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Swiss Bank Tax Evasion: U.S. Using New Tactic For Finding Suspected Tax Cheats

Swiss Bank Tax Evasion

First Posted: 12/28/11 06:16 PM ET Updated: 12/28/11 06:16 PM ET

U.S. authorities hunting in Swiss banks for suspected tax cheats have a new weapon in their arsenal: an arcane but aggressive legal maneuver more commonly used against drug smugglers, money launderers and Imelda Marcos, widow of the Philippine dictator.

Backed by court judges, federal prosecutors are issuing subpoenas -- official papers which compel the recipients to provide potentially damning evidence -- to United States taxpayers suspected of holding hidden accounts at Swiss and other offshore banks, according to criminal defense lawyers whose clients have received the papers.

The grand jury subpoenas are unusual in that they ask bank clients -- not the banks themselves -- to turn over to the authorities their bank account details since 2003, including statements with the highest annual balances. Taxpayers who refuse to comply potentially face a stark choice: be found in contempt of court and thus subject to civil or criminal fines and jail time, or disclose potentially incriminating evidence against themselves.

"This is a very hot issue right now," said Nathan Hochman, former assistant attorney general for the Tax Division of the Justice Department who is now in private practice at the law firm Bingham McCutchen. Hochman said that defense lawyers representing taxpayers were furious over the tactic, which already has been challenged in some courts.

NEW TACTIC IN SHOWDOWN

The subpoenas, at least a dozen of which have been issued over the past year or so, are the latest twist in a showdown between Switzerland and the United States over the battered tradition of Swiss bank secrecy. Swiss law, dating to 1934 and stemming from a medieval tradition, protects client bank information from disclosure; bankers who reveal client details can face jail time.

The subpoenas are evidence of tensions between Switzerland, the global capital of offshore wealth with an estimated $2 trillion in hidden assets, and the U.S. Justice Department, which is conducting criminal investigations of 11 Swiss banks suspected of enabling tens of thousands of wealthy Americans to evade U.S. taxes through secret bank accounts holding billions of dollars in hidden assets. The banks include Credit Suisse AG , which received a target letter last July notifying it that it was formally under criminal scrutiny; HSBC Holdings plc , and Basler Kantonalbank, a large Swiss cantonal, or regional, bank.

The Justice Department is seeking to force the banks to disclose American client names and account information and pay hefty fines or face serious consequences, including possible indictment or deferred-prosecution agreements. "The number one thing is the customer data -- it is at the heart of the issue," said a U.S. government official briefed on the matter and on the subpoenas.

Earlier this month, the upper house of the Swiss parliament backed an amendment that would allow Switzerland to compel its banks to hand over American client data, even if authorities don't already know the client names; the lower house still has to approve it. The amendment covers an existing tax treaty between the United States and Switzerland in which the Alpine country has agreed to hand over client data but generally only if the U.S. side already knows the client's identity.

Tax lawyers representing clients receiving the subpoenas, known as Title 31 subpoenas, say that U.S. prosecutors are effectively staging an end-run around the treaty process. "The government is looking for a shortcut to traditional investigative steps in an international case," said a tax lawyer in Washington, D.C., who declined to be identified because he represented a taxpayer indicted by a grand jury in a sealed case.

Title 31 is a part of the U.S. Code of Laws that deals with money and finance. Federal prosecutors used the Title 31 subpoena strategy against Imelda Marcos around 1990 as part of a federal inquiry into bribes allegedly paid by Westinghouse Electric Corp to the Philippine government, according to prosecutors.

American taxpayers receiving the subpoenas include those who applied too late to one of two IRS voluntary disclosure programs, as well as clients who appear to have been "outed" by a clutch of recently indicted or charged Swiss bankers.

Federal prosecutors suspect that the nearly 20,000 U.S. taxpayers who came forward under the programs represent a fraction of the total tax evaders.

LEGAL WRANGLING

At issue is a U.S. legal principle known as the required records exception to the U.S. Constitution's Fifth Amendment. Courts have ruled that the amendment, granting persons the right not to be forced to incriminate themselves, has an important exception for "required records" that must be kept for activities that are regulated and of a "public" nature. Federal prosecutors issuing the court-backed subpoenas argue that offshore private banking falls into this category of activity.

But courts have issued conflicting opinions on whether that reasoning is correct.

