Re: Legality of requiring credit cards?
At 09:39 PM 12/24/96 -0500, Brian A. LaMacchia wrote:
At 05:54 PM 12/24/96 -0800, jim bell wrote:
"Man wins $27,000. He will eventually be required to report and pay taxes on the amount, but not quite yet. Stupid I/R/S people alert him BEFORE he files his taxes. He reports the payment, as is ostensibly legally required. He paid the taxes owed. Period."
THEN you said, "we settled the matter." Huh? What, exactly, was there to "settle"?
Why, of course, the fact that the guy attempted to structure the transaction to evade the reporting requirements in the first place. 31 U.S.C. 5324(a).
Who says? He eventually reported it within the legally-defined time. The evidence of intent to COMPLY with the law is far stronger than the evidence of the opposite.
Structuring (or attempting to structure) a financial transaction to evade the reporting requirements is a violation of this subsection, and 31 U.S.C. 5322(a) says that a willful violation is a five-year felony.
Again, he clearly DID NOT "evade the reporting requirement." Brian Davis admitted this. (Whether he ever intended to do this is sheer speculation on the part of anyone else. We'll never know; as Davis pointed out, the IRS screwed up.) Even if the standard of evidence was as low as "preponderance of evidence" (which it, of course, is not in a criminal case) he SHOULD have won. By waiting until the return was filed and the tax was paid, the IRS was allowing him to resolve whatever ambiguity remained. Actually, if there were any justice, he should have been able to sue the bank for reporting him and NOT INFORMING HIM of that fact. (I presume the law requires the bank to report suspicious transactions. I also presume that the law _doesn't_ prohibit the bank from telling the customer that it will have to report that transaction.) The bank, presumably being experts in the matter, recognizes that lay individuals can't be expected to be experts in specialized areas, and should be considered obligated to warn customers away from suspicious-looking transactions. I'm sure the REAL LAWYERS (tm) on this list will be able to cite examples of where experts of all kinds were sued by non-experts for failing to warn them of unexpected dangers that could have been averted had the appropriate advice been given promptly. Jim Bell jimbell@pacifier.com
On Tue, 24 Dec 1996, jim bell wrote:
At 09:39 PM 12/24/96 -0500, Brian A. LaMacchia wrote:
At 05:54 PM 12/24/96 -0800, jim bell wrote:
"Man wins $27,000. He will eventually be required to report and pay taxes on the amount, but not quite yet. Stupid I/R/S people alert him BEFORE he files his taxes. He reports the payment, as is ostensibly legally required. He paid the taxes owed. Period."
THEN you said, "we settled the matter." Huh? What, exactly, was there to "settle"?
Why, of course, the fact that the guy attempted to structure the transaction to evade the reporting requirements in the first place. 31 U.S.C. 5324(a).
Who says? He eventually reported it within the legally-defined time. The evidence of intent to COMPLY with the law is far stronger than the evidence of the opposite.
Structuring (or attempting to structure) a financial transaction to evade the reporting requirements is a violation of this subsection, and 31 U.S.C. 5322(a) says that a willful violation is a five-year felony.
Again, he clearly DID NOT "evade the reporting requirement." Brian Davis admitted this. (Whether he ever intended to do this is sheer speculation on the part of anyone else. We'll never know; as Davis pointed out, the IRS screwed up.) Even if the standard of evidence was as low as "preponderance of evidence" (which it, of course, is not in a criminal case) he SHOULD have won. By waiting until the return was filed and the tax was paid, the IRS was allowing him to resolve whatever ambiguity remained.
You misunderstand what the statute intends. The violation is for attempting to evade *the bank's* requirement to report certain transactions (i.e. >$10K). He structured the transaction in an effort to keep the bank from complying with the law.
Actually, if there were any justice, he should have been able to sue the bank for reporting him and NOT INFORMING HIM of that fact. (I presume the law requires the bank to report suspicious transactions. I also presume that the law _doesn't_ prohibit the bank from telling the customer that it will have to report that transaction.) The bank, presumably being experts in the matter, recognizes that lay individuals can't be expected to be experts in specialized areas, and should be considered obligated to warn customers away from suspicious-looking transactions. I'm sure the REAL LAWYERS (tm) on this list will be able to cite examples of where experts of all kinds were sued by non-experts for failing to warn them of unexpected dangers that could have been averted had the appropriate advice been given promptly.
So you want the bank to be your nanny? The guy is a lawyer and had previously been involved in transactions in which such reports had been filed. What is your explanation for the three 3 $9k check request? EBD
Jim Bell jimbell@pacifier.com
participants (2)
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Brian Davis
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jim bell