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Pursuant to Tax Court Rule 50(f), orders shall not be treated as precedent, except as otherwise provided.


UNITED STATES TAX COURT
WASHINGTON,  DC 20217




JOSEPH THOMASLANDER &                                     
KIMBERLYW.LANDER,                                                Petitioners,                                       





V.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,

                                                          Respondent


                                                                                             Docket No. 25751-15 L.


ORDER


The Court has concluded that this case is subject to the procedures of Rules 182(e) and l 83(b)-(d), Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.

Upon due consideration, it is

ORDERED that the Clerk of the Court shall attach to this Order and serve on the parties the Special Trial Judge's Recommended Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. The parties are advised that specific written objections and responses may be filed with the Court within the time periods specified in Rule 183(c), Tax Court Rules of Practice andProcedure.


(Signed) Daniel A. Guy, Jr.
Special Trial Judge




Dated: Washington, D.C.
July 8, 2019




SERVED Jul 08 2019


CLC                        US TAX COURT FILED

JUL 08 2019







UNITED STATES TAX COURT



JOSEPH THOMAS LANDER AND KIMBERLY W. LANDER, Petitionersv.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



Docket No. 25751-lSL.




Frank M. Smith,for petitioners.

Jamie A. Schindlerand John T. Arthur,for respondent.


RECOMMENDED FINDINGS OFF ACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW


GUY, Special Trial Judge:These recommended findings of fact and conclusions of law are filed pursuant to Rules 182(e) and 183.This case isan appeal from a notice of determination issued by the Internal Revenue Service


1Unless otherwise indicated, all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure and all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code), as amended.


SERVED Jul 08 2019



(IRS) Office of Appeals (Appeals Office) sustaining the filing of a Federal tax lien related to petitioners' unpaid Federal income tax for the taxable year 2005. The issues for decision are (1) whether assessments that respondent entered against petitioners for the taxable year 2005 are valid, and, if so, (2) whether the Appeals Office erred in determining that petitioners are barred from challenging their underlying tax liability pursuant to section 6330(c)(2)(8).
FINDINGS OF FACT

The parties have stipulated some facts. Petitioners, husband and wife, resided in Florida at the time the petition was filed.
I.    Petitioners' 2005 TaxReturn

On April 2, 2009, petitioners filed a delinquent joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 2005 (sometimes referred to as the year in issue). In September 2009, shortly after the IRS had opened an examination of the tax return, petitioners filed an amended tax return. The parties agree that the address that petitioners entered on their original and amended tax returns, P.O. Box 2007, Cross City, Florida (Cross City address), was their last known address at all times pertinent to this case.



II.     Mr. Lander's CriminalCase

In 2009 Mr. Lander, an attorney, was convicted by a jury in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida on mail fraud and money laundering charges, and he was sentenced to a term of incarceration beginning February 10, 2010. While Mr. Lander was incarcerated, Mrs. Lander acted as his attorney-in­ fact pursuant to a general durable power of attorney that he had executed in November 2008.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit subsequently reversed Mr. Lander's convictions on 12 counts (mail fraud and money laundering charges related to a real estate development transaction) but sustained his convictions on 4 counts (mail fraud related to misrepresentations that he made to investors in
GenSpec, LLC (GenSpec), a company that he had organized). See United

States v. Lander,668 F.3d 1289 (11th Cir. 2012).

III.     InitialExamination

Revenue Agent Cassandra Sports (RA Sports), assigned to the IRS examination unit in Gainesville, Florida (Gainesville examination unit), examined petitioners' 2005 tax return. On July 29, 2011, the IRS sent petitioners a so-called 30-day letter outlining proposed adjustments to their tax liability for 2005 including, in relevant part, the disallowance of a deduction for aflow-through loss



of$174,588attributabletoGenSpec(GenSpecloss),andanadjustmenttoincome (i.e., an unreported capital gain) attributable to cash distributions that petitioners had received from K3 Ventures, LLC (K3 Ventures capitalgain).2
RA Sports summarized the K3 Ventures capital gain adjustment as follows:

The taxpayers apparently created an entity in 2005 which they named K3 Ventures. The nature  of the activity  and/or  the business purpose of the entity are unknown. Although the entity was a two-member LLC, it was originally reported as a Schedule C activity on the first Form 1040 filed for 2005. On the 09/29/2009  Form 1040X, the  activity was included on Sch E as a flow-through entity. Also, Fl065 was filed for the activity which was consistent with the 1040X assertions.

