Where in the world is JK Harris?

January 31, 2011

by Gina Anton, Director, Corporate Communications

Next month, JK Harris embarks on a speaking tour to promote some big ideas. JK Harris is passionate about small business and is embarking on this tour to share his ideas on growing small businesses, creating jobs on the local level. He feels that small business owners can play a big part in the regrowth of our economy.

Read more about his speaking tour on The Flashpoints blog.

You can also sign up for The Flashpoints newsletter on this site to get business tips for your small business.


JK Harris presents… News from the Net

January 27, 2011

There is a lot going on with tax news and financial information right now, so I decided to do a news round up – something I have not done on the Tax Resolution blog before. There were several informative links I found and wanted to share with our readers this morning. The first link was provided by one of our blog readers, Ann.

Ann covered the topic of “5 Tips for determining the amount a bank will lend you to buy a home.” Her article is an informative one that may help many of our clients who are getting out of tax debt so they can buy a home of their own. Thank you to Ann for providing this link.

MarketWatch covered some of the best tax tips in their Tax Guide 2011. This web guide offers advice on everything taxes. While it may be too late for your 2010 tax return, this helpful article can give you ideas on tax planning for 2011.

And, according to CNNMoney.com, it looks like Congress will be getting right to work on repealing the much hated IRS ruling with regard to 1099s. The rule, as it currently stands would have required small businesses to issue a 1099 IRS form not only to contracted workers, but also to any individuals or corporations from which they buy more than $600 in goods or services in a year. This rule was slated to take effect in 2012 and was much maligned by small business due to the amount of additional work it would cause. (Many small businesses would have had to hire additional staff to keep up with the paperwork alone.)

And last, but not least – the IRS’ tax tip of the day recommends taxpayers choose direct deposit to receive your tax refund faster. Visit the IRS website to read the full article.


New tax act retains some education benefits

January 10, 2011

According to a recent article on The Street by Joe Mont, the recently passed Tax Act included extensions of the Coverdale IRA, the American Opportunity Tax Credit and the Lifetime Learning Credit. If you are planning to go back to school, take advantage of these credits in 2011.

Read the whole article on The Street.


Top Ten Reasons to visit the IRS website

January 7, 2011

If you have never visited the IRS’ website, it is well worth your time. The website is a comprehensive, educational tool for learning about and assisting you with filing your federal returns. You can find out everything you need to know about filing your income taxes, what to do if you receive a notice from the IRS or how to file an overdue tax return.

Here is the IRS’ own Top Ten list of reasons why you should visit their website:

Don’t wait in line, go online. Point and click your way through the tax season. All you need is a computer and Internet access because the IRS website has a wealth of free information and online tax support. Here are the top 10 reasons to visit http://www.irs.gov.

1. If you find yourself working on your tax return over the weekend, there’s no need to wait to get a form or an answer to a question – visit the IRS website anytime. The website is accessible all day, every day.

2. Use Free File: Let Free File do the hard work for you with brand-name tax software or online fillable forms. It’s exclusively at http://www.irs.gov. Everyone can find an option to prepare their tax return and e-file it for free. If you made $58,000 or less, you qualify for free tax software that is offered through a private-public partnership with manufacturers. If you made more or are comfortable preparing your own tax return, there’s Free File Fillable Forms, the electronic versions of IRS paper forms. Visit http://www.irs.gov/freefile to review your options.

3. Try IRS e-file: After 21 years, IRS e-file has become the safe, easy and most common way to file a tax return. Last year, 70 percent of taxpayers – 99 million people – used IRS e-file. Starting in 2011, many tax preparers will be required to use e-file and will explain your filing options to you. This is your chance to give it a try. IRS e-file is approaching 1 billion returns processed safely and securely. If you owe taxes, you have payment options to file immediately and pay by the tax deadline. Best of all, combine e-file with direct deposit and you get your refund in as few as 10 days. More information about e-file is available at http://www.irs.gov.

4. Check the status of your tax refund. Whether you chose direct deposit or asked the IRS to mail you a check, you can check the status of your refund through Where’s My Refund?

5. Find out how to make payments electronically. You can authorize an electronic funds withdrawal, use a credit or debit card, or enroll in the U.S. Treasury’s Electronic Federal Tax Payment System to pay your federal taxes. Electronic payment options are a convenient, safe and secure way to pay taxes.

6. Find out if you qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit. EITC is a tax credit for many people who earned less than $49,000. Find out if you are eligible by answering some questions and providing basic income information using the EITC Assistant.

