Friday, January 15, 2016

IRS Identity Theft


Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney
Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney




Welcome to TaxView with Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney

Tax return identity theft is on the rise and will reach an all time high in 2016. Criminals or the perpetrators plan to illegally obtain your name and Social Security number, create phony W-2s and related forms, and file a bogus tax return before you can file your legitimate return. Many of these crooks are organized criminals who have figured out that it is easier to rip you off by filing a bogus tax return than robbing a bank or hijacking a car. These 21st century thugs are ripping off the US Government as well. Uncle Sam is losing millions of dollars if not potentially billions a year in bogus tax refunds and you the taxpayer are out in the cold if you are one of the unlucky taxpayers who get their identity stolen. Do you want to learn some basic prevention steps to keep your tax return safe from identity theft this year.? So stay with us here on TaxView with Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney to find out how to stop the perpetrators and protect and keep safe your tax return from identity theft in 2016.

The typical identity theft scheme is for the perpetrator to file an early tax return with your social security number and your name but a different address around February through March up to the first week in April. The bogus tax return always shows a refund from a bogus W2 for a company you don't work with an address you don't live at. The mailing address on the tax return could be a PO Box or an executive office suite or any rented house. Sometimes the address could be an abandoned or foreclosed property where there is an outside mailbox or a mail slot in the door with no occupants to get the mail.

Here is how the scheme works:  For manual checks, the refund check comes to the designated address and the mail is picked up by the perpetrator. The check is then either forged and cashed or deposited into a legitimate account but with a fictitious owner. There could be hundreds if not thousands of these refunds for hundreds of taxpayers from the same address to which the perpetrator has stolen identities from. Currently the IRS has absolutely no mechanism to detect such mass refund requests originating from the same address. For electronic refunds, bank accounts are opened and then closed immediately after thousands of bogus refunds have been deposited with the money wired abroad without a trace. While the Government eventually discovers the identify theft when the IRS computer system matches the bogus W2 to the company you supposedly work for, that matching process does not happen immediately when the tax return is filed, but perhaps sometimes months later.  By then the refund had already been issued and soon a few weeks later stolen by the perpetrator all prior to the IRS discovering the identify theft.

In addition the crooks know this crime must be a high volume scam to success. Criminals realize that many of their bogus tax returns will be delayed or questioned by the IRS. So when for example a few hundred of the refunds are received of the thousands of returns filed, the perpetrators close shop and move on. By the time the government investigates the crooks have moved on, new locations have been secured and the illegal operators get ready for the next year’s filing season to start the whole operation again.

How serious is tax return identity theft?  IRS Commissioner Koskinen during a prepared speech on November 19, 2015 in Washington DC noting that "increasingly, these crimes are being perpetrated by sophisticated, organized syndicates. They’ve been able to gather almost unimaginable amounts of personal data from sources outside the IRS. They use this data to file fraudulent federal and state tax income returns, and claim huge refunds."  More specifically, the inspector general of the IRS indicate that bogus tax filings are in the millions with billions of dollars potentially at stake. A new proposed bill “Stop Identity Theft Act of 2015” calls for the Attorney General to: (1) make use of all existing resources of the Department of Justice (DOJ), including task forces, to bring more perpetrators of tax return identity theft to justice; and (2) take into account the need to concentrate efforts in areas of the country where the crime is most frequently reported, to coordinate with state and local authorities to prosecute and prevent such crime, and to protect vulnerable groups from becoming victims or otherwise being used in the offense.

What can you do right now? In addition to the obvious, which is filing as early as possible to beat the perpetrator to filing first,  have your tax attorney continuously check on line with IRS Electronic Account Resolution (EAR) throughout tax season to make sure you are safe up to the moment you file your tax return. When your tax attorney will make her inquiry with the EAR portal prior to the tax return being filed, she will hopefully get a zero transcript indicated no tax return has yet been received by the Government. But beware if you file late and the response is like this one you will know there has been identify theft: Dear Tax Professional, Your office submitted a request for taxpayer information. We apologize for the inconvenience but we are not able to process your request at this time. Please have your client contact the Identity Protection Specialized Unit (IPSU) at 800-908-4490. Sincerely Yours Director, Electronic Products & Services Support.

