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 200K Report 
 Lance Wallach 419, 412i, Section 79, Captive Insurance
In This Issue...
419 Insurance Welfare Benefit Plan
Small Business Retirement Plans Fuel Litigation
419 Plans Attacked by The IRS
The Dangers of being "listed"
If you are suffering from "tax problems" regarding "welfare benefit plan audits" and need 412i and "419 plan help", assistance with captive insurance, Section 79 plans, listed or reportable transactions, or IRC 6707A, you need Lance Wallach's "expert witness testimony" on your side.
    
Lance Wallach's side has NEVER lost a case.

 

419 Insurance Welfare Benefit Plans Continue to Get Accountants in Trouble

 

HG Eperts


The National Conference of CPA Practitioners - By Lance Wallach

 

Popular so-called "419 Insurance Welfare Benefit Plans," sold by most insurance professionals, are getting accountants and their clients into more and more trouble. A CPA who is approached by a client about one of the abusive arrangements and/or situations to be described and discussed in this article must exercise the utmost degree of caution, not only on behalf of the client, but for his/her own good as well. 



The penalties noted in this article can also be applied to practitioners who prepare and/or sign returns that fail to properly disclose listed transactions, including those discussed herein.

On Oct. 17, 2007, the IRS issued Notice 2007-83, Notice 2007-84, and Revenue Ruling 2007-65. Notice 2007-83 essentially lists the characteristics of welfare benefit plans that the Service regards as listed transactions. Put simply, to be a listed transaction, a plan cannot rely on the union exception set forth in IRC Section 419A(f)(5),there must be cash value life insurance within the plan and excessive tax deductions for life insurance, in excess of what may be permitted by Sections 419 and 419A, must have been claimed.

In Notice 2007-84, the Service expressed concern with plans that provide all or a substantial portion of benefits to owners and/or key and highly compensated employees. The notice identified numerous specific concerns, among them:

1. The granting of loans to participants;
2. Providing deferred compensation; 
3. Plan terminations that result in the distribution of assets rather than being used post-retirement, as originally established; and
4. Permitting the transfer of life insurance policies to participants.

Alternative tax treatment may well be in the offing for such arrangements, as the IRS intends to re-characterize such arrangements as dividends, non-qualified deferred compensation (under IRC Section 404(a)(5) or Section 409A), split-dollar life insurance arrangements, or disqualified benefits pursuant to Section 4976. Taxpayers participating in these listed transactions should have, in most cases, already disclosed such participation to the Service. Those who have not should do so at the earliest possible moment. Failure to disclose can result in severe penalties - up to $100,000 for individuals and $200,000 for corporations.

Finally, Revenue Ruling 2007-65 focused on situations where cash value life insurance is purchased on owner employees and other key employees, while only term insurance is offered to the rank and file. These are sold as 419(e), 419A (f)(6), and 419 plans. Life insurance premiums are not inherently tax deductible and authority must be found in Section 79 to justify such a deduction. Section 264(a), in fact, specifically disallows tax deductions for life insurance, at least in some cases. And moreover, the Service declared, interposition of a trust does not change the nature of the transaction.

 

Maryland Trial Lawyer 
Small Business Retirement Plans Fuel Litigation

Dolan Media Newswires  

Lance Wallach     

                                                                     January                                                                           

 

 

Small businesses facing audits and potentially huge tax penalties over certain types of retirement plans are filing lawsuits against those who marketed, designed and sold the plans. The 412(i) and 419(e) plans were marketed in the past several years as a way for small business owners to set up retirement or welfare benefits plans while leveraging huge tax savings, but the IRS put them on a list of abusive tax shelters and has more recently focused audits on them.

The penalties for such transactions are extremely high and can pile up quickly.

 There are business owners who owe taxes but have been assessed 2 million in penalties. The existing cases involve many types of businesses, including doctors' offices, dental practices, grocery store owners, mortgage companies and restaurant owners. Some are trying to negotiate with the IRS. Others are not waiting. A class action has been filed and cases in several states are ongoing. The business owners claim that they were targeted by insurance companies; and their agents to purchase the plans without any disclosure that the IRS viewed the plans as abusive tax shelters. Other defendants include financial advisors who recommended the plans, accountants who failed to fill out required tax forms and law firms that drafted opinion letters legitimizing the plans, which were used as marketing tools.