TheK-1informationprovidedwiththe1040Xindicatedthetaxpayers each contributed $208,010 ($416,020 total) and each received a cash distribution of $202,394 ($404,787 total.) Based on the taxpayers' reported sources of income and other return information there were no sources which could explain the access to over $400,000 to contribute to K3 Ventures,LLC.

*                  *                 *                  *                 *                 *                  *

The taxpayers have failed to report and/or disclose any sources of taxable or non-taxable income to support the 2005, initial capital contribution to K3 Ventures LLC. Absent this documentation and substantiation of any amount of capital contributed, IRC [section] 731(b) provides that the recognized gain shall be treated as a gain fromthesaleofthepartnershipinterest.Sincethisisthefirstyearof


2Petitioners ' amended return for the year in issue stated in pertinent part: "Amended return* * * due to correction to K3 Ventures. Original return had K3 Ventures as Schedule C but company was a 2-person LLC and a 1065 has been prepared for 2005."



operation, the taxpayers' gain will be treated as a short-term capital gam.

On August 26, 2011, Ms. Lander submitted to the Gainsville examination unit a package titled "FORMAL PROTEST" in response to the 30-day letter. The package comprised various records, including an October 2005 bank statement listing deposits/credits and withdrawal/debits to an account that K3 Ventures maintained at Drummond Community Bank. The package included a typewritten note signed by Mr. Lander, dated August 22, 2011, stating: "If  you have any  further questions or if we can provide any additional information to youpursuant
to this communication, please contact Joseph Lander at: * * * P.O. Box 1000,
Morgantown, WV 26507." The address is that of the Federal correctional institutionwhereMr.Landerwasincarceratedatthattimeandwillbereferredto as the FCI Morgantownaddress.
TheIRSdidnottreatMrs.Lander'sAugust26,2011,packageasaproper protest of the 30-day letter. Because petitioners had not agreed to extend the period of limitations governing assessment for the year in issue, their administrative file was forwarded to the IRS Technical Services Office in Jacksonville,Florida(Jacksonvilletechnicalservicesoffice),forthepreparation and issuance of a statutory notice ofdeficiency.



IV.    Notice ofDeficiency

Corey Campbell, group manager at the Jacksonville technical services office in 2011, testified at trial. Mr. Campbell reviewed the documents in petitioners' administrative file, summarized routine IRS practices and procedures concerning the preparation and mailing of notices of deficiency, and described the various actions taken by IRS personnel who worked under his supervision as outlined below.
Revenue Agent Bonnie McElhattan (RA McElhattan), assigned to the Jacksonville technical services office, prepared a joint notice of deficiency detennining that petitioners were liable for an income tax deficiency of $148,708 for the taxable year 2005, an addition to tax of $37,177 under section 665l(a)(l) for failure to timely file a tax return, and an accuracy-related penalty of $29,742 under section 6662(a). In preparing the notice of deficiency, RA McElhattan relied on information in petitioners' administrative file, including the 30-day letter. The income tax deficiency was largely attributable to two adjustments: (1) the disallowance of a deduction for the GenSpec loss and (2) the K3 Ventures capital gain.
After RA McElhattan had prepared the notice of deficiency, petitioners' administrative file was forwarded to Tax Examiner Harvey McGhee (TE



