This comes from the Emptyhead thread below which has been going on in so many directions I wanted to start a new thread so we could focus on the Indirect IRS Audit Methods discussed by Dyne and Uncle Sam.
I have no input here as I suspect both of the aforementioned have been auditors at one point or another and I haven't ever been one. At one point in the flurry of posts, Dyne listed five criteria frequently measured by IRS auditors.
My question is about those five criteria and the subsequent discussion of those methods. I wish to point out that ALL of those criteria depend upon the offender to deposit his unreported earnings into a bank. From what I've been exposed to, the overwhelming cheating occurs when the violator is too smart to leave records of the unreported transaction. Even large amounts of money can be unrecorded - one guy traded $80,000 for a Hummer straight up and recorded some piddly amount as consideration on the bill of sale and gave the car dealership something else under the table. He wasn't my client, but more than one of my customers told me about it.
Another example is the open-air meat and vegetable markets in Philadelphia. All cash transactions. The IRS will NOT go there. They are licensed by powerful friends in city and state governments, and even if they went in there they couldn't find evidence because there is no record -- the market owners take cash and pay cash for everything - even their light bill.
I would like to hear more from Uncle Sam and Dyne - auditing methods to catch the slick people who don't leave records of their unreported income. Only the village idiot would make bank deposits and E-bay sales if they didn't intend to report it.
I have no input here as I suspect both of the aforementioned have been auditors at one point or another and I haven't ever been one. At one point in the flurry of posts, Dyne listed five criteria frequently measured by IRS auditors.
My question is about those five criteria and the subsequent discussion of those methods. I wish to point out that ALL of those criteria depend upon the offender to deposit his unreported earnings into a bank. From what I've been exposed to, the overwhelming cheating occurs when the violator is too smart to leave records of the unreported transaction. Even large amounts of money can be unrecorded - one guy traded $80,000 for a Hummer straight up and recorded some piddly amount as consideration on the bill of sale and gave the car dealership something else under the table. He wasn't my client, but more than one of my customers told me about it.
Another example is the open-air meat and vegetable markets in Philadelphia. All cash transactions. The IRS will NOT go there. They are licensed by powerful friends in city and state governments, and even if they went in there they couldn't find evidence because there is no record -- the market owners take cash and pay cash for everything - even their light bill.
I would like to hear more from Uncle Sam and Dyne - auditing methods to catch the slick people who don't leave records of their unreported income. Only the village idiot would make bank deposits and E-bay sales if they didn't intend to report it.
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