A 412(i) plan is a form of defined benefit pension plan. A 419(e) plan is a similar type of health and benefits plan. Typically, these were sold to small, privately held businesses with fewer than 20 employees and several million dollars in gross revenues. What distinguished a legitimate plan from the plans at issue were the life insurance policies used to fund them. The employer would make large cash contributions in the form of insurance premiums, deducting the entire amounts. The insurance policy was designed to have a "springing cash value," meaning that for the first 5-7 years it would have a near-zero cash value, and then spring up in value.

Just before it sprung, the owner would purchase the policy from the trust at the low cash value, thus making a tax-free transaction. After the cash value shot up, the owner could take tax-free loans against it. Meanwhile, the insurance agents collected exorbitant commissions on the premiums - 80 to 110 percent of the first year's premium, which could exceed million.

Technically, the IRS's problems with the plans were that the "springing cash" structure disqualified them from being 412(i) plans and that the premiums, which dwarfed any payout to a beneficiary, violated incidental death benefit rules.

Under �6707A of the Internal Revenue Code, once the IRS flags something as an abusive tax shelter, or "listed transaction," penalties are imposed per year for each failure to disclose it. Another allegation is that businesses weren't told that they had to file Form 8886, which discloses a listed transaction.

 

According to Lance Wallach of Plainview, N.Y. (516-938-5007), who testifies as an expert in cases involving the plans, the vast majority of accountants either did not file the forms for their clients or did not fill them out correctly.

 

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Question: What is the IRS position on these plans?

Answer: The IRS position appears to be that all multiple employer welfare benefit plans funded with permanent life insurance are abusive tax scams. Their history is to open promoter audits on every such plan and eventually to obtain the client lists from the promoters and then audit their clients. The IRS position on single employer welfare benefit plans that are spin-offs of the multiple employer plans appears to be the same. Similarly, the IRS position on single employer welfare benefit plans invested in permanent life insurance where the employer deducts more than the term cost of insurance is that those plans are also abusive tax scams.

Question: Has the IRS approved any multiple or single employer welfare benefit plan invested in permanent life insurance?

Answer: Though an IRS private letter ruling is not immediately public, it is my understanding that the IRS has never "approved" of any multiple or single employer welfare benefit plan where permanent life insurance was used as a funding vehicle and the participating employer took a deduction for anything other than the current term insurance cost.

Question: Are the IRS audits coordinated?

Answer: Yes. The IRS audits are both targeted and coordinated. They are targeted meaning that the IRS obtains a list of the participating employers in a plan promotion and audits the participating employers (and owners) for the purpose of challenging the deductions taken with respect to the plan. The audits are coordinated meaning that there is an IRS Issue Management Team for each promotion that has responsibility for both managing the promoter audit(s) and also developing the coordinated position to be followed by the Examination Agents. Their intention is that all taxpayers under audit will receive the similar treatment in Exam. There are also IRS Offices that specialize in 419 audits. For example, IRS offices in upstate New York and in El Monte California will manage many audits of specific promotions. Williams Coulson has significant experience in working with both of these offices.

Question: What is the general IRS position on these plans?

Answer: Though there can be some differences among plans, the basic IRS position is that the plans are not welfare benefit plans, but really plans of deferred compensation. As such, the contributions remain deductible at the business level but are included in the owner's 1040 income for every open year and the value of the insurance policy with respect to contributions in closed years is included in the owner's income either in the first open year or the year of termination or transfer. The IRS will normally apply 20% penalties on the tax applied and 30% with respect to non-reporting cases (see discussion below).

Question: Can the penalties ever be waived?

Answer: Yes. The penalties can often be waived upon a showing of the taxpayer's due diligence and good faith reasonable cause. For example, if the taxpayer can show reliance on an outside tax advisor who reviewed the plan and the law, the Examining Agent normally has the authority to waive the 20% negligence penalty. Note that there are different standards for waiving penalties among the IRS Offices. It is important to know the standards of each office before requesting a waiver.

