TUESDAY The
second call comes in on Tuesday morning at 10:00 sharp. A medical practice on
the upper eastside has fallen behind with its payroll taxes and the IRS is
threatening to close them down. Selig answers the call and listens while an
office manager tries to explain what happened. Do you own the medical practice?
asks Selig. No, replies the office manager. Are you responsible for the
debt? asks Selig. No, replies the office manager. Then why am I speaking with
you? asks Selig. Because the doctor told me to call Selig & Associates to
find out what you charge, replied the office manager. Then have the doctor call
me directly. At 1:30 the doctor calls and informs us that the IRS has swept his
bank account. Understood, says Selig, we’ll send you a car. At 2:30 he comes to the Office and retains
David Selig and Attorney Bradley Dorin.
Our
offices are nondescript and forgettable, says Dorin. The street is congested
and the building is unimpressive. In other words, it’s the perfect place for a
tax practice. We keep a low profile because we solve tax problems
directly and through back channels, says Selig. All of our clients are in
trouble with the IRS and State - and none of them want publicity. We’ve
become the go-to Firm because we keep our clients out of court and out of
prison. We defend the indefensible, and we keep our clients in business.
Unfortunately, what makes us so successful has simultaneously kept us in
obscurity, says Selig We’re like the Good Doctor in Sun Tzu’s tale of Three
Healers, inasmuch as our name doesn’t get out much.
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