Tuesday, July 27, 2010

How to Reduce Your IRS Tax Bill

A huge amount of the tax debt in the United States is not a result of intentional refusal or negligence to pay. Rather, much of this nation's tax debt is due to the consumers' failure to use the easy and readily available ways to cut down on tax overdue. If you are among these Americans who have no idea on how they will ever emerge from this overwhelming flood of debts, then here are some tips on how to reduce your IRS tax bill. If you follow these tips on a regular basis, you would definitely be on your way to cutting down on those debts.

First, you might want to hire a tax lawyer or CPA. A tax lawyer or CPA can help in assessing your situation and consequently, identify the things you must do to limit your tax debts. You can find many tax attorneys online.

Second, try to compromise with the IRS. The formal term for this is Offer in Compromise. This is a debt payment that is lower than your total tax debt but higher than the mount they can expect to gain. If they agree, then you will be successful in reducing your tax debt to a more acceptable level. When you try this technique of tax reduction, be sure to seek the help of a tax specialist. It will be very difficult to persuade the IRS to accept an Offer in Compromise.

Third, in the event that an Offer in Compromise fails to save the day, you can attempt to establish an installment agreement with the IRS and your tax counselor. Basically, this entails paying the total amount of your tax debt, penalties and interest included, through a number of small monthly payments.

A CPA or attorney is really vital in this approach because convincing the IRS to accept monthly payments that are less than what you can technically afford will prove to be more than a challenge. However, if your total tax debt is lower than $10,000, the IRS are in no position to argue as long as the amount of monthly payment you plan to give will allow your entire tax debt to be fully paid within three years.

It is also possible for you to convince the IRS to remove the penalties and interest that have accumulated in your debts. If you can honestly show the IRS that you will not be able to pay the full amount of debt because of circumstances that you are simply powerless to influence, then you have some hope of convincing them to eliminate the penalties and interest. However, as mentioned again and again, you would really need a tax representative to assist you.




For information on hiring tax relief attorneys and your tax relief attorney options, then visit these great sites.

adt logo 3 bureau credit Angeles Drug Los Rehab

Monday, July 19, 2010

Contingency Car Accident Lawyers

Contingency car accident lawyers do not charge a fixed amount of legal fees for the services rendered by them. In such a contract the petitioner agrees that the lawyer's fee will be determined by the amount of settlement awarded to the petitioner. The obvious clause in this contract is that the case should be won in the favor of the petitioner. If the petitioner does not win the case, the lawyer will receive no fee. In case of a car accident, a person may file a lawsuit against the offending party for claiming compensation. This may be done in spite of not having adequate resources to pay for the same. In such a case many lawyers do consider working on contingency basis. However, many people falsely tend to believe that if they lose the case they will not have to pay anything. This is not completely true. Though it is a fact that they may not have to pay the attorney's fee, they are liable to reimburse the expenses occurred by the attorney while pursuing their case. These fees might include medical reports, analytical services, proficient witnesses, judicial costs and court reporter fees. Irrespective of winning or losing, the client will be responsible for the expenses or cost of bringing the claim to the court.

When the contract to pay a lawyer in case of a car accident is based on contingency, the fee is always set at a pre-arranged percentage of whatever the compensation amount might be. This may sum up to much more than the normal fee the lawyer would have been entitled to. However, it is seen that there are many advantages to paying on contingency.

If a person loses the claim, the question of paying the lawyer's fees does not arise at all. If the person's compensation is received in arrears, the lawyer's fees can also be paid accordingly. Paying on contingency can enable a person to hire the services of an expensive attorney even though he may not be in a position to pay for it. The attorney also tends to work harder since his fee is at stake. Before getting into any agreement all the factors and clauses of the contract should be studied in great detail.




Car Accident Lawyers provides detailed information on Car Accident Lawyers, Florida Car Accident Lawyers, Illinois Car Accident Lawyers, Texas Car Accident Lawyer and more. Car Accident Lawyers is affiliated with Aviation Accident Lawyers.

Advice Debt Free auto gap insurance asset investigation

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Atlanta Criminal Defense Lawyer Meg Strickler - Nancy Grace

Atlanta Criminal Defense Attorney Meg Strickler gives her opinion on the case involving Drew Peterson and his missing wife Stacey on the CNN news show "Nancy Grace."



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3vPBUVDITU&hl=en

truck accident lawyers low rate credit card alcohol detox

Friday, June 11, 2010

Small Business Tax Credit - Americans With Disabilities Act

Many small businesses complain when confronted with the expense of complying with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Most do not realize that there are a number of tax incentives available to offset the costs. Importantly, one tax incentive comes in the form of a tax credit, which is far more valuable than a tax deduction when it comes to creating tax savings.

