Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Kostelanetz & Fink Publication on Criminal Tax Topics (3/3/15)

Kostelanetz & Fink has published its Semi-Annual Publication, here.  Readers of this blog will know that the firm and its practitioners are at the forefront of tax controversy practice, including criminal tax practice and OVDP related practice.  Their publications are worth notice.  The key articles for the subject of this blog are:

Tax Planning on the Edge Part II: Ethical Standards in the International Tax Arena, by Bryan C. Skarlatos.  Bryan's bio is here.

Be sure and go to page 16 which appears to be a continuation of the article and discusses United States practitioners evading foreign taxes and foreign practitioners evading U.S. taxes.

Déjà vu All Over Again: Re-Trial After Conviction,  by Sharon L. McCarthy.  Sharon's bio is here.

I particularly found Sharon's article interesting.  The article recounts her representation of Dinis Field, a co-defendant in the Daugerdas case which involved tax shelters of the bullshit category.  Readers of this blog will recall that the Daugerdas defendants were convicted in what proved to be the first trial of Daugerdas and related defendants,  including Field.  But, because of jury misconduct, the case was re-tried.  On the re-trial, Mr. Field was acquitted.  Sharon recounts particular stratgies that she believes contributed to the successful representation of Mr. Field.   The reason I found all of the major tax shelter criminal cases in NYC particularly interesting was that I represented one of the defendants in the first of those cases brought against 19 KPMG related defendants.  We did not have a first or second trial for my client and 12 others who were dismissed for prosecutorial abuse.  Still, every lawyer who has a first trial end in conviction would always love the opportunity for a re-do.  Sometimes the outcome is the same, but sometimes not.  It was not for Mr. Field and his lawyer, Sharon.

The subtopics in Sharon's article should give an idea of the article.

Motion Practice and Subpoenas

[As an aside, I just read today in Bryan Garner's periodic email that the word subpoena has an alternative spelling, subpena.  See LawProse Lesson #201: "Subpoena" vs. "subpena" [which I think will  appear shortly on his blog, here].  Bottom-line, spellings sometimes come into fashion and go out.  There was a time when subpena was fashionable and was oft-used, for example, in federal statutes.  It is less popular nowadays, with the spelling subpoena being the preferred spelling.]

Limiting Instructions.

Although it is not said specifically, apparently at Sharon and her co-counsel moved early and often that limiting instructions be given to the jury that certain potentially negative evidence about certain acronymed tax shelters was irrelevant to the cases involving their clients.  Then, "in summation, [] we were able to explain to the jury that significant portions of the government’s case, and the testimony of 14 witnesses, were completely irrelevant to Denis Field."

Defense Case
In the first trial, we did not put on an affirmative defense case. Rather, we used cross-examination to elicit testimony in support of Denis’s good faith defense. As often happens in criminal cases, potential witnesses rarely want to cooperate with the defense. Witnesses with ties to BDO often expressed sympathy for Denis but refused to meet with us for fear of reprisal. As a result, we had very little hope that anyone would be willing to testify for Denis.   
In the re-trial, however, we were able to secure the cooperation of two former BDO employees: Denis’s secretaries throughout the time of the alleged conspiracy. Those witnesses were able to humanize Denis for the jury. In addition, while the government’s cooperating witnesses testified that Denis Field attended every meeting and was on every call concerning the tax shelter business, these witnesses were able to provide insight into Mr. Field’s daily schedule, which was packed with meetings, calls and extensive travel. Their testimony solidified the points we tried to make on cross-examination of the government’s cooperating witnesses, to whom Denis, when he became CEO of BDO in January 2000, had delegated the day-today responsibility for BDO’s tax shelter business.
Argument
In my opening statement to the jury, I talked about the passage of time and the fact that witnesses’ memories, like everyone’s, fade over time. The key events in this case had taken place between 11 and 15 years before the re-trial began. Many of the chinks in the witnesses’ stories upon which we were able to capitalize in the re-trial were, I argued in summation,attributable to the failure of human memory, not any venal purpose of the witnesses to hurt Denis Field. In the end, the jury, which had been incredibly attentive during the eight-week trial, believed and embraced Denis’s good faith defense. 
She did not mention whether Field took the stand in order to flesh out his good faith defense.

In all events, congratulations to Sharon and her team and to Mr. Field.

Also, I could not resist finding a little levity in an otherwise weighty and serious tome.  Go to the last page which has a staged picture of Robert S. Fink and Michael Sardar "reviewing an existing case."  I guess that they needed the "existing" adjective to let readers know that they either have an existing case or were not discussing a nonexisting case (which they may or may not have).  I don't know Mr. Sardar, but Mr. Fink is a superb lawyer bringing the highest level of skill to his existing and nonexisting cases (and clients).

By the way, Bob Fink's bio is here.  One off bio item is that he has in his possession Michael Louis Minns' tome How to Survive the IRS: My Battles Against Goliath (2001), here, which might be particularly handy for his nonexisting cases and, once he masters the lessons, perhaps even for the existing cases.

4 comments:

  1. I've learned from the American Expatriates group on Facebook that those seeking German citizenship may obtain it before renouncing a citizenship when the cost for renunciation costs more than 1280 €. This in a list of other Ausnamen (exceptions) from those who must renounce their citizenship before become a German citizen:

    wenn der andere Staat unzumutbare Bedingungen für die Entlassung aus der
    Staatsangehörigkeit stellt, z. B. überhöhte Gebühren (mehr als ein
    Brutto-Monateinkommen, aber mindestens 1.280 €).

    This means that Americans may obtain German citizenship without having to renounce US citizenship in advance, since the $2350 renunciation fee is higher than 1280 €. It also makes it clear that the reason is that any fee above 1280 € is exorbitant (unzumutbare Bedingungen), equaling more than a month's salary in Germany (1280 €) . Immigration Germany (the Ausländeramt) is showing both compassion and flexibility. This is exemplary pragmatism and should be imitated by bureaucrats around the world. It is the opposite of the current State Department approach, which is tyrannical. The current exchange rate 1.11. 1280 €=US $1421.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Video made by a young man studying in Germany ...... Interesting to
    see a young person's reaction to this dilemma. Worth a listen.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYEIGRezIiI

    ReplyDelete
  3. The Houston Law Review article is a four star article! The author
    totally gets it– he clearly spells out the serious harms caused by FATCA
    and US citizenship taxation and articulates a simple solution to both,
    repeal FATCA and switch to residence based taxation. This article
    deserves high profile.

    http://www.houstonlawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/2-Denson.pdf

    ReplyDelete
  4. Atticus,

    The University of Houston Law Review comment you cite is available to the public here:

    http://www.houstonlawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/2-Denson.pdf

    ReplyDelete

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