Yes, the IRS frowns on cheating and will not only require you to pay the taxes you owe, but they add interest and fees on to the balance.
92.6%. I will be monitoring your future activities. thanks
Of course you do, plus penal;ty and interest.Your jail is for the crime of trying to avoid taxes, not in lieu of paying them.
If you don't pay federal income taxes, eventually you will eventually be investigated by the IRS. From there you will either have the money taken from you, your wages garnished or you may go to prison depending on the severity of the crime.
Proportional taxes, progressive taxes and regressive taxes
I would think no, you cannot make restitution you pay for committing a crime tax deductible, because then the person who did wrong and paid the restitution would benefit in whole or part for his/her crime. That wouldn't be just or fair, and the rest of society would be angry because it would make "crime pay". You can see how this wouldn't be right.
yes
flyaround
paying taxes........................
Here is a simple answer: don't. If you are found to have filed taxes fraudulently or honestly made a mistake, you WILL be subject to fines, bank garnishes, and even prison time. It is not worth it to cheat the IRS...
yes
Noo
As far as the Internal Revenue Service is concerned Mitt Romney has paid all taxes and filed all the paperwork required of him. The IRS determines who is or isn't a tax "cheat". So the answer is no.
92.6%. I will be monitoring your future activities. thanks
Of course you do, plus penal;ty and interest.Your jail is for the crime of trying to avoid taxes, not in lieu of paying them.
Crime of any kind affects all of us. Our taxes pay for law enforcement and prisons.
Yes, failure to pay proper taxes is considered a crime.
It's called "tax evasion".