McGhee), also employed at the Jacksonville technical services office, who was responsible for mailing duplicate copies of the joint notice of deficiency to petitioners by certified mail. In doing so, TE McGhee first printed two or more duplicate "blank" copies of the notice of deficiency (i.e., at least two copies each of the notice of deficiency, one of which was addressed to the Cross City address and the other to the FCI Morgantown address). In both cases the notice of deficiency was addressed to "Joseph T. & Kimberly W. Lander". The copies were blank in the sense that they had not been stamped with the date of mailing or the last date for filing a timely petition for redetermination with the Court.
Before mailing the notice of deficiency, TE McGhee stamped the date of mailing (November 16, 2011) and the last date to file a timely petition for redetermination (February 14, 2012) on the first page of the notice of deficiency that would be mailed to petitioners. He then placed those same stamps on what would become IRS file copies of the notice of deficiency. Because the date stamps were placed on the file copies, independent of the date stamps placed on thenoticeofdeficiencymailedtopetitioners,thefilecopiesarenottrueduplicates of the notice ofdeficiency.
After placing the date stamps on the notice of deficiency, TE McGhee prepared a U.S. Postal Service (USPS) Form 3877, also known as a certified mail



list, which shows that the joint notice of deficiency was mailed to petitioners at (1) the Cross City address (assigned certified mail No. 7010 0290 0002 4450 1988)
and (2) the FCI Morgantown address (assigned certified mail No. 7010 0290 0002 4450 1995). The Form 3877 bears the initials of TE McGhee, initials in a space designated for the USPS Postmaster, and a USPS postmark date of November 16, 2011. The Form 3877 indicates that the IRS presented, and the USPS acknowledged receipt of, seven items of mail bearing specific certified mail numbers.
USPS certified mail packages include a sticker bearing the certified mail number unique to each package that the sender can retain for recordkeeping purposes. It is the routine practice of the IRS to place the certified mail number sticker on the top of the first page of a file copy of a notice of deficiency or to write the number on the top of the file copy in the event that the sticker is inadvertently damaged or is otherwise unusable.
Petitioners' administrative file includes a file copy of the notice of deficiency mailed to the FCI Morgantown address that bears the date stamps referred to above, as well as a certified mail sticker bearing No. 7010 0290 0002 4450 1988. The letter "W" is handwritten on the sticker, which Mr. Campbell surmised was a shorthand reference to "wife" or Mrs. Lander.Petitioners'



administrative file likewise includes a file copy of the notice of deficiency mailed to the Cross City address that bears the date stamps referred to above, as well as handwritten certified mail No. 7010 0290 0002 4450 1995. Noting the discrepancy between the certified mail numbers placed on the file copies of the notice of deficiency and the certified mail numbers assigned to the notice of deficiency as recorded on Form 3877, Mr. Campbell speculated that TE McGhee hadinadvertently switchedthecertified mailnumbersintheprocessofcompleting his work on the file copies of the notice ofdeficiency.
A.   The Cross CityNotice

USPS.com track and confirm records show that the item of certified mail bearing No. 7010 0290 0002 4450 1988 first entered the USPS delivery system at Jacksonville, Florida, on November 16, 2011; it promptly arrived at the USPS unit in Cross City, Florida; the USPS left notice that the item was available for pickup on November 17, 2011; and the USPS treated the item as having been unclaimed on December 6, 2011.
The USPS returned the envelope bearing the Cross City notice of deficiency to the IRS. After the Cross City notice of deficiency was returned, IRS personnel opened the envelope, removed the notice of deficiency, and stapled it to the



envelope.Consistent with normal practice, the IRS retained the envelope and the notice of deficiency in petitioners' administrative file.
Although theyarepartiallyobscured,theenvelopebearsUSPSpostageofat least $4.30 and a postmark date ofNovember 16. The face of the envelope includes handwritten dates as follows: "11-17-11", "11-25", and "12-2-11", evidentlymarkingthedatesthatthe USPSleftnoticeforpetitionersthatanitemof certified mail was available for pick up. The face of the envelope is marked "RETURN TO SENDERUNCLAIMED".
B.    The FCI MorgantownNotice

USPS.com track and confirm records show that the item of certified mail bearing No. 7010 0290 0002 4450 1995 first entered the USPS delivery system on November 16, 2011; the item arrived at the USPS unit in Morgantown, West Virginia, on November 22, 2011; and it was delivered that same day. In the meantime, however, Mr. Lander had been discharged from FCI Morgantown on November 17, 2011, and he spent that day in transit to another Federal prison facility in Pensacola, Florida, where he continued his term of incarceration later that day.
3Respondentproducedtheoriginalenvelopeandthenoticeofdeficiency mailed to the Cross City address at trial, and petitioners' counsel inspected the documents.



