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Forum - April 15th

 
April 15th
AllnightAlisia
04/14/08 03:36
AllnightAlisia
User reputation: 17User reputation: 17User reputation: 17User reputation: 17User reputation: 17

I am procrastinating as always. I am actually thinking of just filing an extension. I hate tax time. It should not be this stressful but for some reason it is for me. Gathering receipt for travel and expenses. I have a lot to do.

How about everyone else? Anyone else procrastinating or is it just me?
 
daka1
04/14/08 03:51
daka1
User reputation: 52User reputation: 52User reputation: 52User reputation: 52User reputation: 52

I did mine last week.

My taxes used to be much more complicated though, so I kept records up-to-date throughout the year. I had one envelope for receipts, and filed them in order by date. I had a spreadsheet with mileages to all the places I regularly traveled for business. It's not so bad if you keep on top of it.

But I'd be the first to say that the U.S. income tax system is way too complicated. Why should people have to hire someone to figure their taxes?


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Kotikkk
04/14/08 15:00
Kotikkk
User reputation: 85User reputation: 85User reputation: 85User reputation: 85User reputation: 85

I think it's not just you.
i"d extremely wonder to meet somebody who likes taxes, especially the very process of paying!grrr! :]


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paulh50
04/14/08 19:22
paulh50
User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144

PROCRASTINATING? Shit....I just filed my taxes fpr 2005, today. Now I'm workinf on 2006 and filed an extension for 07.
I HATE doing taxes and wasting time with the govt. If they'd file a flat rate tax that applied to EVERYONE we wouldn't have to go through this shit every year. The more money you make the more taxes you pay not the way it is now. Do away with all the loop holes and corporate give aways and make the rich pay what they should.
Isn't taxation without representation what the Revloutionary War was about.
Vote out the Career Politicians!! They're the one's fucking us and I don't mean the presidents, their pupetts. Vote out the Congress and Senate.
 
KristinPie
04/15/08 01:46
KristinPie
User reputation: 13User reputation: 13User reputation: 13User reputation: 13User reputation: 13

I did mine today. Not as bad as you, paulh50...but I was cutting it damn close ;)
 
Letusdoit
04/15/08 19:30
Letusdoit
User reputation: 54User reputation: 54User reputation: 54User reputation: 54User reputation: 54

Why such a large delay, Paul?
Isn't it dangerous? The tax officers are tough guys though absolutely lawful :)
 
paulh50
04/16/08 00:21
paulh50
User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144

Mainly because I was on massive doses of anti depressants and trrying to get off them. I went through withdrawls for nearly 18 months. I went from weighing 165lbs down to 128lbs. I couldn't eat or sleep and could barely walk so, I just put all the paper work into boxes and just ignored them. Once I started to do them I got depressed about all the paper work and filing that I had to go through.
When my niece was here for her semester break I paid her to start making up files for the years I needed to file. I am now completing the files and going to file my tax returns.
I have been auditied twice before and every time I have been auditied I was paid back money so the govt never contacted me about filing them.
the majority of money I recieve each month is from Veterans disability so it is non-taxable and the ammount I do recieve that is taxable isn't that much. My deduction greatly out weigh what I would owe if I had filed them on time.
I'm almost finished with my 2006 tax forms and then I'll start and finish my 2007. I've started files for my '08 taxes and plan to keep them up on a daily basis so I won't have to go through this again.
Thanks for asking.
 
Haley Scott
04/18/08 20:27
Haley Scott
User reputation: 10User reputation: 10User reputation: 10User reputation: 10User reputation: 10

ha ha I am on extension. I guess i'll wait until I am good and ready to file. I don't owe anything anyway.
 
dominixe
04/21/08 22:16
dominixe
User reputation: 241User reputation: 241User reputation: 241User reputation: 241User reputation: 241

quote paulh50 :
Mainly because I was on massive doses of anti depressants and trrying to get off them.

Hey Paul, I hope that you are feeling and getting better now. I know all about health problems. Our Tax filing deadline is the end of April. I have an accountant do it, and that takes a lot of the stress out of the chore. Like you, I hate paying taxes!

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paulh50
04/22/08 20:48
paulh50
User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144User reputation: 144

Hi dom,
I'm feeling better and am taking my 06 and 07 taxex in next week to be filed. Better late than never. I guess Wesley Snipes learned that the hard way.

Judge sentences Snipes to 3 years for tax convictions
Thursday April 24 6:04 PM ET

Wesley Snipes was sentenced to three years in prison on tax charges Thursday, a victory for prosecutors who sought to make an example of the action star by aggressively pursuing the maximum penalty.

Snipes' lawyers had spent much of the day in court offering dozens of letters from family members, friends even fellow actors Woody Harrelson and Denzel Washington attesting to the good character of the "Blade" star and asking for leniency. They argued he should get only probation because his three convictions were all misdemeanors and the actor had no previous criminal record.

But U.S. District Judge William Terrell Hodges said Snipes exhibited a "history of contempt over a period of time" for U.S. tax laws, and granted prosecutors the three year sentence they requested one year for each of Snipes' convictions of willfully failing to file a tax return.

"In my mind these are serious crimes, albeit misdemeanors," Hodges said.

Snipes apologized while reading from a written statement for his "costly mistakes," but never mentioned the word taxes.

"I am an idealistic, naive, passionate, truth-seeking, spiritually motivated artist, unschooled in the science of law and finance," Snipes said.

Snipes said his wealth and celebrity attracted "wolves and jackals like flies are attracted to meat." He called himself "well-intentioned, but miseducated."

Snipes was the highest-profile criminal tax target in years, and prosecutors called for a heavy sentence to deter others from trying to obstruct the IRS. The government alleged Snipes made at least $13.8 million for the years in question and owed $2.7 million in back taxes.

Snipes was acquitted in February of five additional charges, including felony tax fraud and conspiracy. Snipes' co-defendants, Douglas P. Rosile and Eddie Ray Kahn, were convicted on both those counts. Kahn, who refused to defend himself in court, was sentenced to 10 years, while Rosile received 54 months. Both will serve three years of supervised release. Snipes will serve one year of supervised release.

Snipes and Rosile remain free and will be notified when they are to surrender to authorities.

Kahn was the founder of American Rights Litigators, and a successor group, Guiding Light of God Ministries, that purported to help members legally avoid paying taxes. Rosile, a former accountant who lost his licenses in Ohio and Florida, prepared Snipes' paperwork.

Snipes maintained in a years-long battle with the IRS he did not have to pay taxes, using fringe arguments common to "tax protesters" who say the government has no legal right to collect. After joining Kahn's group, the government said Snipes instructed his employees to stop paying their own taxes and sought $11 million in 1996 and 1997 taxes he legally paid.

Prosecutors sought to justify the maximum sentence by raising those and other details from the IRS investigation, as well as a tax loss even for years in which Snipes was acquitted of failing to file a return. Such "relevant conduct" is allowed by law for a judge's consideration at sentencing.

Criminal tax prosecutions are relatively rare usually the cases are handled in civil court, where the government has a lower burden of proof. Prosecutors said Snipes' case was important to send a message to would-be tax protesters not to test the government.




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This post has been edited by paulh50: 04/30/08 12:30
 


 


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