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Pittsburgh Tax Fraud Lawyer

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Pittsburgh Tax Fraud Lawyer

Strategic Defense Against Tax Fraud Allegations

Tax fraud investigations often begin long before criminal charges are filed. An audit, IRS correspondence, subpoena, search warrant, target letter, grand jury investigation, or request for tax and financial records may indicate that federal or Pennsylvania authorities are examining tax returns, business records, financial transactions, or an alleged effort to underreport income or avoid a tax obligation.

Levenson Law Firm represents individuals, professionals, executives, business owners, and others facing serious Pennsylvania state and federal tax fraud investigations and prosecutions throughout Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania.

Tax fraud cases frequently involve extensive tax returns, accounting records, bank statements, business documents, electronic communications, witness testimony, and complicated financial issues. Effective criminal defense begins with examining what the government must prove, reviewing the records in context, and identifying what the evidence establishes—and what it does not.

Criminal charges begin with allegations. Effective criminal defense begins with understanding what the evidence proves—and what it does not.

From there, we develop a legal strategy tailored to the facts, the law, and the individual client.

The strategy depends on the case. The commitment does not.

What Is Tax Fraud?

Tax fraud generally involves allegations that a person or business willfully provided false information, concealed income or assets, claimed improper deductions or credits, maintained false records, or took other intentional steps to evade a tax or defeat the collection of a tax.

Federal criminal tax allegations may involve tax evasion, filing or assisting with a false return, failing to file a required return, failing to pay or collect taxes, concealing assets, obstructing the administration of the tax laws, or conspiring with others to commit a tax offense.

Tax fraud allegations may arise from:

  • Unreported or underreported income
  • False deductions, credits, exemptions, or business expenses
  • Cash transactions or allegedly concealed accounts
  • Unreported foreign income or financial accounts
  • Payroll-tax or employment-tax issues
  • False books, invoices, receipts, or accounting records
  • Personal expenses treated as business expenses
  • Alleged nominee ownership or concealment of assets
  • False statements made during an audit or investigation
  • Tax-return preparation or filing practices
  • Efforts to avoid assessment or collection of a tax

Not every inaccurate tax return, bookkeeping error, disputed deduction, late payment, or disagreement with a taxing authority constitutes criminal fraud. Criminal tax charges generally require proof of willful conduct rather than negligence, mistake, or a good-faith misunderstanding of the law.

How Tax Fraud Investigations Begin

Tax fraud investigations may begin through an audit, a referral from another division of the IRS, suspicious financial activity, information from a former employee or business associate, a whistleblower allegation, an investigation of another person, or evidence developed in a separate financial-crime investigation.

Investigators may seek:

  • Federal, state, and local tax returns
  • Bank, investment, and credit-card records
  • Business ledgers and accounting records
  • Payroll, employment-tax, and withholding records
  • Invoices, receipts, contracts, and expense records
  • Corporate, partnership, and ownership documents
  • Emails, text messages, and electronic communications
  • Accounting software and electronically stored data
  • Foreign-account or international transaction records
  • Statements from accountants, preparers, employees, customers, or cooperating witnesses

Federal criminal tax investigations commonly involve IRS Criminal Investigation and prosecutors responsible for federal tax offenses. Other agencies may become involved when the allegations also concern fraud, money laundering, public benefits, healthcare, or other financial crimes.

Early legal guidance can be important before responding to investigators, producing records, participating in an interview, signing a statement, or attempting to explain disputed financial activity.

Federal and Pennsylvania Tax Fraud Cases

Tax-related conduct may be investigated or prosecuted under federal law, Pennsylvania law, or both. The appropriate forum depends on the taxes involved, the conduct alleged, the agencies conducting the investigation, and whether the matter involves federal income, employment, payroll, excise, or other tax obligations.

A tax investigation may also involve parallel civil, administrative, regulatory, or professional proceedings. A person may face additional tax assessments, interest, civil penalties, liens, collection action, licensing consequences, or business-related issues even when no criminal charge has yet been filed.

Information provided during an audit, administrative proceeding, or civil tax dispute may later be reviewed by criminal investigators. The defense strategy should therefore consider the possible interaction among criminal, civil, financial, regulatory, and professional consequences.

What Prosecutors Must Prove

The required elements depend on the offense charged. A federal tax-evasion charge generally requires proof of a tax deficiency, willfulness, and an affirmative act intended to evade or defeat the assessment or payment of a tax.

A false-return allegation may focus on whether a person willfully signed or submitted a return or other document that the person did not believe was true and correct as to a material matter.

