Got a call from kinfolks who unfortunately invested in business with a former "friend" who looted their 3-person S-corp and sent them a K-1 for $60K profit. Their $75K investment is gone (friend secretly "loaned" it to his sole owner S-corp ), they never received a dime, he sold off the inventory, pocketed the money and drained company bank account down to a hundred bucks.
The shyster has all books, records, checkbooks, etc. and I've got an idea his K-1 shows a much smaller perentage of gain (like maybe $5,000). I know when a taxpayer gets an incorrect 1099 and disputes it (say like schedule B interest), he can list the gross amount on that schedule (to match IRS records), then subtract it down to the correct amount and attach an explanation.
So, question is, if it works for a 1099 would it work for a K-1 (say on Schedule E, page 2)?
Don't see why not.
Or...do they have to round up a copy of the 1120-S (he wouldn't produce it) and have someone amend it?
The shyster has all books, records, checkbooks, etc. and I've got an idea his K-1 shows a much smaller perentage of gain (like maybe $5,000). I know when a taxpayer gets an incorrect 1099 and disputes it (say like schedule B interest), he can list the gross amount on that schedule (to match IRS records), then subtract it down to the correct amount and attach an explanation.
So, question is, if it works for a 1099 would it work for a K-1 (say on Schedule E, page 2)?
Don't see why not.
Or...do they have to round up a copy of the 1120-S (he wouldn't produce it) and have someone amend it?
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