What happens to you after your tax return has been filed by the identity theft perpetrator? While I hope you never have to call the Identify Theft Department of the IRS, once you get a hold of them you realize the road ahead is not going to be easy. You are required to complete Form 14039 Identity Theft Affidavit and submit copies of various documents like a passport and drivers license proving you are who you say you are. All documents and original tax return have to be submitted in a paper version and mailed either snail mail or overnight delivery. Processing takes up to six months or longer.

What can you do right now to prevent your 2015 tax return from being stolen from you when you file this Spring in 2016? First and most important, file early in 2015. There is no better way to stop identity theft than to file early. What if you have not received your K1s yet or other supporting documentation.  By all means have your tax attorney record the information direct from the issuers of the K1s by phone or emails. Create a fairly accurate record of what your K1 will show.  File early and true up any small immaterial differences the following year. Disclose to the Government what you are doing in your tax returns prior to filing and explain you are filing early this tax season to avoid identity theft. Make sure your tax attorney attaches his opinion in your tax return as well as to value of filing early to avoid identity theft.

Second, if you move from your primary residence, please have your tax attorney notify the IRS of your new address. Call the government and make sure they have your new address on file before you file your tax return and explain that you are concerned about identify theft. Tell your CPA Attorney you are concerned about identify theft so your tax professional will check up on your account throughout the year. Never give your entire social security number to anyone on the phone. Vendors will be happy to have you call them back to verify who they are before you give them your social security number.

Perhaps sometime soon, the Government will refuse to refund any money to anyone based on a filed income tax return until the taxpayer’s identify is confirmed either by a follow up phone call or a special PIN# identification entered by email or text. This security identification process would significantly delay you all from receiving your refunds but would dramatically reduce the high volume of identify theft in 2016. When you compare the inconvenience of delayed refunds to the absolute nightmare of having your tax return hijacked by criminals I would choose the delay of having my identify confirmed. If you agree with this approach, ask your tax attorney to communicate with your elected officials about your concern with tax return identify theft. Together we can help the IRS fight back against tax return identity theft and help you all keep your tax returns secure from theft.

Thanks for joining us on TaxView with Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney.

See you next time on TaxView.