Important issues may include:

  • Whether additional tax was actually due
  • Whether the disputed information was false or materially misleading
  • Whether the accused knew the information was inaccurate
  • Whether the accused acted willfully
  • Whether the accused personally prepared, reviewed, signed, or submitted the document
  • Whether the accused relied in good faith on an accountant, tax preparer, lawyer, or financial professional
  • Whether the government accurately reconstructed income or calculated the alleged tax loss
  • Whether the records support the government’s interpretation of the transactions
  • Whether the evidence reflects intentional tax fraud rather than negligence, mistake, or a legitimate tax dispute

Tax laws and accounting rules can be complicated. Determining what the client knew, what advice was received, what records were available, and how particular transactions were treated is often central to the defense.

Evidence and Legal Issues in Tax Fraud Cases

Tax fraud prosecutions frequently depend on large volumes of financial, accounting, and electronic evidence. Those materials must be reviewed in context rather than accepted solely through summaries, spreadsheets, reconstructed-income analyses, or selected transactions prepared by investigators.

Depending on the circumstances, the defense may examine:

  • Tax returns and supporting schedules
  • Bank-deposit or expenditure analyses
  • Accounting records and bookkeeping methods
  • Business income and expense documentation
  • Payroll and employment-tax records
  • Communications with accountants and tax preparers
  • Emails, text messages, and electronic files
  • Search warrants, subpoenas, and document demands
  • Statements made during audits or interviews
  • Witness credibility and cooperating-witness testimony
  • Expert accounting or financial analysis
  • Tax-loss calculations
  • The admissibility and reliability of digital evidence

The defense must evaluate not only what the records appear to show, but also what they fail to establish. A discrepancy, unusual transaction, incomplete record, or aggressive tax position does not by itself prove willful criminal conduct.

Defending Against Tax Fraud Charges

The appropriate defense depends on the facts, the available evidence, the client’s role, and the stage of the investigation or prosecution.

Potential issues may include:

  • Lack of willfulness or intent to violate the tax laws
  • Good-faith misunderstanding of a tax obligation
  • Reliance on an accountant, tax preparer, lawyer, bookkeeper, or financial adviser
  • Incomplete or inaccurate records
  • Disagreement concerning the tax treatment of a transaction
  • Absence of a tax deficiency
  • Inaccurate income reconstruction or tax-loss calculation
  • Insufficient evidence connecting the accused to the challenged return or record
  • Unreliable witness or cooperating-witness testimony
  • Improperly obtained records, statements, or electronic evidence
  • Conduct that presents a civil tax issue rather than criminal fraud

Every tax fraud case requires careful analysis of the government’s theory, the tax and financial records, the client’s actual responsibilities, and the information available when the returns or financial decisions were made.

Potential Consequences of Tax Fraud Allegations

A tax fraud conviction may result in imprisonment, fines, restitution, supervised release, prosecution costs, and other criminal penalties. The potential sentence may be affected by the offense charged, the alleged tax loss, the number of tax years involved, the client’s role, obstruction allegations, and other proposed sentencing enhancements.

Tax fraud allegations may also affect:

  • Additional tax assessments, interest, and civil penalties
  • Liens, levies, and collection proceedings
  • Professional licenses and disciplinary matters
  • Employment and business operations
  • Financial institutions and access to credit
  • Government contracts or professional relationships
  • Reputation and future professional opportunities

Because criminal, civil, financial, and professional consequences may overlap, the defense strategy should consider the full range of risks from the beginning of the investigation.

Related Fraud and Financial Crimes

Tax fraud investigations may involve allegations of other state or federal offenses, including:

The presence of multiple allegations may affect the complexity of the case, the potential sentencing exposure, and the strategy required.

What Clients Can Expect From Levenson Law Firm

Clients work directly with Amy Jones throughout the representation. Levenson Law Firm intentionally maintains a limited caseload so that each matter receives the time, preparation, and individualized attention serious tax fraud cases require.

We begin by examining the government’s theory, reviewing the available tax, financial, accounting, and electronic evidence, identifying legal and factual issues, and understanding the client’s role and objectives.

Depending on the case, representation may include advising a client during an investigation, responding to subpoenas or document demands, preparing for interviews, communicating with prosecutors and investigators, coordinating with tax or accounting professionals, challenging evidence, preparing for trial, negotiating an appropriate resolution, or developing a sentencing and mitigation strategy.

No lawyer can honestly promise a particular result. What we can promise is careful preparation, sound professional judgment, candid advice, and individualized representation throughout every stage of the case.

The strategy depends on the case. The commitment does not.

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