Question:

 What if there is an opinion letter issued on the plan - will that eliminate penalties?

Answer:

Generally, the answer is a resounding - No. If the opinion letter was issued to the promoter or the promotion itself and a copy was merely provided to the taxpayer (even if the taxpayer paid for it), the IRS perceives the advice to be bias and not reasonable for reliance.

Question: What if the taxpayer relied upon the advisor who sold the promotion?

Answer: The IRS also discounts any advice provided by parties who are part of the sales team for the promotion. It is possible to negate the bias against professionals involved in the sale if you can demonstrate that the professional was first a tax advisor and gave advice in that role and not as a salesman.

Question: What are the "listed transaction" penalties?

Answer: The IRS has identified certain multiple and single employer welfare benefit plans as listed transactions. Taxpayers who participate in listed transactions have an obligation to notify the IRS of their participation on IRS Form 8886. The Form 8886 must be filed with every tax return where a tax effect of the transaction appears on the return and for the first year of filing must also be filed with the IRS Office of Tax Shelter Analysis (OTSA). There are penalties that apply for the failure to file the Form 8886. The IRS position appears to be that although only the C corporation must file the 8886, if the business is a pass-through entity like an S Corporation, LLC or partnership, then the Form 8886 must be filed at both the entity level and also the individual level. The penalty for non-filing is 75% of the tax reduction for the tax year. Note, that it is very clear that a plan does not have to be proven to be defective or abusive for the penalty to apply. Further, the IRS has made it very clear that they will construe the duty to disclose broadly. Thus, if there is even a possibility that a plan is a listed transaction, the taxpayer should consider strongly filing the Form 8886.

Question:

Are there other negatives to not filing the Form 8886?

Answer: Yes. In addition to the nonreporting penalty, the negligence penalty discussed above of 20% becomes 30% and is much more difficult to have waived. Further, the nonreporting penalty cannot be appealed to tax court. Therefore, the only recourse is to pay the penalty, file for a refund and fight the case in District Court.

Question:

Whose responsibility is it to notify taxpayers of the need to file Form 8886?

Answer:

It depends. Many promoters take the initiative to inform their customers that the promotion may be considered to be a listed transaction and that they should consider filing Forms 8886, though some promoters have actually taken the opposite view and have directed customers to not file the Form 8886 to keep them off the IRS radar. These promoters face potential liability if the penalties are assessed. Because the Form 8886 is filed with the tax returns, it may be partly the responsibility of the CPA who prepares the returns to file the Form, though many CPAs may not know that the transaction is a listed transaction or how to prepare the Form. From the IRS perspective, the responsibility is clear - it is the taxpayer who bears the ultimate responsibility and will be penalized if the Form is not filed.

Question: Are some plans better than others?

Answer: Yes. Even though the IRS appears to have thrown a giant net over the entire industry, I have observed that many promoters have worked hard to develop a plan that complies with the tax law. The plans are supported by substantial legal and actuarial authority and make it clear that they are welfare plans and not deferred compensation plans. These plans are often very strong in their marketing materials as to the nature of the plan and also provide for less deductible amounts. On the other hand, some promotions have ignored new IRS Regulations (issued in 2003) and continue to sell and market plans that have been out of compliance for years. They make no attempt to bring their plans into compliance and seek to stay under the radar by directing their customers to not file Forms 8886.

Question: Do taxpayers have causes of action?

Answer: Maybe. We see two potential causes of action. First, in cases where the promoter has either created a defective product, or has turned a blind eye towards law changes, the promoter and potentially the insurance companies may have liability for the creating, marketing, endorsing and selling a defective product. Second, where planners have sold the product to customers improperly, by describing the plan as a safe, IRS approved retirement plan with unlimited deductions, they may have liability for fraudulent sales.

 

Lance Wallach did not write the above, and agrees with most of it. You must also be careful of 412i, captive insurance and section 79 plans. Many of the abusive plans are sold by the same people that sold abusive 419 plans. Everyone should file under IRS 6707a to avoid additional IRS fines.

Who should you believe? 

Google Lance Wallach and Google the man who sold you the plan.