Last August, in a closely watched case brought by a wealthy California taxpayer known only by the initials M.H., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit upheld a district court's prior ruling that M.H. was in contempt of court for refusing to produce the bank documents.

Meanwhile, last September, a federal judge in Texas ruled that a different taxpayer did not have to comply with a subpoena for bank records because the records did not fall under the required records doctrine. The Justice Department is appealing against that ruling, according to court papers.

According to a criminal defense lawyer in Washington, D.C., with a client who has received a subpoena, the subpoenas are "tantamount to a required confession -- the production and authentication of records that are not in a regulated industry and have none of the 'public' aspects of other required records cases." The lawyer added that "while it may be a clever attempt, it pushes the 'required records' aspects of 5th Amendment case law to -- and most of us think well beyond -- its limits."

The lawyer declined to be identified, citing confidentiality rules governing grand jury subpoenas. But he added that some banks were "dragging their feet" in turning over documents to clients, while others, in particular "smaller banks," were refusing to do so. He did not identify the banks.

Jeremy Temkin, a criminal tax lawyer at Morvillo Abramovitz in New York, called the subpoenas on bank clients "an extension of the pressure on the Swiss to pressure on the American taxpayer. It's a very aggressive position."

(Editing By Howard Goller, Phil Berlowitz)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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U.S. authorities hunting in Swiss banks for suspected tax cheats have a new weapon in their arsenal: an arcane but aggressive legal maneuver more commonly used against drug smugglers, money launde...
U.S. authorities hunting in Swiss banks for suspected tax cheats have a new weapon in their arsenal: an arcane but aggressive legal maneuver more commonly used against drug smugglers, money launde...
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05:13 AM on 07/20/2012
Switzerland has started to give up banking secrecy. But we have other options avaiable for offshore banking
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
istanbulite
03:44 PM on 01/29/2012
Need I mention that this is the Justice Dept of President Obama and not Georgie Porgie. Let's give credit to this president for going after tax cheats who are not supporting their country. (and who would rather have the focus on welfare moms getting rich off of food stamps, yeah right)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:14 PM on 12/29/2011
Some rarely mentioned facts

The Swiss finance ministry collects about 90% of the revenue it is owed. This number is about 75% for the IRS. Thus the banking secrecy law is seen by Swiss citizens as more of a privacy issue. One of the reasons the law was passed in 1934 was to prevent the German government from tracking assets held by Jews in Swiss banks. The situation is similar to how Mexico is pissed about looser gun laws in the US. The US just basically gives Mexico the finger and continues to see it as a border control problem. If Mexico tried to play hardball on US gun laws, Uncle Sam would just laugh. Switzerland (population 8 million) has no such luxury.

Switzerland does not depend solely on hidden bank accounts or Nazi gold (don't get me started...). Banking and insurance is about 12% of GDP. Personal wealth management is at most 3.5% of GDP and 5% of tax revenues. Unemployment is under 4%. What Swiss politicians are slowly realizing is that damage to Switzerland's reputation (regardless of what the actual facts are) could be far worse for GDP than any direct loss of GDP, and laws are changing slowly to differentiate between domestic and foreign accounts. The 2000 World Jewish Congress public relations masterpiece class action shakedown for $1.25 billion (on $30 million of actual deposits and a small number of isolated malfeasances) was the big wakeup call.

Sincerely,
Swiss guy (not a banker)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
montn2
The poor man's son fights the rich man's war.
01:37 PM on 12/29/2011
Love it, love it, love it! About time.......hope it works.
11:09 AM on 12/29/2011
Around the world the rich had hidden their wealth and avoided paying their fair share of taxes.

The problems in Greece and Italy are made worse because people with huge home, expensive cars and boats are not reporting their full incomes. The rich some how feel that the little people need to pay their taxes but it is ok for them to defraud the system.

