I too thought this was interesting:
Someone on a different tax board said he was double-checking to be sure a payment to a client under the Fen-Phen/Redux settlement was non-taxable and ran into an unusual set of circumstances. He said he noticed an article that said two people who lied in claiming they took the drugs and received settlements were charged with failing to report the income on their tax returns. His first reaction was that these payments were non-taxable, so how could the recipients be taxed on the payment? The article went on to explain that the nature of the payment changes to taxable income since it was obtained through fraud.
This was a news article and it didn't get into the technicalities, although it did say they were ordered to forfeit property bought with the proceeds and were facing a $100,000 fine, plus jail time. This wasn't a small matter - they got $250,000 in the settlement, which worked out to $150,000 after paying the lawyers.
Someone on a different tax board said he was double-checking to be sure a payment to a client under the Fen-Phen/Redux settlement was non-taxable and ran into an unusual set of circumstances. He said he noticed an article that said two people who lied in claiming they took the drugs and received settlements were charged with failing to report the income on their tax returns. His first reaction was that these payments were non-taxable, so how could the recipients be taxed on the payment? The article went on to explain that the nature of the payment changes to taxable income since it was obtained through fraud.
This was a news article and it didn't get into the technicalities, although it did say they were ordered to forfeit property bought with the proceeds and were facing a $100,000 fine, plus jail time. This wasn't a small matter - they got $250,000 in the settlement, which worked out to $150,000 after paying the lawyers.
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