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zum Thema passend (ex NYT):
Pioneer of Sham Tax Havens Sits Down for Pre-Jail Chat
When pressed, Jerome Schneider admitted,"Yes, I am a criminal."
Tax Evasion
For 28 years, Mr. Schneider promoted offshore tax schemes in books and seminars.
SEATTLE, Nov. 17 - Jerome Schneider, the nation's best-known seller of fraudulent offshore banks, said in an interview today that he had helped hundreds of rich Americans evade taxes, including actors, celebrities and business owners.
[Können Oscar-Preisträger nervös werden?]
Mr. Schneider, who pleaded guilty in February to conspiring to help his clients evade the tax laws, said that he expected"every single one" of his clients to be prosecuted or sued for the taxes they evaded. He said clients sought to evade taxes on incomes ranging from $100,000 to $40 million, though most were from a third to half a million dollars.
Mr. Schneider, 53, spoke in a cramped hotel room here under the watchful eye of three Internal Revenue Service criminal investigators, who said nothing but smiled broadly at times as he answered questions and named clients and associates. The I.R.S. set up the interview with Mr. Schneider but did not interfere with it. The agency, by law, cannot comment on individual taxpayers.
(...)
Since 1976, Mr. Schneider has set up sham banks for clients in the Cayman Islands, Grenada, Montserratt, Vanuatu, the Cook Islands and, recently, in Nauru, a Pacific island.
Clients paid as much as $60,000 to"acquire" an offshore bank, which consisted of nothing more than pieces of paper to create the appearance of legitimate business activity, he said, confirming the accusations in the government indictment. He said that while most clients wanted to hide money from the I.R.S., some also wanted to conceal money from estranged spouses or creditors.
"Every one of my clients knew full well what they were getting into, including the potential to be prosecuted," he said, detailing how they signed contracts, were advised by lawyers and were told that if tax authorities ever caught onto them they could go to prison."They understood that," he contended.
He said that all his clients had two things in common - they were rich and they wanted to escape taxes.
Most of the nation's major accounting firms worked with one or another of his clients, he said, and he named two law firms that he said were central to his business.
He said one prominent actress sent money to the United International Bank in Nauru, which he said he created. He said the actress paid $50,000 for a legal opinion asserting that the arrangement was legal.
Mr. Schneider also said that in 1988 he arranged for a prominent motivation coach to place $250,000 in an offshore bank without reporting the money to the I.R.S.
In addition, Mr. Schneider said that a billionaire media businessman, one of several clients who he said were on the Forbes 400 list of the wealthiest Americans, sent $40 million to a sham bank in Nauru to pay for a nut-processing company in 1994. The owner of the company has died, but his estate is challenging in Tax Court an I.R.S. demand that taxes be paid on profits from the sale.
For 28 years, Mr. Schneider promoted offshore tax schemes ("The Complete Guide to Offshore Money Havens")...
Asked about the millions of dollars he earned setting up offshore banks, he replied,"It is gone, all gone."
Since he has held himself up as the world's leading expert on hiding money offshore, how could one know for sure if Mr. Schneider really is broke? The I.R.S. agents listening to the question put their hands to their mouths to repress grins.
"If you can find it," Mr. Schneider said,"I would say take it."
Das könnte den US-Haushalt sanieren.
Gruß!
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