Tag Archives: tax-return

Oh Hell Nah: IRS Won’t Issue Tax Returns During Government Shutdown, But They’ll Still Accept Your Payments

Source: Rita Maas / Getty The Government Shutdown Could Keep You From Getting A Tax Refund If you thought the government shutdown wouldn’t affect your daily life, it might be time to think again. As the partial shutdown approaches its two-week point, concerns are growing that a heavily impacted IRS will delay taxpayers’ getting their refunds . The agency has categorized issuing tax refunds as a “non-excepted” activity — meaning that those tasked with processing refunds would be furloughed during their shutdown. Meanwhile, several types of tax return processing were deemed “Necessary for the Safety of Human Life or Protection of Government Property.” That’s according to a December shutdown plan, which   lays out  the first five business days of the agency’s response during a shutdown occurring outside of tax season. While the document notes the plan can be reassessed and furloughed employees can be recalled,  The Wall Street Journal  reported on Wednesday that the IRS generally does not issue refunds during a shutdown. The IRS plan says that only 12.5 percent of the IRS workforce is authorized to work during a shutdown, while the rest of the agency faces furloughs. That plan could be revised as soon as Friday, as the agency shifts into tax season, which typically starts in mid-January. Budget negotiations to reopen the government have stalled over President Donald Trump’s demand for funding a border wall, which means the risk is growing that tax refunds could be delayed if these aforementioned IRS workers don’t return to work soon.

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Oh Hell Nah: IRS Won’t Issue Tax Returns During Government Shutdown, But They’ll Still Accept Your Payments

Chad Johnson Continues Reconciliation With Evelyn Lozada Despite Sex Tape Leak

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After a 3 year old sex tape of Chad Johnson getting it in with 2 chicks at a Florida hotel room leaked to the internet,…

Chad Johnson Continues Reconciliation With Evelyn Lozada Despite Sex Tape Leak

How The Fiscal Cliff Could Effect Your Tax Return

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According to CNN Money, the 100 Million Americans expecting tax returns may have to wait until late March to even file their taxes. Your 2012…

How The Fiscal Cliff Could Effect Your Tax Return

Pay Yo Bills! Ja Rule Faces An ADDITIONAL 3 Years In Prison, Pleads Guilty To Tax Evasion!!

“All of those rainyyy daaays, spend ya lifetime tryin’ to wash awaaaaay” Ja Rule agreed to pay over $1.1 million in tax debts and IRS penalties after the rapper pleaded guilty to tax evasion Tuesday. Ja—whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins—pleaded guilty in Newark federal court to three counts of failing to file a tax return, from 2004 through 2008, despite earning income from touring and royalties from his albums. U.S. federal judge Patty Shwartz set Ja Rule’s bail at $500,000 and permitted the Grammy nominated rapper’s release pending sentencing scheduled for June 13. Each count of tax evasion carries a maximum sentence of one year in prison. Early June will be a busy time period for Atkins as he was already scheduled to begin a two-year sentence for gun possession in relation to a 2007 arrest on June 8. Between the previous weapon charges and the tax penalties, Ja Rule faces a possible five years in prison. “Each of us must pay our fair share to keep this country going,” U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman said in a statement. Ja is reportedly working on a sequel to his triple-platinum album Pain Is Love in the remaining months before his prison term begins. Man, this guy can’t win for losing. When will these niccas learn??? You can cheat on your wife, you can cheat spades, but you can’t cheat Uncle Sam! Source

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Pay Yo Bills! Ja Rule Faces An ADDITIONAL 3 Years In Prison, Pleads Guilty To Tax Evasion!!

Harold Ford to Bring His Expert Knowledge to the Sunny Tax Haven of Bermuda

While we wait for Harold Ford to explain how he’s avoided filing a New York tax return while working in New York, he’s preparing to jet off for Bermuda. To address a group that lobbies for tax evaders, er, avoiders. Shadow New York Senate candidate Harold Ford spent all week mushing through the snow pretending to know where he lives . But next month he’ll be relaxing in the warm sun of Bermuda and speaking to a group that works to preserve the small island as a haven for American companies looking to avoid paying taxes, without all that stigma of being a “tax haven.” On March 4, Ford is slated to be the keynote speaker at the Bermuda International Business Association’s annual meeting , to be held at the luxury Fairmont Hamilton Princess Hotel (pictured below). He’ll talk, according to a BIBA press release, about “the challenges and opportunities that face America and how Bermuda can play a vital role in the U.S. and global economy.” The vital role that Bermuda currently plays in the U.S. economy is that it doesn’t tax corporations , which may explain why nearly a third of foreign profits reported by U.S. corporations in 2003 came from Bermuda and two other low-tax countries , and why 13,000 international corporations, most of them American, are headquartered there. It’s sort of like an international version of Tennessee, which doesn’t have a personal income tax, and which is where Ford presumably claimed to have lived for the past three years while he made money in New York without filing a state income tax return. BIBA’s primary argument seems to be that Bermuda is not a “tax haven” (which sounds bad) but merely has a ” favorable tax structure ” (good!). Here’s how BIBA’s former chairman described companies who set up a Bermuda P.O. Box in 2002 to a Knight Ridder reporter: “It’s not tax evasion,” said Raymond Medeiros, past chairman of the Bermuda International Business Association and a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers. “No one is doing anything illicit or criminal not to pay taxes. It’s tax avoidance, and that’s legitimate.” Sounds familiar! And it actually clears up a little matter in Ford’s legislative record. Ford voted to ” end offshore tax havens ” in 2004 as a congressman, which would make him a strange choice for BIBA’s keynote speaker. But it’s clear that he’s all for tax avoidance , which is totally cool. Meanwhile, now Ford has fewer taxes to worry about avoiding — he’s been suspended as an MSNBC analyst while he mulls his Senate bid to avoid conflicts of interest.

