Showing posts with label appeal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appeal. Show all posts

Saturday, February 05, 2011

Another Good Reason to Hate the IRS

As if anyone needs yet another reason to hate the IRS...

William P Barret of the Forbes.com blog has put together the following article on the legal battle between Robert Coleman and the IRS, and why taxpayers have one more reason to despise the federal collection agency.

From Forbes.com:

    You don’t have to be a supporter of the Tea Party to hold a dim view of the Internal Revenue Service. Still, we’re going to tell you about a case that will make your blood boil.

    The agency told Robert Colman of Santa Monica, Calif. he had no claim to a 15% informant’s reward after reporting his 90-year-old mother was embezzled of $1 million by a Los Angeles accountant not paying taxes on his ill-gotten loot. But the feds told Colman–in writing–he could appeal the whistleblower bounty denial by suing in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. Yet when Colman did just that–after the accountant pleaded guilty to a tax felony involving non-reporting of the very same money–the government said Colman had no right to sue.

    Astonishingly, the IRS won.

    The same court, which is based in Washington, D.C., just ruled that Colman was given very bad advice but that the federal laws establishing the tribunal did not give it jurisdiction over this kind of claim when Colman sought his reward in 2003. Judge Thomas C. Wheeler wrote he was “troubled” by the IRS written assertion that Colman could sue followed by the later denial but that a party cannot confer jurisdiction upon a limited-jurisdiction federal court simply by writing that it exists. “The public rightly should expect better from its federal agencies,” he wrote. But “the parties are powerless to create jurisdiction by consent.”

    According to court records, the accountant in the case, Steven Krell, who was also a lawyer, later pleaded guilty to state grand theft charges involving Colman’s mother and one other person. Besides making what was described as “significant” restitution, he served some jail time, giving up his law and accounting licenses.

Continue reading at Forbes.com...

Monday, June 28, 2010

Wesley Snipes' Lawyers want to Adjust Appeal Request After Adviser's Arrest

From SF Gate.com:

Wesley Snipes' attorneys are requesting that judicial officials in Georgia dismiss their petition appealing the actor's tax evasion conviction following the arrest of his former financial adviser.

The "Blade" star was convicted of three misdemeanor counts of willful failure to file his income tax return in 2008. He is currently free pending an appeal to reduce a three-year prison sentence on U.S. federal tax charges.

Meanwhile, Snipes' one-time accountant, celebrity investor Kenneth Starr, was busted in May and accused of embezzling a massive $30 million from stars including the action star, Uma Thurman and Martin Scorsese.

Starr has been charged with wire fraud, investment adviser fraud and money laundering amid claims he used the stolen cash to buy a luxurious Manhattan apartment.

Snipes' lawyers are hoping Starr's arrest will help the actor's own case, and they filed papers in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta on Wednesday, asking for judges to ignore their petition for an appeal.

Instead, Snipes' attorneys want to lodge a new petition asking to have the star's conviction dismissed, or set up a new trial on the grounds that the actor was the victim of a "miscarriage of justice."

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