| IR-2004-47, April 5, 2004 WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service
issued a consumer alert today for eight schemes where federal employment
taxes are not properly withheld or paid by employers from their employees’
paychecks. The IRS alert to business owners and other taxpayers follows a
string of recent convictions and court rulings involving employment tax
schemes.
“Failure to pay employment taxes is stealing from the employees of the
business,” said IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson. “The IRS pursues business
owners who don’t follow the law, and those who embrace these schemes face
civil or criminal sanctions.”
There are many reasons employers don’t withhold or pay employment taxes.
For some, it may be an attempt to use the government as a bank to 'borrow
the money for a short while' with good intentions to pay it back later. For
others, it may be a situation where an employer collects the taxes and
elects to keep it during a period of financial difficulty rather than pay it
to the IRS. For a small number, it involves philosophical differences with
the tax law of the United States that courts consistently reject. Regardless
of the reason, federal law requires employment tax withholding and payment
by employers.
Employment taxes consist of federal income tax withholding along with
Social Security and Medicare taxes and unemployment taxes. Also, many states
have withholding requirements for various employment related taxes, such as
contributions to a worker’s compensation fund. Improper reporting or payment
of employment taxes affects the ease with which employees can claim future
benefits from these programs.
The IRS takes a variety of steps to combat employment tax non-compliance.
The agency has a number of civil actions it can take like audits and filing
tax liens against property the taxpayer owns. In addition to civil actions,
IRS Criminal Investigation investigates and refers for prosecution
individuals and businesses that have willfully attempted to avoid filing and
paying employment taxes. These efforts have led to significant criminal
convictions resulting in incarceration and fines.
During the past three years, 117 individuals have been sentenced to
confinement in a federal prison, a halfway house or home detention for
criminal violations related to employment taxes. Approximately 77 percent of
the persons sentenced for evading employment taxes served an average of 17
months confinement and were ordered to make restitution to the government
for the taxes evaded, plus interest and penalties.
Recent examples of employment tax prosecutions can be found at IRS.gov. See
the link for Significant Employment Tax Case Summaries, below.
The IRS urges all businesses to resist the temptation to become involved
in or victimized by unlawful activities. The eight most common types of
employment tax non-compliance include:
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Pyramiding. "Pyramiding" of employment taxes is a
fraudulent practice where a business withholds taxes from its employees
but intentionally fails to remit them to the IRS. An often cause is a
lack of profit or capital for operating costs, so the business owner
uses the trust funds to pay other liabilities. The quarterly employment
tax liabilities accumulate (or “pyramid”) until the employer has little
hope of catching up. Businesses involved in pyramiding frequently shut
down or file for bankruptcy and then start a new business under a
different name starting the cycle over.
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Unreliable Third Party Payers. There are two primary
categories of third party payers – Payroll Service Providers and
Professional Employer Organizations. Payroll Service Providers typically
perform services for employers such as filing employment tax returns and
making employment tax payments. Professional Employer Organizations
offer employee leasing meaning that they handle administrative,
personnel, and payroll accounting functions for employees who have been
leased to other companies that use their services. Many of these
companies provide outstanding services to employers. Unfortunately, in
some instances, companies of both types of services have failed to pay
over to the IRS the collected employment taxes. When these employment
service companies dissolve, millions in employment taxes can be left
unpaid. Employers are urged to exercise due diligence in selecting and
monitoring a third party payer. For example, when choosing a third party
payer, employers should look for one that is reputable and uses the
Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS). This allows the business
owner to verify payments made on their behalf. Also, an employer should
never allow their address of record with the IRS be changed to that of
the third party payer.
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Frivolous Arguments. Unscrupulous individuals and
promoters have used a variety of false or misleading arguments for not
paying employment taxes. These schemes are based on an incorrect
interpretation of “Section 861” and other parts of the tax law and have
been refuted in court. One variation of this scheme involves the
improper use of Form 941c, Supporting Statement to Correct Information
on Form 941, to attempt to get a refund of previously paid employment
taxes. Recent court cases have resulted in criminal convictions of
promoters. Employer participants could also be held responsible for back
payments of employment taxes, plus penalties and interest.
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Offshore Employee Leasing. This scheme, which was
designated as a Listed Transaction by the Service in 2003, misuses the
otherwise legal business practice of employee leasing. Under the typical
promotion, an individual taxpayer supposedly resigns from his or her
current employer or professional corporation and signs an employment
contract with an offshore employee leasing company. The offshore company
indirectly leases the individual’s services back to the original
employer using a domestic leasing company as an intermediary. The
individual performs the same services before and after entering into the
leasing arrangement. While the total amount paid for the individual’s
services stays the same or increases, most of the funds are sent
offshore as “deferred” compensation. The “deferred” compensation is then
paid to the individual as a “loan” or ends up in an account under the
individual’s control. Promoters of these arrangements improperly claim
that neither employment taxes nor income taxes are owed on the
“deferred” compensation. Because it is a Listed Transaction those who
use the scheme are required to disclose their participation on current
tax returns, and will be liable for the unpaid tax and subject to
penalties and interest. Civil and criminal actions are being taken
against promoters and participants in offshore leasing schemes – one
promoter was convicted of defrauding the U.S. and sentenced to 70 months
imprisonment, two other promoters have been ordered by the courts to
stop marketing the scheme and a San Diego doctor plead guilty to tax
evasion and is awaiting sentencing.
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Misclassifying worker status. Sometimes employers
incorrectly treat employees as independent contractors to avoid paying
employment taxes. Generally if the payer has the right to control what
work will be done and how it will be done, the worker is an employee.
Employers who misclassify employees as independent contractors (and are
not eligible for relief under Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978)
will be liable for the employment taxes on wages paid to the
misclassified worker and subject to penalties.
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Paying Employees in Cash. Paying employees in whole or
partially in cash is a common method of evading income and employment
taxes. There is nothing wrong with compensating an employee in cash, but
employment taxes are owed regardless of how the employees are paid. And
the IRS will build its case using all available information even if
there are no payroll records or checks.
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Filing False Payroll Tax Returns or Failing to File Payroll Tax
Returns. Preparing false payroll tax returns intentionally
understating the amount of wages on which taxes are owed or failing to
file employment tax returns are methods commonly used to evade
employment taxes.
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S Corporation Officers Compensation Treated as Corporate
Distributions. In an effort to avoid employment taxes, some S
Corporations are improperly treating officer compensation as a corporate
distribution instead of wages or salary. By law, officers are employees
of the corporation for employment tax purposes and compensation they
receive for their services is subject to employment taxes.
The IRS encourages employees to report any concerns that an employer is
failing to properly withhold and pay federal income and employment taxes.
Taxpayers can contact the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 or report suspected tax
fraud by calling 1-800-829-0433.
Employers must report employment taxes withheld from their employees on
Form 941, Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return. Employers are also
responsible for filing Form 940, Employer’s Annual Federal Unemployment Tax
Return. Payment of employment taxes must be made to an authorized bank or
financial institution according to federal tax deposit requirements.
Employers may also pay these taxes electronically. |