Originally posted by OldJack
All they cared about was assessing a 100% penalty on the substantial under reporting. My client didn't even offer the info ahead of time. They found it through doing a bank deposit analysis.
Willfull tax evasion is a tough case to prove. IRS auditors are not going to go down that route unless you give them reason to. Every seminar I've ever been to on the subject said you don't need an attorney until you get a call from CI. Then you get an attorney. In the mean time, the EA is advised to cooperate and help the taxpayer by voluntarily reporting all mistakes that the auditor will obviously catch. There is no need to play games here. Cooperate with the auditors, and they will be happy just to collect their penalties.
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