It is time for all the tax cheats to pay their fair share. The gravy train for the top 1% is ending.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
susangg
Susan in Bocas del Toro,
10:15 AM on 12/29/2011
The government is assuming that anybody who has a bank account outside of the USA is a "tax cheat." Some of us actually live in foreign countries and we have bank accounts there because we need them for daily life. Some of the new laws being passed, ostensibly to catch "tax cheats" are overkill, because they place onerous (and useless) paperwork burdens on ordinary retirees. Why should someone who moves their savings (or their social security checks) to the country they are living in be treated the same as a multi national corporation with overseas branches that are earning millions of dollars a year? It does not make sense. The penalty (and paperwork) should fit the "crime."
04:17 PM on 12/29/2011
Sure but how does the government write a law so they only bother the tax cheats and not you? Seriously, take a stab at it, it would be impressive if you could do it. People who cheat put a burden on all of us unfortunately. I understand your frustration but it's either allow anyone to hide assests overseas or bother people with paperwork, I'm not sure how you can perfectly target the guilty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
susangg
Susan in Bocas del Toro,
04:52 PM on 12/29/2011
Uh....its called EVIDENCE.
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10:58 PM on 12/29/2011
um...

They need to get a warrant and due process to search your home. In Switzerland, the same idea holds for bank accounts. You may not mind if your banking info is leaked all over the internet, but Swiss people do. Banking secrecy does not prevent criminal activity from being investigated and prosecuted. The word "secrecy" is misleading here. Think of it as a "banking privacy" law.

What more people should be asking is: why does every country in the world except the US (and one other, i forget which) tax the income of citizens who live outside its borders? This makes no sense. If you don't drive on US highways or send your kids to US schools, why should you pay US taxes? All resident aliens (green card holders) in the US gladly pay US taxes because they use US services. They do not pay taxes to their home countries because this is crazy.

The other issue is taxation without representation. US expats pay taxes but do not legally have elected representatives in Congress. They are only allowed to vote for President.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Veverka
09:33 AM on 12/29/2011
A lot of room for abuse here but if institutions won't co-operate with normal investigations then extreme measure are warranted. These people who feel they are above the law should feel its worst bite.Too many of the 1%ers feel they can do anything they want to make a profit and steal again by not paying taxes. Its too bad that the DOJ only want the fines and no jail time. Tax evasion is a criminal act and should have mandatory jail time just like what would happen to you and me if we hide taxable income from taxes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
J T K
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
11:05 AM on 12/29/2011
There's no law to be above if the government can just ignore the Constitution (5th amendment in this case) at will.
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11:04 PM on 12/29/2011
From the perspective of Swiss law, it's not a "normal investigation" as you put it, if the IRS asks a Swiss bank for the account info of every American customer. This is what is known as a "fishing expedition," and violates due process. This kind of thing is generally illegal in the US. At least it was until recently, as the article above mentions.
09:00 AM on 12/29/2011
Legal racketerring! These rich tax evaders are crooks and liers - wonder how many names on that list would be recognizable by U.S. citizens? By the time they finally get the information, the tax cheats will have died of old age!
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laterthanyouthink
My snark font is: ON
08:33 AM on 12/29/2011
Why bother?

How many are behind bars after the whistle blower episode?

One.

"Bradley Birkenfeld, a former UBS banker, entered a Schuylkill County federal prison in Pennsylvania to serve a 40-month prison term, after attacking the government for the punishment in light of what he called his cooperation in helping expose thousands of U.S. tax cheats."

http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/01/08/us-ubs-idUSSGE60303Z20100108
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
Expat Extraordinaire.
07:21 AM on 12/29/2011
Yet the Wall Street banksters still roam free.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
psnyder325
Yep, I'm a Socialist. Deal.
07:06 AM on 12/29/2011
So...I'm all in favor of finding these cheats and taxing the heck outta them, but I don't understand one thing. Switzerland, last time I looked, was a sovereign nation and not part of the U.S. Hoiw can the U.S. indict Swiss bankers and have it mean anything so long as they don't travel to the U.S. What are they going to do? Send Navy seals to kidnap the bankers? That would be an act of war against Switzerland. Can someone who understands international law better than I please explain this to me? (No snark...)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Veverka
09:49 AM on 12/29/2011
Aid and abiding a criminal act under the guidance of a standing treaty. US DOJ could lock the Swiss banks from operating here. That would be bad for the Swiss.
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11:38 PM on 12/29/2011
Exactly as Mr. Veverka explained. They go after banks with operations in NYC, or more recently the EU. (The Germans and Italians are doing the same thing now.) In normal investigations this would be no problem and they would get full cooperation from Switzerland, but Swiss law considers fishing expeditions a violation of due process and specifically forbids them. You need more incriminating info than "your client is an American citizen" to get the wheels of justice moving in Switzerland. They do seem to be dragging their feet on the list of clients on the whistleblower CD though. That is lame, because there is specific evidence.