419 Plans Attacked by IRS


By Lance Wallach, CLU, CHFC 

Insurance agents and costs attacked. - Enrolled Agents Journal March*April - For years promoters of life insurance companies and agents have tried to find ways of claiming that the premiums paid by business owners were tax deductible. This allowed them to sell policies at a "discount".
The problem became especially bad a few years ago with all of the outlandish claims about how ��419A(f)(5) and 419A(f)(6) exempted employers from any tax deduction limits. Many other inaccurate statements were made as well, until the IRS finally put a stop to such assertions by issuing regulations and naming such plans as "potentially abusive tax shelters" (or "listed transactions") that needed to be disclosed and registered. This appeared to put an end to the scourge of such scurrilous promoters, as such plans began to disappear from the landscape.

And what happened to all the providers that were peddling ��419A(f)(5) and (6) life insurance plans a couple of years ago? We recently found the answer: most of them found a new life as promoters of so-called "419(e)" welfare benefit plans.

We recently reviewed several �419(e) plans, and it appears that many of them are nothing more than recycled �419A(f)(5) and �419A(f)(6) plans.

The "Tax Guide" written by one vendor's attorney is illustrative: he confuses the difference between a "multi-employer trust" (a Taft-Hartley, collectively-bargained plan), a "multiple-employer trust" (a plan with more than one unrelated employer) and a "10-or-more employer trust" (a plan seeking to comply with IRC �419A(f)(6)).

Background: Section 419 of the Internal Revenue Code

Section 419 was added to the Internal Revenue Code ("IRC") in 1984 to curb abuses in welfare benefit plan tax deductions. �419(a) does not authorize tax deductions, but provides as follows: "Contributions paid or accrued by an employer to a welfare benefit fund * * * shall not be deductible under this chapter * * *.". It simply limits the amount that would be deductible under another IRC section to the "qualified cost for the taxable year". (�419(b))

Section 419(e) of the IRC defines a "welfare benefit fund" as "any fund-- (A) which is part of a plan of an employer, and (B) through which the employer provides welfare benefits to employees or their beneficiaries." It also defines the term "fund", but excludes from that definition "amounts held by an insurance company pursuant to an insurance contract" under conditions described.

None of the vendors provides an analysis under �419(e) as to whether or not the life insurance policies they promote are to be included or excluded from the definition of a "fund". In fact, such policies will be included and therefore subject to the limitations of ��419 and 419A.

Errors Commonly Made

Materials from the various plans commonly make several mistakes in their analyses:

1. They claim not to be required to comply with IRC �505 non-discrimination requirements. While it is true that �505 specifically lists "organizations described in paragraph (9) or (20) of section 501(c)", IRC �4976 imposes a 100% excise tax on any "post-retirement medical benefit or life insurance benefit provided with respect to a key employee" * * * "unless the plan meets the requirements of section 505(b) with respect to such benefit (whether or not such requirements apply to such plan)." (Italics added) Failure to comply with �505(b) means that the plan will never be able to distribute an insurance policy to a key employee without the 100% penalty!

2. Vendors commonly assert that contributions to their plan are tax deductible because they fall within the limitations imposed under IRC �419; however, �419 is simply a limitation on tax deductions. Providers must cite the section of the IRC under which contributions to their plan would be tax-deductible. Many fail to do so. Others claim that the deductions are ordinary and necessary business expense under �162, citing Regs. �1.162-10 in error: there is no mention in that section of life insurance or a death benefit as a welfare benefit.

3. The reason that promoters fail to cite a section of the IRC to support a tax deduction is because, once such section is cited, it becomes apparent that their method of covering only selected key and highly-compensated employees for participation in the plan fails to comply with IRC �414(t) requirements relative to coverage of controlled groups and affiliated service groups.

4. Life insurance premiums could be treated as W-2 wages and deducted under �162 to the extent they were reasonable. Other than that, however, no section of the Internal Revenue Code authorizes tax deductions for a discriminatory life insurance arrangement. IRC �264(a) provides that "[n]o deduction shall be allowed for * * * [p]remiums on any life insurance policy * * * if the taxpayer is directly or indirectly a beneficiary under the policy." As was made clear in the Neonatology case (Neonatology Associates v. Commissioner, 115 TC 5, 2000), the appropriate treatment of employer-paid life insurance premiums under a putative welfare benefit plan is under �79, which comes with its own nondiscrimination requirements. 

