Recognizing revenues and expenses


Case Scenario:

A student from a former class posted this and it is relevant to the material we have gone over. Check out the article and let me know your thoughts!

"Our readings have discussed the importance of recognizing revenues and expenses in the appropriate time period, but here is an article by Browning (2008) about the importance of accurately recognizing revenues and expenses. He also points out how inaccurate financial statement information can impact tax liability.

According to Browning, Federal prosecutors have indicted a Chicago lawyer, charging that he sold questionable tax shelters. Prosecutors also named Deutsche Bank arranged the financial transactions. The tax shelter allowed wealthy clients to falsely generate tax losses of newly $430 million and to evade $103 million in taxes, although it is unclear when the transactions took place.

The full article:

Federal prosecutors have indicted a lawyer trained in accounting, charging that he sold questionable tax shelters named for the lead character of the show "The Simpsons."

The lawyer indicted in the case, John B. Ohle III, was an executive at Bank One before it was acquired by JPMorgan Chase in 2004. The case may put pressure on Deutsche Bank, which has been under criminal investigation over its tax shelter work from the late 1990s through 2001.
Deutsche Bank, identified in the indictment unsealed late Friday as "Bank B," arranged the financial transactions that Mr. Ohle sold.

The shelter, known as Homer, allowed wealthy clients to falsely generate bogus tax losses of nearly $430 million, and to evade taxes of $103 million, according to the indictment from prosecutors for the Southern District of New York, who are also leading the inquiry of Deutsche Bank.

Mr. Ohle, who is also an accountant by training, is accused of selling 36 abusive shelters in 2001 to wealthy clients of Bank One and Jenkens & Gilchrist, a national law firm that went bankrupt in 2007 amid scrutiny of its tax shelter work.

Jenkens earned $12.1 million in fees, while Bank One earned $5.2 million from the Homer shelter, according to the indictment.

Mr. Ohle worked for a Bank One unit in Chicago that focused on selling aggressive tax shelters. In 2002, he left to form his own tax shelter boutique, the Dumaine Group, with former colleagues.

The indictment charges Mr. Ohle, a resident of Wilmette, Ill., and New Orleans, of multiple counts of tax evasion, conspiracy and obstruction of I.R.S. procedures. David Spears, a lawyer for Mr. Ohle, said on Sunday that his client "did not commit any crime, and we intend to defend the case vigorously at trial."

Since at least 2004, prosecutors have been examining Deutsche Bank for its role in two related, abusive tax shelters that were sold to investors and involved collaboration between banks, law firms and accounting firms.

Homer and its cousin, Cobra, are both considered by the I.R.S. to be variations on one widely sold abusive tax shelter of the late 1990s, Son of Boss, itself related to Boss, or bond and options sales strategy.

Cobra, which stands for "currency options bring reward alternatives," was sold to more than 1,100 wealthy investors, while Homer, which stands for "hedge option monetization of economic remainder," was sold to dozens of investors.

The Homer and Cobra inquiries revolve around Deutsche Bank's role in arranging what prosecutors contend are bogus trades and loans that were intended to lose money. Among the unnamed investors who bought Homers are a truck-stop owner from McComb, Miss., and the owner of an options-trading firm in Chicago, the indictment said.

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