It is time for people to wake up and realize that “Quiet” Disclosures really don't make sense in light of the Streamline Voluntary Disclosure Program, which may not be available much longer.
According to DoJ, Lake Worth Businessman Pleads Guilty to Evading Taxes on Millions in Income, Stashing Funds in Secret Accounts Around the World.
He Tapped Hidden Accounts
According to DoJ, Lake Worth Businessman Pleads Guilty to Evading Taxes on Millions in Income, Stashing Funds in Secret Accounts Around the World.
To Buy $1.3 Million Yacht And Waterfront Property
and Filed a False “Quiet” Disclosure
A Lake Worth, Florida, businessman pleaded guilty today to tax evasion and willful failure to file a Report of Foreign Bank or Financial Account, announced
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard E. Zuckerman of the Justice Department’s Tax Division and U.S. Attorney Ariana Fajardo Orshan for the
Southern District of Florida.
According to court documents and statements made in court, Dusko Bruer owned and operated a company that bought U.S.-made agricultural machinery and
parts and sold them throughout the world. Beginning in 2003, the company did not pay Bruer a salary. Instead, Bruer used millions of dollars from the company’s
bank accounts to pay his personal expenses, make investments abroad, and make transfers to an employee and his family.
From 2007 through 2011, Bruer
transferred over $5.8 million of the company’s profits to foreign financial accounts. Bruer used the company’s profits to buy a yacht, purchase a waterfront home
for his girlfriend and himself, purchase a home for an employee, and buy real property in Serbia. Between 2007 and 2014, Bruer failed to report more than $7.7
million in income and did not pay taxes of more than $2.7 million that were due to the United States.
Although Bruer’s company had a number of employees and reaped millions of dollars in profits, Bruer never filed a corporate tax return for the company nor did
the company ever pay taxes on its income. Bruer also never filed employment tax returns during those years reporting wages that the company paid to its
employees nor did the company withhold and pay over payroll taxes.
From 2007 through 2015, Bruer maintained financial accounts in Croatia, Germany, Serbia, and Switzerland. He did not report his ownership of the accounts to
the Financial Crime Enforcement Network (FinCEN) by filing a Report of Foreign Bank or Financial Account (FBAR), despite knowing he had an obligation to do
so. In 2010, an account he held at a subsidiary of Credit Suisse AG in Zurich, Switzerland reached a year-end high value of $6,177,586. Bruer used the assets in
his foreign accounts for personal use, including the purchase of a yacht for $1,350,000 and a 3,200 square foot home in Lake Worth, Florida, with 100 feet of
waterfront frontage for approximately $1,650,000.
From 1999 to 2014, Bruer never filed a personal tax return nor did he pay tax on his income. In 2015, Credit Suisse closed his account in Switzerland and
advised him to enter the IRS’s Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP), by which taxpayers could avoid criminal prosecution by making a voluntary
disclosure directly to IRS-Criminal Investigation, filing six years of delinquent or amended income tax returns, as well as delinquent or amended FBARs, paying
back taxes, interest, and certain penalties on the six tax years in the disclosure period, and paying a penalty on the highest aggregate account balance of their
noncompliant offshore assets.
Bruer Did Not Enter Into The OVDP Because He
Determined That The Cost Would Be Too High?
(Really?#*)
Do You Value Your Freedom?
Instead, Bruer made a “quiet”
disclosure that involved filing several delinquent tax returns with the IRS, not flagging the returns in anyway or paying the taxes, penalties and interest that would
be paid in OVDP.
The Returns Bruer Filed As Part of His “Quiet” Disclosure Were False Because They Disclosed Only The Funds He Held In The Credit Suisse Account and Not The Funds He Held In The Accounts In Croatia, Germany, Serbia, Nor Did They Report The Income He Earned From His Company.
United States District Court Judge Senior District Judge Kenneth A. Marra scheduled sentencing for June 12, 2020. Bruer faces:
- a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison for each charge,
- three years (3) of supervised release,
- pay $2.6 million in restitution, and
- monetary penalties.
As you can see, the "Quiet" Disclosure really work well for this taxpayer - NOT!
Do You Have Undeclared Offshore Income?
Is Your Name Being Handed Over to the IRS?
Want to Know if the OVDP Program is Right for You?
Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A.
for a FREE Tax Consultation contact us at:
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243
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