5. Some plans claim to impute income for current protection under the PS 58 rules. However, PS58 treatment is available only to qualified retirement plans and split-dollar plans. (Note: none of the 419(e) plans claim to comply with the split-dollar regulations.) Income is imputed under Table I to participants under Group-Term Life Insurance plans that comply with �79. This issue is addressed in footnotes 17 and 18 of the Neonatology case.

6. Several of the plans claim to be exempt from ERISA. They appear to rely upon the ERISA Top-Hat exemption (applicable to deferred compensation plans). However, that only exempts a plan from certain ERISA requirements, not ERISA itself. It is instructive that none of the plans claiming exemption from ERISA has filed the Top-Hat notification with the Dept. of Labor.

7. Some of the plans offer severance benefits as a "welfare benefit", which approach has never been approved by the IRS. Other plans offer strategies for obtaining a cash benefit by terminating a single-employer trust. The distribution of a cash benefit is a form of deferred compensation, yet none of the plans offering such benefit complies with the IRC �409A requirements applicable to such benefits.

8. Some vendors permit participation by employees who are self-employed, such as sole proprietors, partners or members of an LLC or LLP taxed as a partnership. This issue was also addressed in the Neonatology case where contributions on behalf of such persons were deemed to be dividends or personal payments rather than welfare benefit plan expenses.

[Note: bona fide employees of an LLC or LLP that has elected to be taxed as a corporation may participate in a plan.]

9. Most of the plans fail under �419 itself. �419(c) limits the current tax deduction to the "qualified cost", which includes the "qualified direct cost" and additions to a "qualified asset account" (subject to the limits of �419A(b)). Under Regs. �1.419-1T, A-6, "the "qualified direct cost" of a welfare benefit fund for any taxable year * * * is the aggregate amount which would have been allowable as a deduction to the employer for benefits provided by such fund during such year (including insurance coverage for such year) * * *." "Thus, for example, if a calendar year welfare benefit fund pays an insurance company * * * the full premium for coverage of its current employees under a term * * * insurance policy, * * * only the portion of the premium for coverage during [the year] will be treated as a "qualified direct cost" * * *." (Italics added)

Most vendors pretend that the whole or universal life insurance premium is an appropriate measurement of cost for Key Employees, and those plans that cover rank and file employees use current term insurance premiums as the appropriate measure of cost for such employees. This approach doesn't meet any set of nondiscrimination requirements applicable to such plans.

10. Some vendors claim that they are justified in providing a larger deduction than the amount required to pay term insurance costs for the current tax year, but, as cited above, the only justification under �419(e) itself is as additions to a qualified asset account and is subject to the limitations imposed by �419A. In addition, �419A adds several additional limitations to plans and contributions, including requirements that:

A. contributions be limited to a safe harbor amount or be certified by an actuary as to the amount of such contributions (�419A(c)(5));
B. actuarial assumptions be "reasonable in the aggregate" and that the actuary use a level annual cost method (�419A(c)(2));
C. benefits with respect to a Key Employee be segregated and their benefits can only be paid from such account (�419A(d));
D. the rules of subsections (b), (c), (m), and (n) of IRC section 414 shall apply to such plans (�419A(h)).
E. the plan comply with �505(b) nondiscrimination requirements (�419A(e)).

Circular 230 Issues

Circular 230 imposes many requirements on tax professionals with respect to tax shelter transactions. A tax practitioner can get into trouble in the promotion of such plans, in advising clients with respect to such transactions and in preparing tax returns. IRC ��6707 and 6707A add a new concept of "reportable transactions" and impose substantial penalties for failure to disclose participation in certain reportable transactions (including all listed transactions).

This is a veritable minefield for tax practitioners to negotiate carefully or avoid altogether. The advisor must exercise great caution and due diligence when presented with any potential contemplated tax reduction or avoidance transaction. Failure to disclose could subject taxpayers and their tax advisors to potentially Draconian penalties.

