Assuming this actually happened, did the accountant in this article encourage the client to commit fraud in applying for his mortgage?
--->>One borrower, who preferred anonymity because he's a sound technician for various bands, recently discovered this the hard way. When he applied for a mortgage with his wife, they were told they wouldn't qualify because his income changed substantially over the previous year.
"I had made about $70,000 one year, then only around $30,000," he explains. He says he was expecting to make it up this year, which looked promising, but he still couldn't qualify. However, his accountant told him there was one way to possibly qualify.
"She told me I could claim and pay taxes on another $40,000, and then I might - might - qualify," he says. "In the end, I decided paying the government thousands of dollars in taxes on money I didn't even earn wasn't worth it." <<---
--->>One borrower, who preferred anonymity because he's a sound technician for various bands, recently discovered this the hard way. When he applied for a mortgage with his wife, they were told they wouldn't qualify because his income changed substantially over the previous year.
"I had made about $70,000 one year, then only around $30,000," he explains. He says he was expecting to make it up this year, which looked promising, but he still couldn't qualify. However, his accountant told him there was one way to possibly qualify.
"She told me I could claim and pay taxes on another $40,000, and then I might - might - qualify," he says. "In the end, I decided paying the government thousands of dollars in taxes on money I didn't even earn wasn't worth it." <<---
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