Quote:
Originally Posted by racitraci
Just curious if you guys think all the providers should pay taxes on they're income? And how do you suggest they do that? Do you look upon them as criminals for not doing so?
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They may trigger an audit or investigation and certainly requests for them to file for previous years if they start filing, especially if they get a straight job. It would be smart for them to claim something that at least covers their living expenses.
Living in a nice apartment, driving a lexus,
paying for day care, and have 2 flat panel TV's, a leather pit group, and only claim 28k a year on taxes.
As far as seeing you as criminals. We all are criminals. I tend to classify people by their crimes.
You are either a misdemeanor offender or a person who is okay committing felonies. I prefer to hang with the misdemeanor types. I don't need to expose myself to situations where others could cause consequences I am not willing to be responsible for.
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Back to another point for clarification.
TTH or others, please correct me if needed.
There is no CPA/client privilege. If compelled by the courts or the IRS, your accounting files do not have the same protection as you would have with an attorney. However, if your CPA is engaged by your attorney on your behalf, the CPA is an agent of the attorney and the "work product" falls under the purview and protection of the attorney client privilege.
Point is, if you need some protection, you can find tax attorneys who are CPA's or attorney who have business relationships with CPA's. It offers a little more protection if you need encounter a problem. I highly recommend them.
Once I owned some property, had dual incomes, etc. and moved from the 1040EZ to the 1040 with multiple schedules and capital gains, etc... I found the services of a CPA very helpful in saving me money. I knew nothing about loss carry forwards and things like that. I highly recommend one. They also keep you from maing those lat minute stupid mistakes they get you automatically flagged for an audit.
If you travel often for work, keep good documentation. That is a common trigger. The IRS will find what you claimed wrongly, ask for that plus the penalties and interest. They will not tell you that there were other areas you could have taken deductions on negating your neglect to pay the proper amount.
If a girl want to get legit, start filing, etc... where should she start?
How should she explain her lack of filing for several years? Claim she dependant on someone else who could not claim her as a dependent?