7. Get tax forms and publications. You can view and download tax forms and publications any hour of the day or night.

8. Calculate the right amount of withholding on your W-4. The IRS Withholding Calculator will help you ensure that you don’t have too much or too little income tax withheld from your pay.

9. Request a payment agreement. Paying your taxes in full and on time avoids unnecessary penalties and interest. However, if you cannot pay your balance in full you may be eligible to use the Online Payment Agreement Application to request an installment agreement.

10. Get information about the latest tax law changes. Learn about tax law changes that may affect your tax return. Special sections of the website highlight changes that affect individual or business taxpayers.

Remember the address of the official IRS website is http://www.irs.gov. Don’t be confused by Internet sites that end in .com, .net, .org or other designations instead of .gov.


IRS sends out 2011 Top ten tax tips

January 4, 2011

IRS Tax Tips 2011-01:

It’s that time of the year again, the income tax filing season has begun and important tax documents should be arriving in the mail. Even though your return is not due until April, getting an early start will make filing easier. Here are the Internal Revenue Service’s top 10 tips that will help your tax filing process run smoother than ever this year.

1. Start gathering your records Round up any documents or forms you’ll need when filing your taxes: receipts, canceled checks and other documents that support income or deductions you’re claiming on your return.

2. Be on the lookout W-2s and 1099s will be coming soon; you’ll need these to file your tax return.

3. Use Free File: Let Free File do the hard work for you with brand-name tax software or online fillable forms. It’s available exclusively at http://www.irs.gov. Everyone can find an option to prepare their tax return and e-file it for free. If you made $58,000 or less, you qualify for free tax software that is offered through a private-public partnership with manufacturers. If you made more or are comfortable preparing your own tax return, there’s Free File Fillable Forms, the electronic versions of IRS paper forms. Visit http://www.irs.gov/freefile to review your options.

4. Try IRS e-file: After 21 years, IRS e-file has become the safe, easy and most common way to file a tax return. Last year, 70 percent of taxpayers – 99 million people – used IRS e-file. Starting in 2011, many tax preparers will be required to use e-file and will explain your filing options to you. This is your chance to give it a try. IRS e-file is approaching 1 billion returns processed safely and securely. If you owe taxes, you have payment options to file immediately and pay by the tax deadline. Best of all, combine e-file with direct deposit and you get your refund in as few as 10 days.

5. Consider other filing options There are many different options for filing your tax return.You can prepare it yourself or go to a tax preparer.You may be eligible for free face-to-face help at an IRS office or volunteer site.Give yourself time to weigh all the different options and find the one that best suits your needs.

6. Consider Direct Deposit If you elect to have your refund directly deposited into your bank account, you’ll receive it faster than waiting for a paper check.

7. Visit the IRS website again and again The official IRS website is a great place to find everything you’ll need to file your tax return: forms, publications, tips, answers to frequently asked questions and updates on tax law changes.

8. Remember this number: 17 Check out IRS Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax on the IRS website. It’s a comprehensive collection of information for taxpayers highlighting everything you’ll need to know when filing your return.

9. Review! Review! Review!Don’t rush. We all make mistakes when we rush. Mistakes will slow down the processing of your return. Be sure to double-check all the Social Security Numbers and math calculations on your return as these are the most common errors made by taxpayers.

10. Don’t panic! If you run into a problem, remember the IRS is here to help. Try http://www.irs.gov or call toll-free at 800-829-1040.


Tax resolution blog adds new feature

January 3, 2011

by Gina Anton, Director of Corporate Communications

Happy 2011! In the spirit of the New Year and a fresh new start, I would like to introduce a new feature on our tax resolution blog – Honest Dialogue: Stories from our Tax Consultants. Honest Dialogue will feature information from our consultants on what the most common tax issues they see are, the most frequently asked questions they get and stories from the field – situations they’ve seen where we have been able to help our clients with their back tax problem.

Our tax consultants are the second person to speak with our clients (second only to speaking with one of our appointment setters for their appointment), before the actual work begins on our clients’ cases. Often, our consultants are counselor, confidante and friend to their clients who have been burdened with their back tax liability for quite some time. Our consultants are very familiar with the tax issues our clients deal with and are familiar with the fear the client faces of the IRS and its tactics.

In the first installment later this week, one of our consultants, Antonia Martin, will tell us what the top five questions about tax resolution she gets from her clients are and how she answers those questions.

If you have a tax question you would like JK Harris to answer, please submit it to us here or via email at jkharris@jkharris.com.

Happy New Year!


‘Tis the season…. To prepare for tax season!

