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Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations Title 31 CFR § 560

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Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations Title 31 CFR § 560. Presented by: Zaher Fallahi, Attorney At Law, CPA 10866 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90024 Tel: (424) 901-8529 1503 South Coast Dr., Suite 207, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Tel; (714) 546-4272 . Disclaimer. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Presented by: Zaher Fallahi, Attorney At Law, CPA 10866 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90024 Tel: (424) 901- 8529 1503 South Coast Dr., Suite 207, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Tel; (714) 546- 4272 Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations Title 31 CFR § 560
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Page 1: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Presented by:

Zaher Fallahi, Attorney At Law, CPA

10866 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90024 Tel: (424) 901-8529 1503 South Coast Dr., Suite 207, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Tel; (714) 546-4272

Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations

Title 31 CFR § 560

Page 2: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

The highlights contained herein are for general informational purposes only. They are not intended for, and may not be construed as, Legal or Tax advice. For specific advice, please consult your adviser.

We at the American Association of Attorney-Certified Public Accountants (AAA-CPA) have a similar disclaimer even for our own members.

Disclaimer

Page 3: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Income; Interest, Dividends, Rental, Capital Gains, Earned Income, Etc.;

Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR), Form TD F90-22.1, New Amnesty 1-9-2012, Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program; and,

Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA); Gift Tax, Form 709; Inheritance (Estate) Tax, Form 706; and; Receipt of Foreign Gifts, Form 3520.

Presumption: Sanctions Laws are Complied With

Selected Tax Laws

Page 4: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Interest Income, Schedule B; Dividends Income, Schedule B; Capital Gains, Form 8949 (Former Schedule

D); Rental Income, Schedule E; Earned Income, Form 2555; Distribution From Entities; and, Others.

Income Tax

Page 5: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Report of Foreign Bank & Financial Accounts (FBAR)

Financial Crime Enforcement Network (FinCen), fight against money laundering;

Excess of $10 K, must be received by June 30th, No extension;

Penalties, 5 years prison, plus civil penalties; Potentially a criminal matter (Non-Lawyers

beware); 2012 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program

(OVDP), effective January 9, 2012; and,  Foreign financial institutions require W-9, or take

money elsewhere.

Page 6: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

  The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA),

enacted in 2010, is an important development in U.S. efforts to combat tax evasion by U.S. persons holding investments in offshore accounts;

Under FATCA, U.S. taxpayers holding financial assets outside the United States will report those assets to the IRS;

Effective 2014, foreign financial institutions to report to the IRS information about financial accounts held by U.S. taxpayers, or by foreign entities in which U.S. taxpayers hold a substantial ownership interest.

Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA, effective 2011)

Page 7: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Legal Status of Donor◦ US Person; Defined Under IRC 7701 v. Defined by OFAC◦ US Person, Form 709/Exclusions

$13K; Unlimited Medical Expenses; Charitable Contributions; Direct Tuition to Institutions; Unlimited Between Spouses; Political Contributions, used for the purpose; 2011-12 Threshold is $5,000,000;

◦ Non-US Person Receipt of Gift from a Non-Resident Alien, Form 3520

Sufficient documents to substantiate Gift

Gift Tax

Page 8: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Inheritance Tax Legal status of Decedent

◦ US Person Estate Tax Return, Form 706; Unlimited Deduction for Spouse; 2011-12 Threshold is $5,000,000; Receipt of Gift from a Foreign Trust, Form 3520;

◦ Non-US Person Receipt of Gift from a Foreign Trust, Form 3520;

◦ Sufficient documents to substantiate Inheritance

Page 9: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

License is granted upon representations made in the application; The Licensee shall furnish for inspection any relevant documents, requested by

the Treasury Secretary, to substantiate statements made in the application; No License required for Non-Commercial Remittances; Gift and Inheritance; OFAC Applicant may be questioned by:

◦ Local Bank Bank Secrecy Act Suspicious Activity Report (FinCen, IRS, OFAC)

◦ US Treasury FinCen

Banks, including the Federal Reserve Bank; US Customs, $10 K

IRS OFAC

◦ Department Of Justice/ US Attorneys ◦ Even Non-SDN Iranian Banks do not transfer money. Sarrafis do transfer;

A radio listener: Sarrafis require OFAC License. Note: Iranian Customs Allows $5K.