Disable Access Tax Credit

If you make your small business accessible to persons with disabilities, you can take an annual tax credit. Your business is eligible if you earned one million or less the previous year or had 30 or fewer employees. If you meet this test, you can claim a tax credit of 50 percent of your expenditures to a maximum of $5,000. Since this is a tax credit, it is deducted from your total tax liability.

To claim this tax credit your expenditures must be paid or incurred to enable your business to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Expenditures might include:

1. Purchase of adaptive equipment or modification of equipment;

2. Production of print materials in alternate formats such as Braille or audio; and

3. Sign language interpreters for employees or customers.

Modifications to buildings or offices also qualify as long as two criteria are met. First, the modifications cannot be construction of something new. Second, the building must have been in service prior to November 5, 1990.

Barrier Removal Tax Deduction

All businesses can take a tax deduction for expenditures incurred to remove physical, structural or transportation barriers for disabled individuals in the work place. This tax deduction carries no restrictions in regard to revenues earned or number of employees. Businesses may claim up to $15,000 a year as a tax deduction. Expenditure amounts exceeding this amount may also be claimed, but are subject to depreciation calculations.

To claim the barrier removal tax deduction, your expenditures must be related to making a facility or vehicle accessible to disabled persons. Examples include:

1. Providing ramps and curb cuts;

2. Making restrooms accessible to persons in wheelchairs; and

3. Expanding the width of sidewalks to at least 48 inches.

Significant Tax Break

Small business owners can double their tax saving pleasure by claiming both of these tax incentives in the same tax year. If a small business spent $20,000 creating wheelchair access to an office, it could take a $5,000 tax credit and a $15,000 tax deduction.

These tax incentives are in place to significantly reduce the burden of complying with the Americans with Disabilities Act. If you failed to claim the credit or deduction during the last three tax filing years, you should file amended tax returns to get a refund.




Richard A. Chapo is with http://www.businesstaxrecovery.com - recovery of business taxes through tax help and tax relief. Visit http://www.businesstaxrecovery.com/articles to read more business tax articles.

atlanta patent American Relief Tax

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

US Immigration Lawyer on Naturalization & Tax Return

www.4immigration.comTop US & New York Immigration Lawyer/Attorney Brad Bernstein gives free advice to callers at Immigration Link Show on Linkup Radio 93.5 FM. In this episode, Brad Bernstein answers the following question: Can a permanent resident (green card holder) file for naturalization while having failed to file his/her tax returns? Watch this video to the end to hear the answer of the immigration expert. Immigration Link Radio Show is aired Monday through Friday, 12:00pm-12:30pm EST, on 93.5 FM in New York City and parts of New Jersey. You too can ask a free immigration question from Spar & Bernstein's attorneys by calling 1-718-324-5465 during the hours of the show. To schedule a consultation with The Law Offices of Spar & Bernstein, please call 1-800-LAW-LINK or 1-800-529-5465 (within USA) or 1-212-227-3636 (outside of USA). For more information, please visit Spar & Bernstein's website at www.4immigration.com Also please visit our cool blog, Spar & Bernstein's Law Link sblawlink.com DISCLAIMER This media presentation is an attorney advertisement brought to you by The Law Offices of Spar and Bernstein and Linkup Media. Any information provided in this presentation should not be considered legal advice and does not take the place of consulting with an attorney. The Law Offices of Spar & Bernstein expressly denies that an attorney-client relationship is formed between The Law Offices of Spar & Bernstein and any and/or particular listeners/viewers of this show ...



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-PoYMlG9Y0&hl=en

aoto insurance

Monday, May 31, 2010

Evasion or Avoidance: A Crucial Difference

The old adage, "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" is particularly true when you are dealing with the tax man.

Although this article assumes that the reader/taxpayer is a Canadian resident, is subject to the Income Tax Act ("ITA") and will be dealing with the Canada Revenue Agency ("CRA") similar principles may cautiously be applied to other common law jurisdiction like the U.S.A. and England.

Taxing statutes are some of the most complex written documents known to mankind; so expert accounting and legal advice is needed to avoid their many pitfalls.

This article is designed to alert the reader to the concerns that should to be addressed before structuring, or restructuring, your business affairs or engaging in a tax reduction strategy you heard was 'great.'

