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Says Benefit Plan Scheme Costs Millions In Taxes
Law360,
New York (October 11, 2013, 2:38 PM ET) -- The U.S. government sued an insurance
program marketer in California federal court Wednesday in an effort to shut down
a purported scheme pushing small businesses to buy into employee benefits
programs it claims are structured to cheat the government out of millions of
dollars in taxes.
The
government’s complaint accuses KAE Insurance Services Inc. and affiliated
entities of hawking voluntary employee beneficiary association plans on the
misleading promise that the participating businesses can legally write off plan
contributions as federal income tax deductions while still recouping the full
value of those contributions down the road, according to the complaint.
The
defendants have long been well aware, however, that the plans as structured
violate the Internal Revenue Code and regulations promulgated by the U.S.
Department of the Treasury, and their activities must be halted via a court
injunction, the government argues.
“Defendants
have continued to falsely claim that the VEBA plans in fact comply with the tax
laws, and manage and promote them to this day despite their documented knowledge
of the illegality of the plans,” the government said. “The result is significant
amounts of lost tax revenue to the treasury based on erroneously claimed tax
deductions.”
The
complaint alleges that named defendant and California resident Kenneth Elliott
has since 2001 used a network of businesses, independent certified public
accountants and financial planners to sell companies on the VEBA plans on the
promise they can provide “a lucrative and tax-advantaged method to accrue
wealth.”
Promotion
of those plans has led participating companies across the country to deduct
millions in contributions, despite the fact that the IRS decided more than a
decade ago — in a determination repeatedly upheld by federal courts — that
massive tax write-offs under such plans are at odds with federal law, according
to the complaint.
The
government said one audit of some 41 customers who participated in the plans
marketed by the defendants revealed a total tax deficiency of nearly $14
million, and further estimated the potential total loss to date to be over $70
million.
Elliot
and his co-defendants are said to push the VEBA plans on wealthy customers with
closely-held businesses such as medical practices, pitching the programs as a
legal and tax-free means of providing medical or death benefits to employees,
according to the complaint.
VEBA
contributions are placed into a trust used to purchase insurance contracts, the
premiums for which would otherwise be included as part of that employee’s gross
income if purchased directly. Because such plans have in the past been used as
tax shelters, federal law tightly regulates the ways in which plan contributions
may be deducted, the government said.
The
complaint noted that one common example of how such plans have been used as
“vehicles for rampant tax abuse” involves paying excessive contributions to
obtain cash value insurance policies set aside for future benefits to company
owners that do not actually provide welfare benefits to employees but instead
are a means of distributing excess corporate profits and softening current
federal tax obligations.
The
involvement of Sea Nine Associates Inc. — which sponsors the VEBA plans promoted
by the instant suit defendants and is itself a named defendant — in a suit over
those plans more than a decade ago serves as evidence that the defendants are
well aware of the potential illegality of their enterprise, the government
said.
“The
core purpose and effect of the participation in a Sea Nine VEBA plan is to
provide participants with a mechanism to accumulate wealth for their personal
benefit, unlawfully protecting that income from federal taxation by treating it
as a welfare benefit when it was that in name only,” the complaint said.
Representatives
for the parties were not immediately available for comment Friday.
Counsel
information for the defendants was not immediately available.
The
case is United States of America v. Kenneth Elliott et al, case number
8:13-cv-01582 in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of
California
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