December 6, 2010

It’s never too early to start preparing for the next tax season. You may find that you can still squeeze in some last minute tax strategies to help save you money on your 2010 return. It’s a little trickier this year than most, since tax rates are scheduled to change for 2011. With the uncertainty about next year’s tax rates, some taxpayers are looking to accelerate their income into 2010 at the known tax rate rather than waiting to see what 2011 holds. For now, here are some tried and true ways to save on your taxes:

*Max out your 401(K) or other employer sponsored retirement plan. Contributions to a 401(K) or 403(b) have to be made by the end of the year, so now is the perfect time to lower your taxable income while padding your retirement account.

*Make your charitable contributions by December 31st to be able to claim them on your 2010 tax return.

*Giving any large cash gifts? You are allowed to gift up to $13,000 (for 2009 and 2010) per person, to any number of people without having to file a gift return. Of course, if you give a check, the recipient must cash the check by the end of the year.

*Pay your property taxes by the end of the year in order to deduct them on your 2010 return.

*Sell of any stocks or investments that have fallen in value. You can take the losses in 2010, if you sell before the end of the year.

*The energy efficient home improvement credit is set to expire at the end of 2010. If you are thinking of making some home improvements (new insulation, more efficient windows, doors or HVAC system), act now to take advantage of this credit.

*Previously, a computer counted as a qualified expense for section 529 college savings plans. This will expire at the end of 2010.


TIGTA Reports Possible $576 Million in Back Taxes Owed From Non-filers For 2007

December 1, 2010

According to an article published by Accounting Today, the Treasury Inspector General released a report stating the IRS could unearth up to $1.3 billion in unpaid taxes by making better use of currency report data. These reports could help pinpoint non-filers who have generated enough income from certain financial transactions, but have failed to file a tax return.

TIGTA estimated over 40,000 potential non-filers in 2007 could owe as much as $576 million in back taxes, penalties and interest, while under-reporters could owe as much as $758 million in back taxes, penalties and interest for the same period. Read the full article below:
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The Internal Revenue Service could unearth as much as $1.3 billion in unpaid taxes, penalties and interest by making better use of currency report data to identify taxpayers with potentially unreported income, according to a new government report.

The report, by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, assessed the IRS’s use of currency reports to address nonfilers and under-reporters. Banks and other financial institutions are required to file reports on currency and suspicious transactions, which are in turn used by law enforcement officials to battle a range of financial crimes, such as narcotics trafficking, tax evasion and financing of terrorist activities.

TIGTA identified a number of individuals who have enough cash to engage in currency transactions totaling at least $20,000, but did not file tax returns even though they appeared to have a filing requirement.

TIGTA also identified a number of other individuals engaged in similar currency transactions who filed tax returns, but reported income that did not appear sufficient to cover their basic living expenses. The difference between their income and expenses raises questions about whether additional income sources should have been reported.

TIGTA estimated that 42,804 potential nonfilers may collectively owe as much as $576 million in delinquent taxes, penalties and interest for 2007. TIGTA also estimated there are 78,770 potential under-reporters who may owe as much as $758 million in additional taxes, penalties and interest for 2007.

TIGTA recommended that, as resources become available, the IRS should explore the feasibility of making greater use of currency transaction reports to pursue additional nonfilers and under-reporters for audit.

IRS management agreed with the recommendation. However, IRS management did not commit to pursuing additional potential under-reporters for audit, nor did they agree with the outcome measure because of concerns with the selection criteria used. TIGTA maintains that the potential $1.3 billion of increased revenue is reasonable considering the assumptions used to make the estimate.

Posted by JK Harris


JK Harris Employees Rally to Help Local Food Pantry for Thanksgiving

November 30, 2010

For the second year in a row, JK Harris employees participated in a food drive to help local charity, Helping Hands of Goose Creek. Helping Hands is a local food pantry that provides emergency food to families in crisis situations. All families are assessed to determine if they meet the requirements of emergency aid.

Over the recent months, the charity has seen donations drop while demand has increased.Helping Hands is located in Berkeley County, which currently has the highest unemployment rate in South Carolina at over 12%.

Last year, JK Harris held its first food drive for the charity and donated 378 pounds of food. This year, the goal was to exceed that number.

Executive director Michelle Maynard was very happy and more than a little emotional when she called to let us know late last week that JK Harris’ donations weighed in at 591 pounds this year. She was thrilled she would be able to provide all of her families with a holiday turkey this year.

A big thank you goes out to our generous employees at JK Harris.

If you would like more information on Helping Hands of Goose Creek, visit their website at www.helpinghandsofgoosecreek.net.