Kindest regards from Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney

Saturday, December 5, 2015

IRS Offset Tax Audit

IRS Offset Tax Audit

Have any of you ever had your income tax refund from the IRS or your social security retirement income intercepted by the Government because you owed income tax or child support or were in default on your student loan?  Unfortunately for those Americans who owe taxes there are more offsets coming your way. Just weeks ago Congress passed H.R 22 Surface Transportation Reauthorization and Reform Act of 2015 which allows the Government to confiscate your Passport if you owe back income tax. Many feel the Government is overstepping its collection powers in restricting international travel as if you had been indicted in a criminal investigation and being ordered by a Federal Judge to surrender your passport so you don’t flee the country before trial.  So stay with us here in TaxView with Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney to see where the IRS Offset Tax Audit is trending in 2015 and beyond and what you need to do now to protect yourself against an IRS Offset Tax Audit.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has been conducting ongoing studies called “High Risk Enforcement of the Tax Laws” for years, but the March 2011 study entitled Federal Tax Collection, “Potential for Using Passport Issuance to Increase Collection “appears to be the basis of Congressional legislation to revoke passports of folks who owe income tax.  The 21 page study claims that there were 224,000 individuals issued passports in 2008 who owed a total of $5.8 billion in unpaid Federal taxes.  The report concludes that because Federal law already allows linkage of debt collection to passport issuance in the area of Child Support Enforcement there is reason to believe the same linkage can be made to delinquent taxes.
From this GAO study a consensus in the Senate seemed to take hold that it was time to add passport confiscation for taxpayers who owe income tax to the Government. Who authored the provision in Senate Bill 1813 revoking or denying a passport to anyone who owes certain unpaid income taxes to the Federal Government?  A Forbes article claims Senator Harry Reid originally proposed the idea to Orin Hatch and links a Press Release from Senator Orin Hatch as the source.
Regardless of who inserted the provision, the bill cleared the Senate 65-34 on July 30, 2015 and passed in the House 363-64 on November 5, 2015 with the passport provision still intact. HR 22 Surface Transportation Reauthorization and Reform Act 2015 was then sent to Conference last week.  The bill left Conference and was approved by both Houses 359-65 in the House and 83-16 in the Senate on December 3 2015 and was sent to the White House for President Barack Obama’s signature.  The President signed the bill this week and HR22 FAST Act is now law. Section 32101 of the bill Subtitle A Tax Provisions requires that Section 7345 will be added to the IRS Code, requiring the Secretary of the Treasury to transmit to the State Department in accordance with the Passport Act of 1926 a request the passport of any individual who has a seriously delinquent tax debt be revoked. More specifically, HR22 Fast Act reads in part “If the Secretary receives certification by the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service that any individual has a seriously delinquent tax debt in tan amount in excess of $50,000, the Secretary shall transmit such certification to the Secretary of State for action with respect to denial, revocation or limitation of a passport pursuant to Section 32101 Subtitle A of FAST Act HR22.
Some scholars are questioning the Constitutionality of revoking a passport for back taxes owed. A February 2015 Penn State Law Review article by Gancarlo Seratto points out that Passport revocation is usually reserved for criminals or individuals who pose national security risks. But as the GAP study points out there are certainly similar statutes as described in 22 CFR 51.60 which requires the State Department to deny the issuance of a passport to any applicant who has been certified by the Secretary of Health and Human Services to be in arrears of child support. For example, the Passport Denial Program (PDP) established by Federal law in 1997 requires that if you are owe more than $2500 in back child support your passport will be restricted and revoked.
So assuming the law is deemed Constitutional, if your passport can be revoked for back child support or back taxes, can your passport also be revoked for other Federal infractions.  While 31 USC 3716 specifically excludes and exempts Title IV delinquent unpaid student loans all other student loans backed by the Government are subject to offset. Indeed, as far back as 1983 the Senate Finance Committee Subcommittee on Oversight of the IRS had a hearing specifically addressingTax Refund Offset Program for Delinquents Student Loans.
One more point: What about taxpayers who have not filed tax returns? It appears that there is no provision in HR 22 for Americans who have joined the underground economy and have not filed income tax returns for many years. Perhaps an income tax nonfiler for 3 successive years should also lose his or her Passport?
In conclusion, regardless of whether you agree or disagree with expanding the Government offset program to Passports, there is no question that the ever expanding US Government offset program will keep growing its collection of enforcement tools against Americans who owe back taxes to the IRS. One may ask what could be next on the horizon of Government offset enforcement if you are a delinquent taxpayer. What about Professional licenses? Government Contracts?  Drivers Licenses?  Or simple Business Licenses?  What about denial of Federal Home Loan approved mortgages, low income housing or even Federal subsidized health care?
What can you do now?  The best advice is to hire the best tax advisors you can afford, pay your taxes in full and timely file your tax returns each year knowing with confidence that you can withstand any IRS Offset Tax Audit the Government throws your way.
Thank you for joining us on TaxView with Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney
See you next time on TaxView
Kindest regards