Tax Documents And OFAC License

Page 10: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Comply with the Laws of Sanctions; Obtain credible evidence to substantiate

representations made in an OFAC application; Don’t lable an asset as “Gift” or “Inheritance” just

to void OFAC Licensing and Taxes; File Form 3520, Receipt of Gift from a Non-

Resident Alien or a Foreign Trust, for “Gift” and “Estate” timely;

File “Gift” and “Estate” Tax Returns timely; FBAR must be received by 6-30-2012; and, FATCA, form 8938, must be filed with 1040.

Recommendations

Page 11: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

AN OVERVIEW OF OFAC AND THE ITR

• Defining OFAC and the ITR• What is prohibited?• What is permitted?

YAZDANYAR LAW OFFICES www.yazdanyarlaw.com Beverly Hills, Irvine, San Francisco Tel: 310-780-6360

Page 12: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

WHAT IS OFAC?

• What is OFAC: The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is an agency within

the Department of Treasury.

• What are they responsible for: Administering and enforcing U.S. economic sanctions programs.

• Why should you care: OFAC implemented the sanctions against Iran by promulgating

the Iranian Transactions Regulations (ITR)

12 YAZDANYAR LAW OFFICES www.yazdanyarlaw.com Beverly Hills, Irvine, San Francisco Tel: 310-780-6360

Page 13: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

IRANIAN TRANSACTIONS REGULATIONS

• What is ITR: A country-based sanctions program aimed to prohibit “U.S. persons”

from engaging in transactions with the government of Iran, with persons in Iran, or in transactions where the benefit is realized in Iran.

• Who is considered a “U.S. Person”: U.S. citizens (regardless of where you are located) U.S. legal permanent residents (regardless of where you are located) Individuals and entities within the U.S. Entities incorporated in the U.S. (including foreign branches)

13 YAZDANYAR LAW OFFICES www.yazdanyarlaw.com Beverly Hills, Irvine, San Francisco Tel: 310-780-6360

Page 14: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

ITR: WHAT IS PROHIBITED?

The direct or indirect importation, exportation or re-exportation of goods, services, and technology from Iran or to Iran

14

Facilitating or financing these transactions is

prohibited.

Goods: No distinction between commercial and non-commercial purpose.

Buying jewelry from Iran and bringing it to the U.S.

Services: When services are performed on behalf of a person in Iran, the government of Iran, OR if the benefit is received in Iran

Working in Iran Hiring a real estate agent Using the services of a currency exchange

broker

YAZDANYAR LAW OFFICES www.yazdanyarlaw.com Beverly Hills, Irvine, San Francisco Tel: 310-780-6360

Page 15: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

ITR & NEW INVESTMENTS ITR prohibits new investments in Iran.

ITR prohibits U.S. persons from purchasing, selling, swapping, brokering, financing, guaranteeing goods or services of Iranian origin.

Continuing charging fees and getting interest on existing Iranian loans.

Examples: Buying a house in IranKeeping money in bank accounts in IranEarning interest on money kept in Iranian banks

15 YAZDANYAR LAW OFFICES www.yazdanyarlaw.com Beverly Hills, Irvine, San Francisco Tel: 310-780-6360

Page 16: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

WHAT IS PERMITTED? Importation/Exportation of Goods and Services:

Gifts: Total value must be less than $100 Items must be of a type and in quantities normally given as gifts; not otherwise prohibited

Accompanying Baggage: For personal use Not intended for sale or for anyone else; not otherwise prohibited

Household and Personal Effects: Must have been actually used by you in your household Intended for your personal use not sale or any other person; not otherwise prohibited

Information: Films, newspapers, mail, email

16 YAZDANYAR LAW OFFICES www.yazdanyarlaw.com Beverly Hills, Irvine, San Francisco Tel: 310-780-6360

Page 17: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

WHAT IS PERMITTED?Financial Transactions:

Travel-related payments Payment for the importation or exportation of information or information materials Non-commercial family remittances• Cannot involve a commercial transaction• Cannot involve a family-owned enterprise• Cannot involve Specially Designated National (SDN) • Cannot use “hawala” as defined by the U.S. government

Authorized transactions By a specific or general license

17 YAZDANYAR LAW OFFICES www.yazdanyarlaw.com Beverly Hills, Irvine, San Francisco Tel: 310-780-6360

Page 18: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

U.S. Sanctions on Iran:OFAC Licensing

Farhad R. Alavi

Washington, DC

Presentation at U.C. IrvineFebruary 22, 2012

Page 19: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Overview 2 types of OFAC licenses – General and Specific