Summary

Key points of this article include:

* Practitioners need to be able to differentiate between a legitimate �419(e) plan and one that is legally inadequate when their client approaches them with respect to such plan or has the practitioner to prepare his return;
* Many plans incorrectly purport to be exempt from compliance with ERISA, IRC ��414, 505, 79, etc.
* Tax deductions must be claimed under an authorizing section of the IRC and are limited to the qualified direct cost and additions to a qualified asset account as certified by the plan's actuary.

Conclusion

Irresponsible vendors such as most of the promoters who previously promoted IRC �419A(f)(6) plans were responsible for the IRS's issuing restrictive regulations under that Section. Now many of the same individuals have elected simply to claim that a life insurance plan is a welfare benefit plan and therefore tax-deductible because it uses a single-employer trust rather than a "10-or-more-employer plan".

This is an open invitation to the IRS to issue new onerous Regulations and more indictments and legal actions against the unscrupulous promoters who feed off of the naivety of clients and the greed of life insurance companies who encourage and endorse (and even own) such plans.

The last line of defense of the innocent client is the accountant or attorney who is asked by a client to review such arrangement or prepare a tax return claiming a deduction for contributions to such a plan. Under these circumstances accountants and attorneys should be careful not to rely upon the materials made available by the plan vendors, but should review any proposed plan thoroughly, or refer the review to a specialist.

A Rose By Any Other Name, or Whatever Happened to All Those 419A(f)(6) Providers? By Ronald H. Snyder, JD, MAAA, EA & Lance Wallach, CLU, ChFC, CIMC.

This information is not intended as legal, accounting, financial, or any other type of advice for any specific individual or other entity. You should contact an appropriate professional for any such advice.


The Dangers of being "listed"

A warning for 419, 412i, Sec.79 and captive insurance 

Accounting Today: October 25, 2010 
By: Lance Wallach

Taxpayers who previously adopted 419, 412i, captive insurance or Section 79 plans are in 
big trouble. 


In recent years, the IRS has identified many of these arrangements as abusive devices to 
funnel tax deductible dollars to shareholders and classified these arrangements as "listed 
transactions." 

These plans were sold by insurance agents, financial planners, accountants and attorneys 
seeking large life insurance commissions. In general, taxpayers who engage in a "listed 
transaction" must report such transaction to the IRS on Form 8886 every year that they 
"participate" in the transaction, and you do not necessarily have to make a contribution or 
claim a tax deduction to participate.  Section 6707A of the Code imposes severe penalties 
($200,000 for a business and $100,000 for an individual) for failure to file Form 8886 with 
respect to a listed transaction. 

But you are also in trouble if you file incorrectly.  

I have received numerous phone calls from business owners who filed and still got fined. Not 
only do you have to file Form 8886, but it has to be prepared correctly. I only know of two 
people in the United States who have filed these forms properly for clients. They tell me that 
was after hundreds of hours of research and over fifty phones calls to various IRS 
personnel. 

The filing instructions for Form 8886 presume a timely filing.  Most people file late and follow 
the directions for currently preparing the forms. Then the IRS fines the business owner. The 
tax court does not have jurisdiction to abate or lower such penalties imposed by the IRS. 
Many business owners adopted 412i, 419, captive insurance and Section 79 plans based 
upon representations provided by insurance professionals that the plans were legitimate 
plans and were not informed that they were engaging in a listed transaction.  
Upon audit, these taxpayers were shocked when the IRS asserted penalties under Section 
6707A of the Code in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Numerous complaints from 
these taxpayers caused Congress to impose a moratorium on assessment of Section 6707A 
penalties.

The moratorium on IRS fines expired on June 1, 2010. The IRS immediately started sending 
out notices proposing the imposition of Section 6707A penalties along with requests for 
lengthy extensions of the Statute of Limitations for the purpose of assessing tax.  Many of 
these taxpayers stopped taking deductions for contributions to these plans years ago, and 
are confused and upset by the IRS's inquiry, especially when the taxpayer had previously 
reached a monetary settlement with the IRS regarding its deductions.  Logic and common 
sense dictate that a penalty should not apply if the taxpayer no longer benefits from the 
arrangement. 