Saturday, September 19, 2015

IRS Crummey Gift Tax Audit

IRS Crummey Gift Tax Audit

Do you all own a family business and want to start the process of transferring ownership to your children without getting hit with large gift and estate taxes?   Best practice suggests you consider gifting to your minor children, or if you are the older children, have your parents or grandparents gift to you a Crummey Trust membership through your Family Limited Liability Company.  The “Crummey” Trust”, named for Crummey 397 F.2d 82 (9th Cir 1968­) is a great way to get tax deductions, have your children receive annual Family LLC memberships, reduce your estate tax and have the family work together in a unified and protected Estate Plan.  But danger lies ahead during an IRS Estate tax audit after you die or an IRS Gift tax audit before you die claiming if you died the gifts were not irrevocable, or while you are still living that the Trust should be subject to gift tax by disallowing the tax free exclusions.  Either way you lose unless you are structured correctly.  So if you are interested in winning for you your wife, children and grandchildren, stay with us here on TaxViewwith Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney to learn how to fight back during an IRS Crummey Trust audit so you can win, save taxes, and keep your assets in the family business safe and protected from harm for many generations to come.
Current gift tax law allows exemption for a Husband and Wife to gift tax free $28,000 to a Crummey Trust owning a membership in the Family LLC to each child in 2015. Named after taxpayer Crummey, the Crummey Trust accumulates the $28,000 tax free exemption year after year in a protected irrevocable trust by giving your children the right to demand immediate distribution of exemption.  This is exactly what Crummey did in Crummey vs IRS 397 F.2d 82 (9th Cir 1968).
The facts are simple.  Husband and Wife Crummey each gave in 1962 their 4 minor children $3000, the exemption at that time, or $12,000 total to an irrevocable trust.  The IRS audited and disallowed the Trust claiming that the gifts to minors were nothing more than disguised future interests disallowed under then IRS Section 2503(b).  Crummey appealed first to US Tax Court and next to the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit 397 F.2d 82 (9th Cir 1968).
District Judge Byrne frames the key issued presented as whether or not a present interest was given by the Crummey’s to their minor children so as to qualify for the exclusion under 2503(b).  The Court looked to California law to determine if the children had the right to demand distributions from the Trustee. The Government said if the children can’t sue under California law they can’t demand the trust assets under California law.  The Crummey’s said if the children can own property under California law they can indeed demand the trust assets under California law.
The Court took particular interest in George W Perkins 27 T.C. 601 (1956) where the Court said that where the parents were capable of asking the Trustee for the assets on behalf of the minor children in order for the children to have the “right to enjoy” the assets and there was no showing that the demand for funds from the children via the parents could be resisted under State law, then the gift was a present interest.  The Court in my view did not clearly have an easy answer, but in the end ruled that under Perkins, the “right to enjoy” test is preferable.  Crummey win IRS loses.
Where is Crummey trending in 2015? Let’s take you all as an example:   In 2015 you and your wife irrevocably gift $28,000 to each of your 3 children ages 5, 7 and 9 and give at this level for 5 more years.  If structured through a Crummey Trust your gifts would be $84,000 per year or $420,000 after 5 years all tax free.  Further suppose your $28,000 irrevocable gift to each child was an LLC membership interest.  With a 35% discount applied to each membership gift for lack of marketability your tax free gifts to 3 children for 5 years would be $630,000.
