A case has been filed against a tax return preparer and his preparation business in the Olathe, Kansas, area.
The suit, filed in federal court in Kansas City, Kansas, asks the court to permanently bar Everett Bias and the company he owns and operates called Integrity Solutions Tax Consultants Inc. from preparing federal tax returns for others. The government also asks the court to order Bias and ISTC to turn over the names of customers for whom they have prepared federal tax returns since 2012.
The complaint alleges that the defendants unlawfully understated their customers’ income tax liabilities and overstated these customers’ refunds.
According to the complaint, Bias and ISTC unlawfully prepared federal tax returns that lower their customers’ federal tax liabilities by using S corporations. This type of corporation passes corporate income, losses, deductions, and credits to its shareholders for federal tax purposes. Shareholders report the flow-through of income and losses on their personal tax returns and are assessed tax at their individual income tax rates. According to the government’s complaint, Bias and ITSC misreport S Corporation items on their customers’ personal income tax returns by:
• Failing to report customers’ pass-through income as taxable income on the customers’ personal income tax returns;
• Falsely lowering the income of customers’ S corporations and then reporting that false lowered income amount on the customers’ personal income tax returns;
• Improperly double-deducting customers’ personal expenses, such as mortgage interest and real estate taxes, on customers’ corporate and personal returns; and
• Preparing and filing tax returns for fictitious S corporation businesses in order to improperly deduct customers’ personal expenses as business expenses.
According to the complaint, Bias and ISTC also allegedly fabricate itemized deductions on their customers’ personal tax returns, such as unreimbursed employee business expenses and medical-dental expenses, to fraudulently reduce their customers’ taxable income. Furthermore, the government alleges that Bias and ISTC similarly assert that some customers operate a business as a sole proprietorship, which is required to report its profit or loss on a Schedule C (Form 1040, Schedule C, “Profit or Loss from Business”) to the income tax return. According to the complaint, Bias and ISTC allegedly fabricate the income and expenses of the fictitious business to show a loss, which falsely lowers their customers’ taxable income.
According to the complaint, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has examined 200 tax returns prepared by Bias and ISTC and calculated a tax loss to the government of at least $828,506. The complaint alleged that out of these 200 tax returns, the IRS examined 130 personal tax returns. The IRS found that the defendants understated their customers’ liabilities or overstated their refund on 117 of the 130 personal tax returns (90 percent), according to the complaint.
The IRS has some tips on its website, www.irs.gov, for choosing a return preparer and has launched a free directory of federal tax preparers.