Specific License is a written authorization for certain activities by applicants (and appointees, etc.) based on request made in the application

Can apply for a license for anything not expressly permitted/subject to general license. Probability of approval based on many factors

General and specific licenses generally subject to certain terms & conditions

19Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 20: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

What is an OFAC license? Specific Licenses issued by OFAC based on applications

submitted

Based on request applicant makes – if you do not request to engage in a certain activity in/related to Iran, you will most likely not receive authorization for it in the license

Typically a few pages, outlining permitted activities along with terms and conditions

Generally valid for 1-2 years, renewable

License number can be used in wire transfers

20Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 21: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

What can be licensed? Personal Transactions

Commercial Transactions

Philanthropic Transactions

21Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 22: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Personal Transactions Transactions related to personal property in Iran

Sale, purchase or rental of real estate and personal property (including services)

Liquidating inheritances in Iran

Retrieving pensions, etc.

Note: Subject to certain conditions, sending cash gifts/family remittances between the US and Iran generally does not require a specific license

22Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 23: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Commercial Transactions Ag/Med Program permitting export to Iran of:

Medical Equipment and Supplies Pharmaceuticals

Hiring services in Iran

(e.g., translators, consultants, etc.)

Remitting commercial earnings in Iran (e.g., earnings from rental property, passive interests in businesses, etc.)

23Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 24: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Charitable Transactions Building a school or hospital in Iran Donating computers to universities in Iran

Sending cash to Iranian charities in Iran Lecturing in an Iranian university (even if unpaid)

Note: Export of items like food and clothing to Iran for charitable use is generally permitted under general license

24Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 25: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

OFAC would likely not license: Investment in Iran

(e.g., buying stocks, depositing money in banks)

Outsourcing labor to Iran (e.g., software design)

Partnering with entities in Iran or Iranian entities overseas

Exporting most consumer goods to Iran

Working in Iran for financial gain

Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected] 25

Page 26: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Exceptions What is generally permitted under the ITR?

Subject to certain limitations: Trade in informational materials Non-monetary humanitarian transactions Transactions incident to travel Communications-related transactions Provision of certain legal services to individuals in Iran Non-commercial family remittances

Note: Previous general license for importation of Iranian carpets, dried goods, and caviar repealed effective September 29, 2010

26Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 27: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Critical Considerations Note: Specific licenses from OFAC must be used

strictly by their terms and are not blank checks to do business or engage in transactions in Iran.

Each specific license has a number. You can reference the number on your wire transfer to help effectuate the payment more smoothly.

License applications generally take several months to process, so think ahead.

27Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 28: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Critical Considerations U.S. persons cannot:

Structure transactions with an intention to circumvent restrictions and provisions of the ITR

Divert transactions to 3rd country nationals if that transaction would be a violation if the U.S. person him/herself executed it Example: U.S. person cannot give money to a relative in

France to go invest in Iran on U.S. person’s behalf

28Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 29: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Money Transfer New regulations generally continue to allow for

authorized / licensed funds transfers to/from Iran

Always ensure that the money transfer (commercial or personal) is authorized

Is the intended route for transmitting funds out of Iran compliant with U.S. laws? (e.g., make sure no personal hawalah or use of sanctioned banks, etc.)

29Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 30: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Money Transfer (continued)

30

Private, Non-Sanctioned

Bank in Iran

3rd country non-Iranian, non-U.S., non-sanctioned bank

(e.g. in UAE, Turkey)

Bank (U.S.)

U.S. Person’s Account

Iran Funds

Affidavit and/ orLetter

U.S. Person

Iran Funds21

Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 31: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Money Transfer (continued) Have you given your bank adequate

documentation? Should follow “best practices”

Funds rejection can be legally troublesome and costly

Account closure at US banks increasingly common

31Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 32: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Penalties Violations can be subject to civil and potentially

criminal liability

Civil penalties can be up to $250,000 or twice the value of the transaction, whichever is higher. Cases can be referred for criminal enforcement as well

32Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 33: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Penalties (continued)

Administrative Subpoenas (as part of investigations into rejected wires or “havalehdars” can lead to an effective audit of your Iran activities and considerable exposure

Very time consuming and potentially costly

Frequency of Administrative Subpoenas (even for activities several years past) appears to be increasing

33Farhad R. Alavi / BHFA Law Group, PLLC - Washington, DC / [email protected]

Page 34: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Any Questions? Farhad R. Alavi

5335 Wisconsin Avenue, NWSuite 440

Washington, DC 20015

(direct) (202)686- [email protected]

www.bhfalaw.com

Page 35: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

So What?Iran Sanctions: Investigations and Penalties

Presented by:Erich C. Ferrari, Ferrari Legal, P.C.

