Federal Taxation
One of the important procedures involved in Federal taxation is the apprehension of those persons and firms and trusts and others who evade tax payment and thereby break the law. This means that these entities may either conceal facts and/or misrepresent them so that the result would be beneficial to them. Such individuals may under declare their income levels and the earnings and profits that they may have earned during the course of their jobs. They may even over declare the deductions so that any losses would be made up this way. These are all the methods of tax evasions generally used by dishonest individuals who wish to avoid paying taxes to the federal government. However, tax avoidance is another issue wherein individuals and firms exploit the entire tax regime so that they will gain the ultimate advantage.
This way, they break the legal laws that govern taxation and they do not pay up the taxes that they are supposed to pay within the limits of the taxation policies of the government. Tax avoidance can be described as sometimes even legitimate means of avoiding one's duty towards the society and the people by discovering all the legal and legitimate means of avoiding paying taxes in contrast to the tax evaders who break laws by hiding evidence and misrepresenting facts. Sometimes, these tax evaders openly defy authorities by posing as if there were actual legal laws supporting the evasion of tax, and such people are referred to as 'tax protestors'. (Tax Evasion)
The government, faced with the problem of tax evasion and avoidance and other forms of tax crimes, has designed the 'Federal Tax Enforcement Program' that will serve to protect public interest in the tax system of the country by the strict and purposeful enforcement of the government's laws on the 'Internal Revenue' systems, with the idea of achieving the highest amount of deterrent value from the prosecuted cases. This enforcement must be balanced and uniform at all times so that there will be more compliance and conformity to those laws. When a case of tax evasion or avoidance is brought into court, a federal grand jury can, with the permission of the Tax Division, except in a few exceptional cases, investigate the case in court.
The CID can also involve itself in the investigation of federal tax cases, and can, whenever necessary, request the investigation of a 'grand jury' to help them to solve any unfinished case. The United States Attorney who has the authority to conduct a grand jury investigation generally handles internal Revenue laws and cases involving the IRS. The Assistant Attorney General of the Tax Division has the sole authority to issue arrest warrants in cases of federal tax crimes, especially when the subject of the investigation is a lawyer or an accountant or a physician or a political candidate, or a labor union official or a member of the clergy, or a person from the media, or an official of any organization that has been exempted from tax payments. The Assistant Attorney General, in fact, has the authority and the responsibility to take care of all the criminal proceedings that come under the IRS laws. (Criminal Tax Case Procedures)
The 'Principles of Federal Prosecution' outline the standards on which the review of tax evasion and other cases can be investigated for presentation to the court. The 'Federal Tax Enforcement Program' is also responsible for laying down the rules and the dictates upon which tax investigations must be based. The Tax Division, in order to speed up proceedings, designates criminal tax cases that come under the IRS division into either 'complex' or 'non-complex', so that a certain uniform standard of prosecution can be easily maintained. 'Complex cases' generally are those cases that are either legally or even factually complicated, and show only indirect methods of proof. 'Non-complex' cases are usually those cases that do not need any sort of in-depth reviews, and are generally screened before presentation by a team of senior Criminal Enforcement Section Attorneys.
The case of United States vs. Baggot, 463 U.S. 476 (1983) can be quoted as an example for a case involving Federal Tax Procedure. The facts of the case are as follows: In the year 1976, a special grand jury started its investigations into the matter of commodity figure transactions made by James E. Baggot on the Chicago Board of Trade. IRS agents were sent to interview...
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