Tax research

  • A federal judge in Greenville, S.C., has permanently barred Heather Alexander Ferguson from promoting an alleged tax-fraud scheme.

    July 19
  • Thomson Tax & Accounting, part of The Thomson Corp., announced the upcoming release of its InSource WorkFlow Manager solution.

    July 19
  • The Congressional Research Service, which provides nonpartisan public policy research, has released its review of the presidential advisory panel on tax reform's two major proposals.

    July 18
  • The failure to get a revamped computer program online to screen for fraudulent 2006 tax returns will cost the federal government between $200 million and $300 million, the Internal Revenue Service has estimated.

    July 17
  • A federal court has barred a Jackson Hewitt franchise from preparing federal income tax returns claiming an improper federal income tax exemption for casino proceeds paid to Native Americans.

    July 17
  • The Internal Revenue Service has ruled that employer incentives encouraging their employees to purchase environmentally friendly hybrid cars, are considered taxable compensation.

    July 16
  • The Senate Finance Committee pushed hard for answers from a tax policy nominee on when the Treasury Department will supply recommendations on an overhaul of the tax system, and how best to meaningfully improve the nation's tax compliance.

    July 13
  • National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson has delivered a report to Congress outlining the priority issues her office will tackle in the coming fiscal year.

    July 13
  • The government got a big victory in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, winning a reversal of a 2004 decision in a case legal experts say will go a long way in defining what constitutes an illegal tax shelter by reestablishing the economic substance test.

    July 12
  • Prosecutors are looking into Deutsche Bank's role in providing a lesser-known questionably tax shelter sold through a Silicon Valley firm, according to published reports.

    July 12
  • Three weeks into the clean-up effort following the massive flooding at its Washington headquarters, the Internal Revenue Service said that the office -- which houses some 2,700 workers -- won't reopen until early 2007.

    July 11
  • During his administration's mid-year congressional review, President Bush said that high tax revenues were responsible for helping the government reduce the budget deficit faster than originally anticipated.

    July 11
  • Whether accounting firms and tax practitioners should be allowed to seek patent protection for the tax advice they offer is a question being raised on Capitol Hill in response to a recent upsurge in patent applications by the developers of new tax reduction strategies.

    July 11
  • While practitioners are still scrambling to make sense out of the recent tax reconciliation legislation, significant changes in tax legislation are already in effect for 2006 - changes that may have a huge impact on the tax pro's 2007 tax filing season. And since it's an election year, tax pros will have to keep a close watch on any additional legislation that makes it into law impacting 2007 filings.How the practitioner community prepares for those changes now will make a big difference in the success of that filing season, which is really just a few months away.

    July 9
  • The energy industry hopes that anticipated public guidance regarding Section 45 of the Internal Revenue Code will provide significant clarity on tax credit issues for projects producing electricity from open-loop biomass projects."Currently, there's a logjam when it comes to doing deals involving open-loop biomass projects as the industry does not have clear guidance on various issues," said David S. Lowman Jr., a tax partner in the Energy Practice Group at Hunton & Williams LLP in Richmond, Va., who works with clients on issues related to various energy tax credits.

    July 9
  • With the tax filing season over, tax software vendors hope to get a head start on next season's sales by offering special summer season discounts and tryouts. At the same time, preparers have some time to tinker with different software to find a solution that fits their practice.Meanwhile, the recent enactment of tax legislation, such as the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 - with the promise of more to come - gives preparers additional motivation to consider new software solutions. Publicity over legislative changes will drive increasing numbers of taxpayers to seek professional help, according to observers. It also means more sales for tax prep vendors, since more preparers are expected to enter the field to service the additional taxpayers seeking professional advice.

    July 9
  • The Internal Revenue Service announced regulatory revisions that the agency hopes will remove impediments to e-filing for corporations and shareholders."This is a win-win situation for businesses, shareholders and the IRS," said Commissioner Mark W. Everson. "Businesses and shareholders will be relieved of excessive reporting obligations that really no longer made sense, while the IRS will still receive the information it needs for compliance. As a bonus, a number of roadblocks to IRS e-file also will be removed."

    July 9
  • Congressional investigators have uncovered a new breed of tax chiselers - deadbeat charities that shortchange the government and their own employees by failing to pay millions of dollars in payroll taxes.As tax-exempt organizations, or EOs, charities are excused from income tax liability, but are required to withhold and pay employment taxes for their workers. With one in 12 U.S. civilian workers now employed by exempt organizations, even a small percentage of non-compliance by charities can add up to a significant drain for federal tax collectors.

    July 9
  • The Internal Revenue Service will issue guidance clarifying the 20 percent penalty for executives divesting a deferred compensation arrangement.

    July 4
  • Looking at criteria that includes business taxes and state incentives, a recently released survey has found that Philadelphia is the most expensive city to do business in, while Cheyenne, Wyo., took the honors at the opposite end of the scale.

    July 4