Treas. Reg. Sec. 1.6011-4(c)(3)(i) provides that a taxpayer has participated in a listed 
transaction if the taxpayer's tax return reflects tax consequences or a tax strategy described 
in the published guidance identifying the transaction as a listed transaction or a transaction 
that is the same or substantially similar to a listed transaction.  Clearly, the primary benefit in 
the participation of these plans is the large tax deduction generated by such participation.  It 
follows that taxpayers who no longer enjoy the benefit of those large deductions are no 
longer "participating ' in the listed transaction.   But that is not the end of the story. 
Many taxpayers who are no longer taking current tax deductions for these plans continue to 
enjoy the benefit of previous tax deductions by continuing the deferral of income from 
contributions and deductions taken in prior years.  While the regulations do not expand on 
what constitutes "reflecting the tax consequences of the strategy", it could be argued that 
continued benefit from a tax deferral for a previous tax deduction is within the contemplation 
of a "tax consequence" of the plan strategy. Also, many taxpayers who no longer make 
contributions or claim tax deductions continue to pay administrative fees.  Sometimes, 
money is taken from the plan to pay premiums to keep life insurance policies in force.  In 
these ways, it could be argued that these taxpayers are still "contributing", and thus still 
must file Form 8886.

It is clear that the extent to which a taxpayer benefits from the transaction depends on the 
purpose of a particular transaction as described in the published guidance that caused such 
transaction to be a listed transaction. Revenue Ruling 2004-20 which classifies 419(e) 
transactions, appears to be concerned with the employer's contribution/deduction amount 
rather than the continued deferral of the income in previous years.  This language may 
provide the taxpayer with a solid argument in the event of an audit.  

Lance Wallach, National Society of Accountants Speaker of the Year and member of the AICPA faculty of teaching professionals, is a frequent speaker on retirement plans, financial and estate planning, and abusive tax shelters.  He writes about 412(i), 419, and captive 
insurance plans. He speaks at more than ten conventions annually He does expert witness testimony and has never lost a case. Contact 
him at 516.938.5007

The information provided herein is not intended as legal, accounting, financial or any 
other type of advice for any specific individual or other entity.  You should contact an 
appropriate professional for any such advice.
A Rose By Any Other Name
or
Whatever Happened to All Those 419A(f)(6) Providers

Enrolled Agents Journal                                                                    March
 
 

 
By Ronald H. Snyder, JD, MAAA, EA & Lance Wallach, CLU, ChFC, CIMC

 

 

 
For years promoters of life insurance companies and agents have tried to find ways of claiming that the premiums paid by business owners were tax deductible. This allowed them to sell policies at a "discount".

 

The problem became especially bad a few years ago with all of the outlandish claims about how ��419A(f)(5) and 419A(f)(6) exempted employers from any tax deduction limits. Many other inaccurate statements were made as well, until the IRS finally put a stop to such assertions by issuing regulations and naming such plans as "potentially abusive tax shelters" (or "listed transactions") that needed to be disclosed and registered. This appeared to put an end to the scourge of such scurrilous promoters, as such plans began to disappear from the landscape.

 

And what happened to all the providers that were peddling ��419A(f)(5) and (6) life insurance plans a couple of years ago?  We recently found the answer: most of them found a new life as promoters of so-called "419(e)" welfare benefit plans.


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419 412i Section 79 Scams





Advisers staring at a new 'slew' of litigation from small-business clients 
Five-year-old change in tax has left some small businesses and certain benefit
plans subject to IRS fines; the advisers who sold these plans may pay the price 