The Mikel family set up this kind of trust in 2007 with one exception:  The Trustee had final and conclusive power to assist the children with “Life Changing Events”, like reasonable wedding costs, the cost to purchase a primary residence, or costs of starting a new trade or business.  Finally the Trustee had power over the children’s expenses in connection with their health, education, maintenance and support.  The IRS audited Mikel and disallowed the gifts to his children claiming they never were gifted a “present interest in the property” that is an unrestricted right to immediately use the gifts, citing Regulations 2503-3(a) and 2503-3(b) particularly in light of the special “Life Changing Event” powers granted to the trustee.  Mikel appealed to the US Tax Court Mikel v IRS, US Tax Court (2015).
Mikel argued and surprisingly IRS conceded that each of the children received a timely and effective notice of their right to withdraw the maximum annual exclusion.   Both the Government and Mikel further agreed that the trust declaration stated unequivocally that upon receipt of a timely made withdrawal demand, “the Trustees would have to immediately distribute to the children the property allocable to them.” The IRS finally also conceded that the declaration put forth by Mikel in the Crummey Trust did in fact afford each beneficiary an unconditional right of withdrawal.
However the Government not to be outdone, argued vigorously that the children did not receive a present interest in the trust income and corpus because their rights of withdrawal were not legally enforceable in practical terms.  That is the children’s right of withdrawal was “legally enforceable” only if the children could go before New York State Court to enforce their rights and that such an action by the children was not likely to happen considering the special powers for life changing events granted to the Trustee.
Judge Lauber’s thoughtful Opinion acknowledges that the Mikel trust was indeed a Crummey Trust citing Crummey v Commissioner 397 F.2d 82 (9th Cir 1968) with a substantially similar demand clause providing that whenever an addition was made to the trust, the children or their guardian could demand immediate withdrawal of an amount equivalent to the maximum annual exclusion as required by Section 2503(b). The Court further noted that even though the IRS expressed its general agreement with Crummey citing Estate of Cristofani v IRS 97 Tax Court 74 (1991) it appeared to the Court that the Government was challenging Crummey power only when the withdrawal rights are not in substance what they purport to be in form.  Judge Lauber nevertheless opined that the Government’s claim that the withdrawal right of Mikel children was illusory was flawed.  The Court went on to conclude that the Mikel children under New York law could seek justice to enforce the provisions of the Crummey Trust regardless of the special powers of the Trustee for “Life Changing Events”.  The Court therefore found that under New York law withdrawal demands by the beneficiaries could be in fact legally enforced citing Crummey. Mikel wins, IRS loses.
What does this mean for all families with a small business who want to gift Crummey assets to their young children to take advantage of the $28,000 per year gift tax exclusion?  First, create your Family LLC with your wife as your partner each donating your share of the family business into the Family LLC.  Second, for each subsequent year gift your children Family LLC discounted membership interests to the maximum exclusion $28,000 in 2015 through a Crummey Trust.  Third, make sure your Tax Attorney gives the children the absolute right and power under State Law to withdraw their interests.  Fourth, by the time your children are in their late teens and early 20s you should have successfully used the Annual Exemption and the Lifetime Exclusion to perhaps have your Family LLC owned by a Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT) with your wife as Trustee and Beneficiary and your children as successor beneficiaries  to further protect your tax free transfer from not only an IRS Estate Tax Audit, but to protect in a spend thrift clause from potential creditors as well.  Finally have your tax attorney prepare for you a written opinion that she will file your tax returns and represent you when and if the IRS should audit disallowing your Crummey Trust.  Include your Crummey Trust in your tax returns as a contemporaneously prepared PDF file before you file your returns.   Rest assured your Estate Plan is safe, secure and protected from IRS audit many years later.
Thank you for joining us on TaxView with Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney