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Harold Ford to Bring His Expert Knowledge to the Sunny Tax Haven of Bermuda

Harold Ford’s Tennessee Tax Dodge

When it comes to his shadow run for Senate, Harold Ford is a New Yorker through and through. When it comes to paying taxes, though, he’s still a Tennessean — he’s never filed a New York return. Ford claims to have moved to New York three years ago, and says paying “New York taxes” makes him a New Yorker. But his spokeswoman confirms to Gawker that he’s never filed a New York tax return — meaning that he’s never paid New York’s income tax, despite keeping an office and a residence in New York City as a vice chairman of Merrill Lynch since 2007: “He pays New York taxes and will file a New York tax return in April for the first time,” Ford’s spokeswoman Tammy Sun told Gawker. “He will file all necessary personal disclosure and tax forms that candidates are required to file if he chooses to run.” (According to Sun, Ford admitted to the tax dodge yesterday at a press availability in Albany, but we can’t find any news accounts mentioning the remarks.) Ford has presumably chosen to instead file in his other home Tennessee, which conveniently has no income tax. Which means that, despite the fact that New York law requires part-time and nonresidents to pay income tax on money they earn in the state , Ford has shielded his entire Merrill Lynch salary from New York’s tax collectors for the past three years. In fact, it seems like Tennessee’s lack of an income tax may be the best explanation for Ford’s rather complicated two-state life since 2007 — he clearly wanted to live in New York, and married a woman in 2008 who did live in New York. But he made sure to keep a foot in a state whose tax code is friendly to rich guys like himself. When Merrill Lynch announced Ford’s hiring in 2007, it said he would be keeping offices in Nashville and New York City . Ford has said that he’s basically lived in New York since then, though he never technically lived here until last year since he didn’t “spend the requisite number of days” staying at his wife Emily Ford’s breathtakingly yellow apartment in the Flatiron district. (” Moved is such a legal term,” he told the New York Times ). Ford was clearly thinking of New York’s 184-day rule, which requires that part-time residents who spend 184 or more days living in the state pay New York taxes on all their income. What he seems to have forgotten is that New York has gone to great pains to prevent wealthy people like him from spending time and earning money in the state and then jetting off to a tax haven come April 15: It also requires nonresidents and people who live there fewer than 184 days to pay New York income taxes on whatever portion of their income they earned in the state. If Ford did enough business in New York to keep an office there, its reasonable to presume that he earned a good deal of money in New York. Now, we’re sure that there are all sorts of accountants’ arguments and narrow dodges at Ford’s disposal to claim that he didn’t owe New York income tax until he moved here last year: He could have been paid out of Merrill Lynch’s Nashville office, for instance, and he could have received the majority of his income in a bonus that he could claim he earned in Tennessee, not New York. But while those sorts of arguments may be useful to someone trying to get as close as possible to living in New York without suffering the tax consequences of doing so, they’re not as effective when you’re loudly thinking about running for Senate in New York by claiming you’ve lived there for three years and pay taxes there. So what taxes is Ford talking about, if he’s never paid income tax in New York? We’ve asked Sun, and haven’t heard back. The most pathetic (and, by our lights, likely) answer is New York City’s 8.875% sales tax, though Ford could also be talking about sharing in property taxes on Ford’s apartment, or paying quarterly estimated tax payments on his freelance income as an MSNBC talking head, which he might have started paying last year once he decided to break that 184-day barrier and commit to New York. Or perhaps he instructed Merrill Lynch to start withholding New York taxes from his salary when he established residency in 2009. And when precisely, did that happen, by the way? According to this Federal Election Committee filing recording a donation Ford made to Colorado Sen. Mike Bennet, he was still using his Memphis address as recently as September 29 of last year—98 days before he announced his interest in Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand’s seat.