Evasion Versus Avoidance

Evasion is an offence under §239(1)(d) of the ITA and unlike the enforcement provisions creating civil penalties (§§162 - 163 ITA), or regulatory offences (§238), evasion is a true criminal offence: R. v. Knox Contracting Ltd., [1990] 2 S.C.R. 338 at 346-348 and R. v. Klundert (2004), 242 D.L.R. (4th) 644 per Doherty, J.A. at §32.

Avoidance is structuring your affairs to minimize or defer taxes without violating the provisions of the ITA, however, is not a crime (Hickman Motors Ltd. v. Canada, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 336 McLachlin J. at §8).

Structuring Your Affairs

It is a fundamental principle of tax law that "[e]very man is entitled if he can to order his affairs so as that the tax attaching under the appropriate Acts is less than it otherwise would be": Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Westminster (Duke of), [1936] A.C. 1 (H.L.), at p. 19, per Lord Tomlin.

As Wilson J. put it in Stubart Investments Ltd. v. The Queen, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 536 (S.C.C.), at p. 540, "[a] transaction may be effectual and not in any sense a sham (as in this case) but may have no business purpose other than the tax purpose".

Tax Policy

Some so-called loopholes in the ITA are actually provisions designed to achieve a particular policy objective for Parliament.

One kind of behaviour may be thought to be beneficial and it is given a preferential tax treatment (e.g., tax shelters) while another may be considered detrimental to public policy objectives or revenue generation and it is subject to a higher level of taxation (e.g., §219 ITA). It is the complexity of these competing interests which help make income tax as complex as it is.

It is imperative that any taxpayer, who wants to structure their affairs to achieve a particular benefit, should consult their tax accountant and/or their tax lawyer to get expert advice before they do anything.

Your situation is unique and so too is the solution to your circumstances - there is no substitute for expert advice tailored for you. For large transactions your tax advisers may even recommend obtaining an advance tax ruling from CRA (see Information Circular IC 70-6R).

ITA: A Code

The Income Tax Act is designed to be a complete code; that is, if you fall inside its provisions you will be subject to its terms as dictated by Parliament, but if you fall outside its provisions you are free of its strictures.

The ITA taxes on residency (§2(1) ITA) and source of income (e.g., §§5 and §9(1) ITA) so usually if you are a non-resident (not carrying on business in Canada; e.g., §§2(3)(b) and §253) you are subject to taxation here. Similarly, if your receipt of funds is not attributable to a prescribed source (e.g., lottery winnings or gifts) then you are not tax on those receipts.

Here is a caveat for our American readers: the IRS taxes on residency and on citizenship; they also tax 'windfalls' like your winnings in Las Vegas; and 'gifts' may be subject to both federal and state taxes.

The theory is generally the same, if you're in the Act you pay, and if you're out of the Act, you don't. It is this clear demarcation, which permits, tax planning (cf., Hickman Motors Ltd., above).

The theory, however, is subject to some complications. Under Part XVI of the ITA, after September 13, 1988 §245(2) provides a general anti-avoidance rule ("GAAR") which was designed to prevent abusive tax avoidance. It is an anti-avoidance provision of last resort: Canada v. Imperial Oil Ltd., [2004] 2 C.T.C. 190 per Coram at §30.

"Tax minimization is legal and acceptable; abusive tax avoidance is not": Vern Krishna, The Fundamentals of Canadian Income Tax, 7th ed. (Toronto: Carswell, 2002) at 868.

Put this into vernacular CRA is saying that if you're clever enough to come up with a plan Parliament didn't think of (that is, one that doesn't offend a specific anti-avoidance provision), it costs the government too much money in tax revenues, and CRA thinks you did only to avoid paying taxes, they will try to claw it back. Whether the courts permits this, will depend on the facts.

If the scheme considered in the Duke of Westminister was used in Canada today it "would probably be caught" by GAAR: Hogg, Magee and Li, Principles of Canadian Income Tax Law, 4th ed. (Toronto: Carswell, 2002) at 584.
GAAR, however, is not a criminal provision in the ITA.

The Offence Of Evasion: §239(1)(d) ITA

As with all such questions it is necessary to begin with the statutory language: "every person who has ... (d) wilfully, in any manner, evaded or attempted to evade compliance with this Act or payment of taxes imposed by this Act ... is guilty of an offence ..." it is apparent that there are two constituent elements for committing this offence:

* proof of an act or course of conduct (the "actus reus") which has the effect of evading or attempting to evade payment of taxes actually owed under the Act (Klundert, above, §34); and

* a culpable state of the taxpayer's mind (the "mens rea").
The conduct component can usually be established where tax is owed under the ITA and the taxpayer has failed to report, calculate and pay the applicable tax owing (Klundert, §42).

