scheme is legal, the intent of Congress remains clear. U.S. taxpayers are not to be allowed to evade taxes by shifting their own liability to some foreign entity.

 

Abusive Offshore Tax Avoidance Schemes

The Internal Revenue Service is cautioning the public about schemes that attempt to evade taxes by hiding income and assets in banks and other institutions outside the United States.

"Offshore Transactions" generally involve activities in foreign jurisdictions that offer financial secrecy laws in an effort to attract investment from outside their borders. These jurisdictions are commonly referred to as "tax havens" because, in addition to the financial secrecy they provide, they require little or no taxation of income from sources outside their jurisdiction.

There are a number of possible reasons for a U.S. taxpayer to utilize offshore entities and accounts – some of them perfectly legal. However the IRS is finding many cases in which the only purpose in going offshore is to divert income and conceal assets for taxpayers who have no "real" operations in a foreign country. By law, U.S. persons are taxed on their worldwide income.

The IRS is aggressively pursuing promoters of these illegal schemes, as well as individuals who employ the schemes in an effort to evade taxes. Taxpayers should be aware that abusive offshore arrangements will not produce the tax benefits advertised by their promoters and that the Internal Revenue Service is actively examining these types of arrangements. Furthermore, taxpayers and/or the promoters of these offshore arrangements may be subject to civil and/or criminal penalties.

For further information, visit the Tax Fraud Alerts page of the Criminal Investigations Web site.

If you have specific questions on a tax scheme, or wish to report a possible scheme, call 1-866-775-7474, or send an e-mail to: irs.tax.shelter.hotline@irs.gov

- - - - -

Abusive Offshore Tax Avoidance Schemes: Questions and Answers

Q. What is so important about "Offshore Transactions"?

A. In recent years, a significant increase in offshore activity has been noted among U.S. taxpayers. More and more taxpayers have been observed attempting to "expatriate" their income and assets. Numerous schemes have been devised in which the true ownership of income streams and assets has been hidden or disguised. In this fashion, substantial amounts of financial activity have been improperly shielded from the U.S. tax system. "Offshore Transactions" generally involve activities in jurisdictions (commonly called "tax havens") that offer financial secrecy laws in an effort to attract investment from outside its borders.

Q. I keep hearing about "Foreign Trusts". Is that what this is about?

A. Yes and no. Initially, the need for enhanced "offshore" compliance efforts was determined as a result of noncompliance observed in numerous trusts. Trusts lend themselves to being the type of entity through which income and assets are more easily hidden or disguised. Because they are flow-through entities, the facts behind true ownership of income or assets may be difficult to establish. Secrecy laws found in most tax havens only compound this difficulty. Many different foreign entities and schemes are being promoted and used by U.S. taxpayers to evade tax. The list includes the use of:

  • Foreign trusts

  • Foreign corporations

  • Foreign (Offshore) partnerships, LLCs and LLPs

  • International Business Companies

  • Offshore private annuities

  • Offshore private banks

  • Personal investment companies

  • Captive insurance companies

  • Offshore bank accounts and credit cards

  • Related party loans

It is important to note that the list is not all-inclusive. Promoters of such schemes always appear to be "improving" the products and services that they market.

Q. What is a U.S. person?

A. IRC § 7701(a)(30) defines a United States person to include:

  • a citizen or resident of the United States;

  • a domestic partnership;

  • a domestic corporation;

  • any estate (other than a foreign estate, within the meaning of paragraph (31)) and

  • any trust if -- a court within the United States is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust, and - one or more United States persons have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust.

Q. The information presented by the promoter sounded legitimate. Now I have concerns regarding this promotion. Who do I contact to report information on the promotion and promoter?

A. Contact the Internal Revenue Service at 1-866-775-7474 or e-mail the Tax Shelter Hotline at irs.tax.shelter.hotline@irs.gov

Q. Can I get more information on the Internet?

A. Yes. Additional information is available at the following IRS web sites:

The Criminal Investigation site Tax Scams/Fraud Alerts provides information on tax scams and explains how to report suspected tax fraud.

The Abusive Tax Shelter site provides information to help identify some red flags that may be present in an abusive tax shelter.

The IRS Newsroom's page on Tax Scams/Consumer Alerts describes a number of common tax scams. If any of these apply to your investment, you should consult a tax professional not involved in promoting the investment. Or you may contact IRS to determine how it will treat such a promotion.

Note: This page contains one or more references to the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), Treasury Regulations, court cases, or other official tax guidance. References to these legal authorities are included for the convenience of those who would like to read the technical reference material. To access the applicable IRC sections, Treasury Regulations, or other official tax guidance, visit the Tax Code, Regulations, and Official Guidance page. To access any Tax Court case opinions issued after September 24, 1995, visit the Opinions Search page of the United States Tax Court.

 

 

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