Page 36: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

How will they ever find out?

36

Common ways that investigations are initiated

• Blocking and Reject Reports• Most common way; thousands of these reports are sent every year

• License Applications• Revealing information about violations

• Federal Investigations• Very common when investigating havaleh brokers

• Self-Disclosures: Intentional and Unintentional• Voluntary self-disclosures vs. contacting OFAC and informing them of

violations

• Anonymous Tips

Page 37: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Blocking and Rejecting Reports

37

Wire Request

Intermediary U.S. Treasury

Interdiction

1

2

3

SWIFT

Blocked/Rejected4

Subpoenato Sender/ Recipient

5

Sender

U.S. Bank

Page 38: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

What kind of trouble can you get in?

38

• Problems with the banks• Bank Investigations• Freezing of Accounts• Closing of Accounts

• OFAC Investigations • Administrative Subpoenas• Penalty Process• Coordination with other agencies

• Criminal Investigations• Agents• Target/Subject Letters• Exports and Money Transferring• Banki, Seifi, Amirnazmi, Mousavi, Vaghari, Hariri, Lahiji, Socara, etc.

Page 39: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

OFAC Investigations

39

Administrative Subpoenas• 30 days to provide information and documents• You can request an extension, but may have to sign a tolling agreement• Your response is under penalty of perjury• Not only false statements, but also misleading statements• OFAC will refer cases to DOJ for false statements (5 year max)

Voluntary Self-Disclosures• Self reporting a violation• 50% reduction in base penalty• If a violation occurred and you need a license to transfer funds, then VSD

Penalty Calculations• Base Penalty Calculations• Enforcement Guidelines• Settlement

Page 40: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Enforcement Responses

40

Sanctions Enforcement Options

No Action

Cautionary Letter

Finding of Violation

Civil Penalty

Criminal Referral

Lesser Penalty Higher Penalty

Page 41: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Base Penalty Calculation Matrix

41

One-Half of Transaction Value

Capped at $125,000 per violation

One-Half of Statutory Maximum

Applicable Schedule Amount

Capped at $250,000 per violation

Statutory Maximum

1

2

3

4

Egregious Case

Volu

ntar

y Se

lf-D

iscl

osur

e

No Yes

No

Yes

* The base penalty amount will not exceed the applicable statutory maximum amount.

Page 42: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Violation Schedule Amounts

42

Amount Transaction Value$1,000 < $1,000

$10,000 >= $1,000 and < $10,000

$25,000 >= $10,000 and < $25,000

$50,000 >= $25,000 and < $50,000

$100,000 >= $50,000 and < $100,000

$170,000 >= $100,000 and < $170,000

$250,000 >= $170,000

Page 43: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Criminal Prosecutions

43

US Attorney’s Offices across the U.S. have been actively prosecuting these cases.

There are a number of individuals under investigation across the United States for these types of violations.• Testimony of Special Agent Pelczar (JTTF)Hearing Transcript from the

Vaghari Case: Much of his work involves investigating Iranians.

If the FBI comes knocking….• Don’t speak to them without counsel• People get nervous and may say something that mischaracterizes• Proffer Letter

Page 44: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Conclusion

44

Enforcement cases are on the rise:• 2009: 1,000 investigations• 2010: 1,200 investigations• 2011: 1,300 investigations

Difficulty in transferring funds is leading to more creative ways to get around sanctions which is leading to more investigations

Talk to a lawyer with experience before acting• Prior to engaging in the transactions• File a request for interpretative guidance• Map out how the transaction will occur

Page 45: Tax Implications of the Iranian Transactions Regulations  Title  31 CFR § 560

Iranian Transactions Regulations

45

If you have questions after the event please contact me:

• Phone: 202-280-6370 or 310-270-9930• Email: [email protected]• The Iranian Transactions Regulations

Practice Guide• www.sanctionlaw.com

THANK YOU!


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