Stop Overpaying
Your Tax Liability




Presented by
Alvin S Brown, Esq.,
tax attorney, formerly with the Office of the Chief Counsel of the Internal Revenue Service.
Call (888) 712-7690
for all IRS tax issues,
problems and emergencies.




Protect yourself from IRS intimidation, errors, and penalties




Home page: irstaxattorney.com
Email at: info@irstaxattorney.com

Other Tax Topics
of interest to taxpayers and consultants

Offers In Compromise

Interest Abatement

Tax Refunds

Tax Liens

Tax Liens - Suing the IRS

Appeals of IRS Collection and Examination Actions

Taxpayer Rights

New Tax Legislation

IRS Statute of Limitations Information

Seizures and IRS Enforcement

Department of Justice Criminal Tax Manual

IRS Criminal Investigation Division

IRS Tax Code and Regulations

IRS Installment Agreements

Tax Court

Taxpayer Advocate and Problem Resolution

Tax Audits

Tax Penalties

IRS Collection

Freedom of Information

Taxpayer Privacy

Innocent Spouse Relief

Employee-Independent Contractor Issues

Write Your Congressman

IRS LEVERAGE AND OVERTAXATION

The Internal Revenue Service is adept at using leverage to intimidate, coerce and bluff taxpayers and their representatives into adverse tax determinations based upon weak legal authority and incomplete or insufficient facts.

The IRS agent is both "prosecutor" and "jury." The IRS agent raises issues and comes to conclusions that are presumed to be correct under present law. Also, taxpayers, not the IRS agent, must prove the accuracy of their deductions.

This leverage against a taxpayer applies even if the agent uses incorrect or incomplete facts or makes determinations on erroneous or flawed argument and law. When the agent uses incomplete or weak facts and weak legal authority against a taxpayer - it is a "bluff." The agent can be sloppy and incompetent and still get a large and unjustified tax deficiency. The raw power of the agents position and presumption of correctness is intimidating to taxpayers - more importantly, it is intimidating to the representatives of the taxpayer who do not have the skill or ability to identify and expose the "bluff." The "intimidation" of the IRS agent is used as a tool to close cases quickly. It is well documented that the IRS has a high error rate. Accordingly, taxpayers significantly overpay their tax liability, penalties and interest.

AB Tax Reduction Services protects taxpayers by reducing or eliminating redundant tax liability, penalties and interest. We specialize in exposing defective IRS tax determinations.

If you are a sports fan, you know how a defensive football line matches up against the offensive football line. One or the other can dominate and win the game. There is a similar match-up between the IRS agent and your tax attorney. An IRS agent is generally an accountant who has not been to law school. The agent has a high case load with limited experience and perhaps eight weeks of training at an in-house IRS training facility. Note that the IRS has made substantial reductions of its employees and is generally understaffed. Match that agent up with a trained and experienced tax attorney who has: superior education and tax knowledge; superior interpretative, analytical, writing and research skills; many years of high-level IRS Chief Counsel experience; knowledge of IRS thinking; no pressure to close the case and resolve issues; and who is prepared to pursue all administrative and legal remedies. We are prepared to identify and rebut adverse tax determinations of the IRS based upon incomplete facts and flawed argument and law. If anything, this match-up is intimidating to the IRS agent.

Call AB Tax Reduction Services before you settle with the IRS when you think that you have no other alternative. It is best to call us as early as possible on difficult, serious or important tax matter so that we can maximize use of all administrative procedures and legal remedies. However, even if an adverse tax determination is in collection, tax liability can be reduced and even eliminated in some cases.

Even worse is the fact that the mind-set of an accountant is to see "black and white" rather than the "gray" because they are trained to be precise with numbers. Tax law is drenched with ambiguity where there is mostly no answer that is right or wrong. Tax lawyers are trained to seek and find the ambiguity in the law (i.e., the "gray"). Tax law ambiguity can be used as a "sword" to attack and IRS position and also as a "shield" to protect the taxpayer.

However, not all tax attorneys are equal just as, for example, professional golfers have difference levels of skill and ability. Tax attorneys have different levels of creativity, insight and skill.

The most important attribute of a good tax attorney is to be "creative" with the tax law. This creativity may arise in many ways. A creative tax attorney will use interpretative skill to find support of a taxpayer position. A creative tax attorney will find a gap in a statute or a regulation (a "tax loophole") that permits favorable tax treatment in situations not covered by the statute under consideration. A creative tax attorney will be able to identify inconsistencies by the IRS in its published positions or private ruling letters. A creative tax attorney will use interpretative skills to spin facts, case law, regulations in favor of the taxpayer. Creativity is unlimited in its potential to interpret and apply the law or the ability to develop that knowledge through research skills.

Home | Next


Alvin S. Brown, Esq., Attorney at Law

Phone: (888) 712-7690
Fax: (703) 425-1567
E-Mail: info@irstaxattorney.com