Wesley Snipes Ordered to Report to Bureau of Prisons; Found Guilty of Tax Crimes

November 19, 2010

Today, a federal judge rejected actor Wesley Snipes’ request for a new trial and ordered him to report to the Bureau of Prisons to begin serving a three year sentence on tax related crimes. Although his attorneys presented evidence of two jurors claiming members of the jury were prejudiced in the case from the beginning. Prosecutors have accused Snipes of obstructing the IRS and attempting to avoid paying millions of dollars in taxes. For details, read the full article below, written by Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel.
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OCALA — A federal judge today rejected movie star Wesley Snipes’ demand for a new trial and ordered the actor to surrender to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons to begin serving a 36-month prison sentence for tax-related crimes.

In a 17-page order, U.S. District Court Judge William Terrell Hodges said, “The Defendant Snipes had a fair trial; he has had a full, fair and thorough review of his conviction and sentence by the Court of Appeals; and he has had a full, fair and thorough review of his present claims, during all of which he has remained at liberty. The time has come for the judgment to be enforced.”

Snipes, 48, an Orlando-born star of “Jungle Fever,” “White Men Can’t Jump,” and “The Fugitive” sequel “U.S. Marshals,” was convicted in 2008 of three misdemeanor counts of willfully failing to file federal tax returns.

Prosecutors contend he obstructed the IRS and attempted to avoid paying millions of dollars in federal taxes.

“It is just shocking,” Snipes’ Atlanta-based lawyer Daniel Meachum said in an e-mail to the Orlando Sentinel. “Wesley is very disappointed but staying strong and positive.”

The actor’s defense team had hoped the judge would grant Snipes a new trial after receiving e-mails from two jurors who claimed that other members of the panel had concluded the actor was guilty before the trial began.

Meachum also argued that a key government witness, Kenneth Starr, provided “tainted” testimony against Snipes. Starr, a New York financial adviser with a stable of celebrity clients, pleaded guilty recently to fraud.

“We were hopeful that we had convinced Judge Hodges that the government’s witness, Ken Starr, had perjured himself and that the government knew of his criminal activities and the predetermined minds of three jurors, but we obviously fell short in accomplishing that,” Meachum said.

He said the defense team was “determined to exhaust all plausible avenues in this matter.”

While Snipes could challenge Hodges’ latest ruling and ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review his case, he would likely await the ruling from a federal prison cell.

The judge’s order requires Snipes to “surrender himself” upon receipt of notice from the U.S. Marshal Service or from the federal Bureau of Prisons. It is unclear in the order where and when he must turn himself in.

Best known as the vampire-killing hero in the science-fiction trilogy “Blade,” Snipes was accused of conspiring with Eddie Ray Kahn of Lake County to avoid paying more than $15 million in taxes from 1999 to 2004.

The conspiracy charge accused Snipes of seeking a fraudulent refund of $7.3 million.

Kahn, who founded American Rights Litigators in Mount Dora, sold illegal tax-dodging schemes and convinced the actor that he had no obligation to pay federal income taxes. Kahn was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Snipes’ defense team provided Hodges with an unsolicited e-mail from a juror whose identity was redacted from public documents and who suggested that other members of the panel were not fair to the actor.

The e-mail read: “I served on the jury in Ocala that found him guilty on 3 counts of failing to file taxes. It was a deal that had to be made because of certain jurors that had already presumed he was guilty before the trail (sic) started and we only found this out in the last few days of deliberation. We thought we were making the right deal because we did not think he would go to jail for not filing taxes. There were 3 on the jury that felt this way and told us he was guilty before they even heard the first piece of evidence going against what the judge had said.”

Jurors take an oath pledging to obey the principle that a defendant is innocent until proven guilty.

In his ruling, Hodges noted the e-mail “presents, to be sure, a troubling set of circumstances,” which would be contrary to the jury’s oath and his repeated instructions before and during the two-week length of the trial.

U.S. law also prohibits courts from prying into jury deliberations without evidence of outside influence.

Hodges pointed out, “It is also worthy of note…that the veracity of the claim of juror misconduct in this case is undermined by the fact that (Snipes) was acquitted of the most serious charges; that the complaining juror waited two and a half years before bringing the alleged misconduct to light; and the fact that the jurors’ complaint was expressly motivated by the Defendant’s sentence — a consideration that, in itself, the jury was expressly instructed to disregard in arriving at its verdict.”

Posted by JK Harris

Check out our previous blogs regarding Wesley Snipes here:

Wesley Snipes’ Lake County tax guru gets more prison time

Frivolous tax arguments do not sit well with IRS


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