By Jessica Toonkel Marquez 

October 14, 2009 
Financial advisers who have sold certain types of retirement and other benefit plans to small businesses might soon be facing a wave of lawsuits - unless Congress decides to take action soon. 
For years, advisers and insurance brokers have sold the 412(i) plan, a type of defined-benefit pension plan, and the 419 plan, a health and welfare plan, to small businesses as a way of providing such benefits to their employees, while also receiving a tax break. 
However, in 2004, Congress changed the law to require that companies file with the Internal Revenue Service if they had these plans in place. The law change was intended to address tax shelters, particularly those set up by large companies. 
Many companies and financial advisers didn't realize that this was a cause for concern, however, and now employers are receiving a great deal of scrutiny from the federal government, according to experts. 
The IRS has been aggressive in auditing these plans. The fines for failing to notify the agency about them are $200,000 per business per year the plan has been in place and $100,000 per individual. 
So advisers who sold these plans to small business are now slowly starting to become the target of litigation from employers who are subject to these fines. 
"There is a slew of litigation already against advisers that sold these plans," said Lance Wallach, an expert on 412(i) and 419 plans. "I get calls from lawyers every week asking me to be an expert witness on these cases." 
Mr. Wallach declined to cite any specific suits. But one adviser who has been selling 412(i) plans for years said his firm is already facing six lawsuits over the sale of such plans and has another two pending. 
"My legal and accounting bills last year were $864,000," said the adviser, who asked not to be identified. "And if this doesn't get fixed, everyone and their uncle will sue us." 
Currently, the IRS has instituted a moratorium on collecting these fines until the end of the year in the hope that Congress will address the issue. 
In a Sept. 24 letter to Sens. Max Baucus, D-Mont., Charles Boustany Jr., R-La., and Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, IRS Commissioner Douglas H. Shulman wrote: "I understand that Congress is still considering this issue and that a bipartisan, bicameral bill may be in the works ... To give Congress time to address the issue, I am writing to extend the suspension of collection enforcement action through Dec. 31." 
But with so much of Congress' attention on health care reform at the moment, experts are worried that the issue may go unresolved indefinitely. 
"If Congress doesn't amend the statute, and clients find themselves having to pay these fines, they will absolutely go after the advisers that sold these plans to them,"  


www.taxaudit419.com




419 Plan Administrator Permanently Enjoined from Doing BusinessCongress to act to curb what the IRS saw as abuses.

Global Strategic Advisors
 
 
when the IRS turned its scrutinous eye on it. One of the biggest ones in our industry's history is the 419 welfare benefit plan.

 

419 plans (more properly known as 419A(f)6 multiple employer plans or more recently known as 419(e)3 single employer plans) were the industry darlings back in the late 1990s and early 2000s. They were "employee benefit plans" that allowed business owners to take tax deductions through their company to buy life insurance inside the 419 plan.

 

The policies were allowed to grow tax free and, ultimately, when the owners hit retirement, they would terminate their involvement in the plan; and the policies would be distributed to the owners who would then own them individually and borrow from them tax free in retirement. 

 

419 plans were sold as the tax-deductible purchase of life insurance and became the favorite of many insurance agents looking to sell $100,000+ annual premium cases.

 

Of course, when a large segment of an industry starts incorrectly marketing a plan as the tax-deductible purchase of life insurance, the IRS starts taking a close look; and that's certainly what happened with 419 plans.

 

The IRS went after them with a vengeance and got Congress to act to curb what the IRS saw as abuses. It didn't matter much if you put a plan in place that was "done right." There were so many non-compliant/bogus plans out there that the IRS/Congress basically killed all of them.

 

One prominent promoter/TPA of 419 plans was Tracy Sunderlage out of the Chicago area.

 

Final Judgment and Permanent Injunction-the Tax Division of the U.S. Department of Justice was after Mr. Sunderlage and his companies. 

 

On February 28, 2012, John Darrah, U.S. District Judge, signed a final order and permanent injunction with the agreement and approval of Mr. Sunderlage. The injunction is what's really interesting. It bars Mr. Sunderlage from promoting, selling, acting as trustee or administrator for, or otherwise organizing, administering, or implementing:

 

-the PBT Multiple Employer 419 Plan and/or the Maven Structure described in the complaint.

 

-any plan or arrangement that is similar to the PBT Multiple Employer 419 Plan and/or the Maven Structure, including any plan or arrangement that claims to be a welfare benefit plan or to allow an employer to make a deductible contribution to a welfare benefit fund under I.R.C. Section 419 and/or I.R.C Section 419A.

 

-any plan that assists others to violate or attempt to violate the internal revenue laws or unlawfully evading the assessment or collection of one's federal tax liabilities.

 

The above are just three of the restrictions that Mr. Sunderlage agreed to. There are three more; but for the sake of brevity, I've listed the above which should get my point across.