See you next time on TaxView.
Kindest regards,

Thursday, September 3, 2015

IRS Domestic Asset Protection Trusts DAPTs and SLATs

Domestic Asset Protection Trusts DAPTs SLATs

Domestic Asset Protection Trusts (DAPTs) and Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLATs) appear to be best practice in 2015 for Asset Protection and Estate Tax Reduction. The SLAT, which is nothing more than a DAPT for a family allows your Husband Grantor Settlor to appoint you his Wife as both Trustee and Beneficiary with your children appointed as successor Beneficiaries.  If your SLAT becomes a member of the Family Business LLC you have an ideal estate tax reduction, asset protection, and additional annual income tax savings all created in an almost “too good to be true” legal tax structure and foundation.  Are in fact DAPTs and SLATs too good to be true? Some feel the IRS is just waiting, patiently I may add, until you die to audit your estate and disallow the entire SLAT arguing before the US Tax Court that the SLAT corpus never legally left the Estate. So if you are interested in setting up a SLAT, stay tuned to TaxView withChris Moss CPA Tax Attorney to find out how to take advantage of these new Domestic Asset Protection Trusts without losing your advantage during an IRS SLAT Audit soon to be coming your way.
So what is a SLAT?  A SLAT is an irrevocable DAPT established uniquely for a married couple, in many cases with children who ultimately become successor beneficiaries under newly enacted Sweet 16 State Protection Trust laws that allow the SLAT Husband Settlor Grantor to irrevocably gift his assets to his Wife, Trustee and Beneficiary with all lifetime distributions being made according to “ascertainable standard” as per IRS Code Section 2514, and IRS Code Section 2041 and Sweet 16 State laws, relating solely to the health, education, support or maintenance of in the case of a SLAT, your wife, both Beneficiary and Trustee. As Grantor Settlor you must make absolutely certain that you do not retain a life estate of any kind whatsoever in the Trust Corpus or Income Distributions in violation of IRS Code 2036.  If you flawlessly insert a Spendthrift Clause in the Trust documents exactly according to State Law, and then finally appoint a non-family member Trust Protector or Co-Trustee you have what some would consider a “too good to be true” Estate plan.
The “too good to be true” folks out there may very well remember that prior to 1997, State Court Common Law for over 100 years held that these kind of Domestic Asset Protection Trusts were unenforceable and void against public policy.  Yet one State legislature after another have in the last 20 years codified Trust Fund laws making legal what the Courts in Equity have prohibited.  These DAPT and SLAT friendly 16 States (Sweet 16) Alaska, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Missouri, Mississippi, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia and Wyoming are the only States in my view that you can safely create a DAPT or SLAT with some reasonable assurance that creditors could not reach your SLAT assets.
So what steps can you take to prove the “too good to be true” folks wrong.  First keep your DAPT or SLAT within the “Sweet 16” as Sessions should have done in Rush Univ Med Center v. Sessions, N.E. 2d , 2012 IL 112906, 2012 WL 4127261 (Ill, Sept. 20, 2012) (Rush U).  The facts in Rush are rather simple.  Sessions established a DAPT which irrevocably pledged $1.5M to Rush.  Rush commenced construction in reliance on the pledge.  Sessions however was diagnosed with cancer that he blamed on Rush for failure to diagnose.  He wrote Rush out of his Will before he died in effect voiding the $1.5M gift.  Rush sued the Sessions estate in Rush v Sessions claiming the estate was liable for the $1.5.  Lower Courts grappled with conflicts between the Common law in Equity and the Illinois Fraudulent Transfer Act with the Appeals Court eventually ruling for Sessions.  However, the Illinois Supreme Court reversed noting that Sessions created a DAPT for his own benefit and used the “spendthrift clause” to protect the assets from Rush, a legal creditor.  Justice Thomas further opined that regardless of state statute supporting Sessions, justice and fairness require that Illinois common  law in equity void the “spendthrift clause” of Sessions DAPT and allow Rush to pierce the DAPT and collect their debt.  Rush wins, Estate of Sessions loses.
If you are fortunate enough to live within the Sweet 16 how should you structure the SLAT so that when the IRS audits your SLAT your SLAT will survive intact and protected?  Historically the US Tax Court has looked to States for guidance on whether or not an irrevocable trust is a valid transfer not subject to estate tax of the Settlor Grantor.  For example inOutwin v IRS 76 T.C. 153 (1981), Outwin created various irrevocable trusts under Massachusetts law with Outwin being the sole Beneficiary during his lifetime with family friends as trustees.  The IRS audited and claimed gift taxes were not paid on what the IRS claimed was an irrevocable transfer out of Outwins’s estate. Outwin appealed to US Tax Court inOutwin v IRS 76 T.C. 153 (1981) arguing that he never lost control over the trust because he was the “sole Beneficiary” of the fund assets and therefore no legal gift had been transferred.
Judge Dawson goes further asking whether Outwin’s trusts could be subjected to the claims of the settlor’s creditors under Massachusetts law. Citing Ware v Gulda 331 Mass. 68, 117 N.E.2d 137 (1954) the Court finds that under Massachusetts law Outwin’s trust fails to relinquish dominion and control for gift tax purposes if creditors can reach the trust assets. Concluding there is a strong public policy in Massachusetts common law against persons placing property in trust for their own benefit while at the same time insulating such property from the claims of creditors the Court finds for Outwin.   IRS loses, Outwin, wins.
So in conclusion, to make your SLAT bullet proof against an IRS SLAT Audit, first, make sure you retain a tax attorney who knows his Sweet 16 SLAT law and knows it well. Have that same tax attorney file all tax returns.  Second,  have your tax attorney structure the SLAT so that you Settlor Grantor Husband appoint your wife as Trustee and as a primary Beneficiary receiving beneficial ascertainable standard distributions for her health education support or maintenance in accordance with IRS Code Section 2041(a)(2), (b1) and (b)(2) making sure you Husband Grantor Settlor are not in violation of IRS Code Section 2036 by not retaining a life estate in the Trust corpus or income. Third make sure your SLAT is absolutely protected from Creditors by inserting exact word for word language of the Spendthrift provisions of your State’s Domestic Asset Protection Trust laws.  Finally, Appoint a non-family member Trust Protector or independent Co-Trustee to give you that extra added protection when the IRS comes on over soon after you are gone.  If you stayed married for the duration, on the day of your passing, you can rest in peace knowing your Wife and children are protected from a very likely IRS SLAT Audit coming your way, with family Business and Estate bulletproofed with a safe and protected SLAT foundation for many years to come.
Thanks for joining us on TaxView with Chris Moss CPA Tax Attorney
See you next time on TaxView
Kindest regards