FEDERAL CRIMINAL DEFENSE

Tax Fraud / IRS Defense

Defense against IRS criminal investigations and federal tax fraud prosecutions.

10,000+ Cases Handled
50+ Years Experience
Nationwide Federal Courts
24/7 Availability

Understanding Tax Fraud / IRS Defense

Federal tax crimes are investigated by IRS Criminal Investigation (CI), one of the most effective federal law enforcement agencies. Tax fraud, tax evasion, filing false returns, and failure to file are all federal offenses that can result in significant prison sentences and financial penalties. The IRS has made tax fraud enforcement a priority, and convictions are obtained in over 90% of cases that go to trial.

Common Federal Tax Offenses

The most commonly charged federal tax crimes include tax evasion (26 U.S.C. Section 7201), filing false returns (26 U.S.C. Section 7206), failure to file tax returns (26 U.S.C. Section 7203), and tax fraud conspiracy. Tax evasion, the most serious charge, requires proof that the defendant willfully attempted to evade or defeat a tax obligation through affirmative acts of evasion, such as concealing income, overstating deductions, maintaining double books, or using nominee accounts. The willfulness element requires proof that the defendant knew of the tax obligation and intentionally violated it.

The IRS Criminal Investigation Process

IRS CI investigations typically begin with a referral from a revenue agent conducting a civil audit, a Suspicious Activity Report from a financial institution, or information from a cooperating witness. The investigation progresses through distinct phases, culminating in a recommendation to the DOJ Tax Division for prosecution. The IRS publishes detailed guidance (the Criminal Investigation Handbook) governing how these investigations are conducted, and violations of these procedures can be used in the defense.

Defense Strategies for Tax Cases

Tax fraud defense centers on the willfulness element. The government must prove that the defendant acted knowingly and intentionally, not merely negligently or through honest mistake. Our attorneys develop defense strategies that may include demonstrating reliance on a tax professional, showing that errors were inadvertent, challenging the government’s calculation of tax loss, and presenting evidence that the defendant made good faith efforts to comply with tax obligations. We also explore the possibility of resolving the matter through civil penalties rather than criminal prosecution.

If you are under IRS criminal investigation, the stakes could not be higher. A federal tax conviction results in imprisonment, massive financial penalties, and permanent damage to your reputation. Contact our firm for immediate, confidential assistance.

Potential Penalties

Offense Level Penalties
Tax Evasion (26 USC 7201) Up to 5 years imprisonment, $250,000 fine per count
Filing False Return (26 USC 7206) Up to 3 years imprisonment, $250,000 fine per count
Failure to File (26 USC 7203) Up to 1 year imprisonment per year of non-filing
Tax Fraud Conspiracy Up to 5 years imprisonment, $250,000 fine

Defense Strategies We Use

Challenging the government's proof of willfulness
Establishing good faith reliance on a tax professional
Demonstrating that errors were inadvertent or negligent, not fraudulent
Challenging IRS tax loss calculations
Negotiating civil resolution to avoid criminal prosecution
Identifying procedural violations in the IRS investigation

The Federal Criminal Process

Understanding what happens next is critical. Here is a step-by-step overview of the federal criminal process — and where an experienced attorney can make the biggest impact.

1

Investigation

Federal agencies (FBI, DEA, IRS) build a case. You may not know you're under investigation. Early attorney involvement can make a critical difference.

Frequently Asked Questions

Tax avoidance is the legal use of the tax code to minimize your tax obligation. Tax evasion is the illegal willful attempt to evade or defeat a tax. The line between aggressive tax planning and criminal evasion can be thin, which is why intent is the critical element in every tax fraud case.
If you relied in good faith on a qualified tax professional and provided them with accurate information, their mistakes generally should not result in criminal charges against you. However, if the government can prove you provided false information or knowingly signed a false return, you could face charges regardless of who prepared the return.
Warning signs include receiving a visit from IRS Criminal Investigation agents (as opposed to revenue agents), learning that your bank or associates have received grand jury subpoenas, or being told that your civil audit has been suspended. If you suspect a criminal investigation, contact an attorney immediately and do not speak with IRS agents.

Todd Spodek in the Media

Watch our managing partner discuss criminal defense strategy on major news networks.

Why Clients Trust Spodek Law Group
Fox News: Tax Evasion Defense
Todd Spodek on Tax Fraud Cases
CBS: IRS Criminal Investigation
Federal Tax Fraud Sentencing
IRS Audit vs Criminal Investigation

Fighting Tax Fraud / IRS Defense Charges?

Don't face these serious charges alone. Our experienced attorneys are available 24/7 to discuss your case.

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