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Harold Ford’s Tennessee Tax Dodge

Has Harold Ford Ever Filed a New York Tax Return?

Harold Ford has defended himself against carpetbagging by saying “I pay taxes there, and once you pay taxes there, you feel like a New Yorker.” So why won’t he say whether he’s ever filed a New York tax return? Could it be because, despite his protestations to be a real New Yorker, he filed in Tennessee — which has no income tax — right up until he decided to run for Senate in New York? Ford, who is loudly and hamfistedly considering a Senate run despite the fact that he hasn’t even lived here for a full year, claimed as recently as one month ago on his web site that he resided in Tennessee. In early 2007, he took a job at Merrill Lynch, and announced that he would keep offices in New York and Nashville . And just last month, in an interview with the New York Times , he claimed that he “moved” to New York shortly after losing his Tennessee Senate bid in November 2006. But he then immediately backtracked: [M]oved is such a legal term. I was not a resident here yet until just last year, because I did not spend the requisite number of days here — being that the majority of time I still spent commuting between here and Nashville, and spending time in Tennessee. Who knows where anybody lives these days with all these new legalisms like “moved”? If Ford wasn’t a legal resident of New York until just last year — which means he wouldn’t have to file a state tax return until April 15 of this year — then what’s he talking about when he says he pays taxes “there”? There are two possible answers: 1. You only have to pay full income tax in New York if you lived there for 184 or more days out of the year. If you split your time between two states, and spent 183 or fewer days in New York, you only have to pay New York income tax on “income you received from New York sources” for “services performed in New York state” [pdf]. This is almost certainly what Ford was talking about when he told the Times that he didn’t spend “the requisite number of days” in New York to qualify as a resident until 2009 (which would mean, by the way, that the earliest Ford could have acquired legal residency would have been June 29, the 184th day of 2009—just eight months ago) . So if we assume that Ford didn’t hit the magic number in 2007 and 2008, that means he was only required to pay New York taxes on his Merrill Lynch income for the days he worked in New York. The days he worked out of his Nashville office would have been tax-free, but he would have still had to file a New York tax return for part of his income. Unless! He could have arranged to have been paid by Merrill Lynch’s Nashville office, and simply accounted for his New York days as business trips, thereby avoiding New York taxes altogether. Moreover, if he earned the majority of his compensation as a bonus, as is customary among banksters, it’s unclear whether any portion of the bonus would have to be accounted for as New York income, especially if it were being paid by Merrill Lynch out of Tennessee. 2. Ford could have begun paying taxes on a quarterly basis as soon as he established residency last year. While he’s been on salary at Merrill Lynch, Ford also earned a substantial freelance income as an MSNBC talking head. If MSNBC didn’t withhold, taxes on that non-salary income would have to be paid on a quarterly basis, so—if Ford was able to shield his earnings from New York tax collectors until he actually moved here—he would have started making quarterly payments as soon as he established residency. Which would mean he actually has paid taxes as a New Yorker. It wouldn’t, however, mean that he has filed a New York tax return—quarterly payments are like advances, and are paid before the actual annual return is filed in April. So he could have begun making quarterly estimated payments last year and still not have filed a return. Ford could have spared us all this speculation if he had simply answered our very simple question: Has he ever filed a New York state tax return? We posed it to his publicist on Tuesday morning, and — though our question was acknowledged, and we reiterated it on Tuesday afternoon and Tuesday evening — we still don’t have an answer. Given Tennessee’s generous tax laws, Ford would have been under substantial pressure to find a way to allocate as much of his income as possible to time spent there—in fact, his home state’s lack of an income tax could explain the whole long-distance arrangement with Merrill. That’s certainly how we’d try to do it. Then again, we’re not running for Senate in New York.

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Has Harold Ford Ever Filed a New York Tax Return?

The Best Way For Wyclef Jean to Help Is to Get Out of the Way

Ego and financial improprieties aside, Wyclef Jean has demonstrated a genuine desire to help the people of Haiti. To do that, it’s time he acknowledge his personal foundation isn’t equipped to provide disaster relief and donate to those who can. We and others have demonstrated this week that his charity Yele Haiti is fraught with chronic management problems that make it less effective, transparent, and ethically managed than any charity ought to be

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The Best Way For Wyclef Jean to Help Is to Get Out of the Way

Is Wyclef Jean’s Charity the Best One to Help Haiti?

There’s no doubt Wyclef Jean — who has raised $1 million since the Haiti earthquake — wants to help his homeland. But a look at his personal foundation’s finances raises questions about whether it’s wisely managing the donations it’s collecting. The Smoking Gun took a look at the finances of Yele Haiti, the foundation Wyclef Jean founded to help his homeland— and it’s ugly

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Is Wyclef Jean’s Charity the Best One to Help Haiti?