Rich Americans are hiding "vast amounts of income" from the IRS by exploiting a "deeply troubling" loophole in a 12-year-old U.S. law designed to crack down on offshore tax evasion, according to a Senate Finance Committee report.
The committee, led by Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden, focused on the loophole after investigating Robert Brockman, the billionaire software developer indicted in the largest tax-evasion case against an individual in U.S. history. Brockman, who
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"It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see how this loophole leads to billions in tax evasion," Wyden said in a separate statement.
The firm isn't "shelving" its offering – it's waiting for Wall Street to emerge from the worst IPO landscape since 2009.
The report described a "shockingly easy" process that starts by setting up shell companies abroad and registering them with the IRS as offshore financial institutions. The IRS issues the entities unique
Hundreds of thousands of entities holding GIINs are based in tax havens like the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands and Guernsey. In most cases, the IRS issues the identifiers without conducting any investigation into the recipient's assets, activities or beneficial owners because the agency says it is "extraordinarily difficult to do meaningful due diligence," according to the report.
'Shell bank' loophole
"This 'shell bank' loophole creates widespread risks for offshore tax evasion and money laundering," the report said. "Due to persistent budget cuts and decade-long campaign to gut the IRS, the agency does not have the personnel or the capabilities to adequately monitor whether these offshore entities are properly reporting accounts belonging to U.S. persons."
Senate investigators, citing court documents, said Brockman set up entities in the tax havens of Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Malta, Nevis, Switzerland, Singapore, Guernsey and the British Virgin Islands. He used those foreign entities to hide more than $2 billion in untaxed income, much of it from his investments in Vista Equity Partners, the Justice Department alleged.
Swiss bank Mirabaud & Cie. received at least $799 million for an entity linked to Brockman called Point Investments, court records show. While that transfer happened before FATCA was in place, the law later required the bank to flag accounts owned by Americans, regardless of when they were opened.
However, because Bermuda-based Point and other Brockman-linked entities had IRS-issued GIIN numbers,
The IRS has issued GIIN numbers to more than 128,000 entities in eight FATCA partner jurisdictions linked to Brockman, the Senate report showed. For entities like those tied to Brockman, obtaining GIINs involves a self-certification process in which applications "are almost always approved without meaningful investigations," the committee found.
The committee, which interviewed IRS officials for its study, wrote that a lack of resources has "significantly hindered" the agency's enforcement activities and ability to crack down on tax evasion by wealthy Americans, as was intended under FATCA.
"Urgent steps need to be taken to ensure that the wealthy taxpayers are not abusing this 'shell bank' loophole and other weaknesses with FATCA enforcement to hide their assets offshore and evade paying their fair share," the Senate report says.