If the US govt gets desperate enough they will make up some stuff about Nazi gold during WW2 and try to pressure the Swiss government to do something. This did not work last time. The approach mentioned above worked much better.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
psnyder325
Yep, I'm a Socialist. Deal.
05:40 AM on 12/30/2011
Thank you all for helping me to understand how the U.S. can go after a sovereign nation. I guess I didn't really think through that they have U.S. assets. Our arm has grown long, indeed. Perhaps too long.
03:40 AM on 12/29/2011
in Republican circles it was oh-so "patriotic" to evade your fair share of taxation...Texas Republicans...we the people are coming for ya...

We need names...published and open by the Freedom of Information act if need be...America needs to know the extent of the problem and who the PERPS are...

Anyone with me on this? Or is it TOO uncomfortable to expose real people after they try to cheat all the rest of us...

Or should they get to ride this anonymously///pay their slap on the wrist and maybe then run for office...
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muysuave41
Spanish Olive Oil Producer
02:53 AM on 12/29/2011
Another unconstitutional power grab. O's Treasury Dept is out of control creating rules on the fly to entrap innocent USA people. Rather than go after tax cheating off-shore USA firms with Trillions in overseas accounts, O's Treasury is using questionable laws to punish law abiding citizens. Punishment is disproportionate to the supposed crime -- penalties that are on par with drug traffickers. Unfortunately, O has failed to understand history: money can easily move elsewhere, therefore mitigating any sizable revenue income. They are chasing ghosts. It's too bad the media keeps falling for the way the Treasury Dept frames the discussion with off-shore money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
psnyder325
Yep, I'm a Socialist. Deal.
07:00 AM on 12/29/2011
"Innocent citizens????" If they are innocent, then they'll turn over their financial records and pay the tax on their money so that we, the people, don't have to pick up their tax. If they're NOT innocent...if they've evaded their LEGALLY REQUIRED taxes, then the courts have every right to subpoena their records. What IS it with you Republicans?!? You will support BREAKING THE LAW to protect the 1%, but will also support the government breaking the law to punish th 99%. There is neither consistency, logic nor morality in the Conservative position on things.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
Expat Extraordinaire.
08:51 AM on 12/29/2011
These are fishing expeditions and they stink. Today it's some alleged tax evader and tomorrow it will be you. This is how capital controls start and why only an idiot would have all of their assets in one country. Next they'll be coming for your precious metals and safety deposit boxes. Turn over your financial records for no good reason? Rubbish.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
susangg
Susan in Bocas del Toro,
10:18 AM on 12/29/2011
And that's the key word: "IF." Yes, by all means, punish millionaires and corporations who are earning big bucks and not paying taxes. But why assume that any individual who has a foreign bank account is doing that? If the government has probably cause to believe that a crime (tax evasion) has been committed, no problem with subpenas for bank records. But I didn't see any probably cause requirement in the article, probably because there isn't one. Live overseas? Have a bank account where you live? You're PRESUMED guilty. And that's not right either.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RitaS
02:47 AM on 12/29/2011
The US finally looking for tax evaders.... I so hope it's not too late for the US & all it's people, given the current corporate owned politicians....
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rikster
buy the ticket-take the ride
10:09 AM on 12/29/2011
they all probably have accounts there...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RitaS
10:04 PM on 12/29/2011
No doubt...

It's a baby step that will hopefully expose those *sses...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hdaryl01
02:32 AM on 12/29/2011
Wake me up when the Feds decide to go after the jurisdiction of Israel, Israeli Banks like Bank Leumi et al, and dual Israeli/American citizens for tax evasion. These same citizens, of course, can't be extradited from Israel to the United States because, Israel doesn't have an extradition treaty with the United States. Until then, the Swiss and the U.S. customers utilizing the services the Feds are going after the obvious, politically correct and non-contentious, low hanging fruit. How long do you think we'll have to wait for the Feds to make it through the Swiss, Leichtenstein, Luxembourg, Panama, Dutch Antilles, Caymans, Channel Islands, Isle of Mann, Hong Kong, and every other non-Isreali jurisdiction before they grow the balls go after the number 1 worldwide tax evasion and money laundering jurisdiction-Israel?

I'm not holding my breath...