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Home > Reach Into Foreign Banks for Hidden U.S. Money Deepens

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Reach Into Foreign Banks for Hidden U.S. Money Deepens

By John Pacenti All Articles 

Daily Business Review

January 16, 2013

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bank vault

Image: James Porter/Brand X

The Justice Department and the Internal Revenue Service are expanding their reach into foreign countries to find people who owe the U.S. government money, panelists said at the 31st International Tax Conference in Miami.

Mark F. Daly, the senior litigation counsel at the Justice Department's tax division, told conferees the goal is to move beyond the investigation of Switzerland's leading bank, UBS, which cracked centuries of offshore banking secrecy. The bank paid $789 million in penalties and handed over the names of more than 4,000 U.S. account holders.

HSBC customers were targeted next.

"We are targeting a whole host of institutions abroad," Daly said last Friday without identifying the institutions.

About 350 people attended the panel discussion moderated by Miami tax litigator Robert Panoff.

Tony Gonzalez, the special agent in charge of the region's IRS field office, said the agency has established outposts in Hong Kong, Bogota, Belize, Barbados, Ottawa, Panama City, Sydney and elsewhere.

"The international section is evolving so much," he said. "Every day we are expanding."

Daly said the Justice Department has built on the initial UBS case in 2009.

He noted the agreement this month with Wegelin & Co., Switzerland's oldest private bank, to pay $57.8 million in fines after admitting it helped at least 100 U.S. clients conceal $1.2 billion in assets.

Wegelin announced it would cease to operate as a bank after 272 years.

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Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • International Tax Conference
  • IRS field
  • HSBC PLC
  • UBS AG
  • Internal Revenue Service
  • Justice Department

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  • Tax

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