The fault or mental component is found in the word "wilfully": R. v. Docherty (1989), 51 C.C.C. (3rd) 1 (S.C.C.) What will be required is something more than "negligently" or even "recklessly".

Culpability will then follow only where the accused engages in conduct intended to avoid the payment of tax owing under the Act; that is, the accused must know that the tax is owing under the ITA and they must intend to avoid payment of the tax (Klundert, §46).

Mistakes of fact can negate the fault requirement for the offence (e.g., arithmetic errors) but purely legal errors usually won't (e.g., §19 Criminal Code, "CC"). Discuss with your lawyer whether any mistakes of fact, or law, you may have made provide you with a defence to the charge(s). Each case will resolve itself based on its own set of facts.

Tax Planning

There is a "need to distinguish between legitimate tax planning and the crime of tax evasion" (Klundert, §36).

It is the culpable state of mind (i.e., mens rea) that distinguishes the legitimate tax planner from the dishonest tax evader. Both may engage in the same course of conduct that can aptly be described as a deliberate attempt to avoid payment of tax. The difference lies in their respective states of mind. Unlike the tax evader, the tax planner does not intend to avoid the payment of a tax that he or she knows is owed under the Act, but rather he or she intends to avoid owing tax under the Act in the first place (Klundert, §41).

Section 239(1)(d) is part of an Act which is necessarily and notoriously complex. It is subject to ongoing revision. No lay person is expected to know all the complexities of the tax laws. It is accepted that people will act on the advice of professionals and that the advice will often turn on the meanings to be given to provisions in the Act that are open to various interpretations. Furthermore, it is accepted that one may legitimately structure one's affairs so as to minimize tax liability (Klundert, §55).
In other words, if you retain and follow professional advice then it is unlikely you will be charged with tax evasion; or if charged, that you will be convicted.

So essentially we're back to where we began, "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure."




Staff Writer
For Tax Evasion Resources
http://www.taxevasionresources.com

refinance loan

Friday, May 28, 2010

Jogging Dangers Create Legal Nightmares

Every jogger has the nightmare. You're out for an evening jog when someone's dog jumps a fence or slips its leash. The dog catches your leg and without warning, you're on the ground, in pain and unable to escape.

Even though you may take precautions like wearing a reflective vest or bright clothes, vicious dogs are just one of the many threats joggers face. You can slip and fall on unsalted, icy sidewalks, or be hit by a careless driver or reckless bicyclist. Hazards can come from careless homeowners, dangerous sidewalks or roadways, and anyone you have to share the road with. No amount of preparation or awareness on your part can protect you from the negligence of others.

What's worse is that the dog bite or slip-and-fall nightmare doesn't end once you leave the hospital. You may have missed work, lost wages, or even be unable to return to your job. Suddenly, this healthy past-time has cost you your livelihood.

And what if the injury has left you permanently unable to work, with lifelong scars or unpaid medical bills? Without a personal injury attorney experienced in the laws of your state, you may end up with a bigger nightmare, facing insurance attorneys out to settle your claim for less than you deserve or a dog-owner that refuses responsibility for their pet.

While a good personal injury attorney can't get you back on the road any quicker, your personal injury attorney can help you recover compensation for disability, pain and suffering, or disfigurement.

When you first set out for that jog, a personal injury lawsuit is not what you anticipated, but once you have been injured, you need an attorney on your side that is willing to take your matter through the settlement negotiations and into court if necessary.

If you have just been injured, do you have the time or luxury of trying to navigate a complex legal system? Do you know who needs to be served? Who is really responsible for your bills? Do you know what a fair settlement figure is? Do you know what evidence or information you will need to provide to the Court? Do you know how to collect on a judgment, if you get one?

An experienced accident attorney will help throughout the process. From dealing with insurance companies, negotiating settlements, and filing your claim right through to your day in court. After, your personal injury lawyer will help you collect on and enforce your judgment. A good accident attorney is your best resource and can often be the only thing standing between you and an unfair settlement.

Every day, you run the risk of being injured by a car, motorcycle or being hurt by negligently maintained property. You can't undo the injury, but you can ensure a fair and just result by consulting a personal injury attorney that will help make the legal system work for you when you need it most.




Nick Messe is president of Lead Frog LLC. If you are involved in a Waukesha auto injury contact the experienced Waukesha personal injury lawyers at Gruber law Offices. That is the best way to get the maximum compensation you are entitled to.

apr best card credit adt security birth injury attorney