Respondentacknowledgesthatpetitionersdidnotreceiveeithercopyofthe notice of deficiency. Consequently, they did not have the opportunity to file a petitionforredeterminationwiththeCourtchallengingthenoticeofdeficiency.4
V.    Assessment and Initial CollectionActivity

OnJuly2,2012,theIRSenteredassessmentsagainstpetitionersforthetax, additiontotax,andaccuracy-relatedpenaltydetermined inthenoticeofdeficiency for the taxable year 2005, and interest related thereto. On that same date, the IRS sent to petitioners a notice and demand for payment of $295,691--the balance due on their account for the taxable year 2005. Petitioners did not remitpayment.
On July 23, 2012, the IRS sent to petitioners a CP504, Notice of Intent to Levy, for 2005.5On July 26, 2012, petitioners sent a letter to the IRS Taxpayer AdvocateService(TAS)statingthat,althoughtheyhadneverreceivedanoticeof deficiencyfor2005,noranyresponse totheirprotesttothe30-dayletter,theIRS had initiated collection activities for that year. In April 2013 the TAS sentan


4ltisworthnotingthatonMarch23,2012,respondentissuedtopetitioners a joint notice of deficiency for the taxable years 2006, 2007, and 2008. On June 20, 2012, petitioners filed a timely petition for redetermination with the Court assigned docket No. 15807-12. The parties arrived at a basis for settlement, and the Court entered a stipulated decision in that case on May 21,2013.
5This notice did not state that petitioners could request a collection due process hearing with the Appeals Office.



Operations Assistance Request memorandum to the IRS Examination Division recommending a reexamination of petitioners' 2005 taxreturn.
VI.    AuditReconsideration

On June 5, 2013, a supervisor at the Gainsville examination unit sent a letter to petitioners stating that their August 26, 2011, letter did not qualify as a formal protest under the Internal Revenue Manual. The letter (which effectively started the audit reconsideration process) was accompanied by an IRS rebuttal to petitioners' August 26, 2011, letter, invited them to submit a proper formal protest, and identified Revenue Agent Femi Ayadi (RA Ayadi) as the person to contact.
On July 1, 2013, petitioners forwarded to the IRS a protest and response to the IRS rebuttal. Petitioners asserted that the period of limitations governing assessment for 2005 had expired because the IRS had never issued a notice of deficiency to them. To varying degrees, petitioners also addressed the merits of the adjustments related to the GenSpec loss and the K3 Ventures capital gain.
With regard to the K3 Ventures capital gain, petitioners stated in relevant part:
Upon creation of the PARTNERSHIP * *  *  taxpayers  made a tax free contribution into the entity. The source of those funds were from external resources with personal liability attached viapersonal
guarantee(s) or securitization with other property. * * * Even if the
funding came from a third party directly into the K-3 Ventures, LLC operating account(s), the spirit and intent - as well as contractual obligations (written or oral) - carry the day and are in accordance with



IRC Sec 731(a)(l) and consistent with how taxpayer(s) reported the transactions(s).

Petitioners closed their letter with a request for Appeals Office review.
On July 10, 2013, petitioners submitted an amendment to their protest providing additional argument related to the K3 Ventures capital gain. Petitioners asserted that they had previously provided Drummond Community Bank records showing "deposits in excess of $415,000 [in October 2015] * * * credited to the taxpayer(s) respective capital account(s)".

On July 15, 2013, RA Ayadi sent a letter to petitioners responding to their July 1, 2013, protest. Acknowledging that petitioners had requested Appeals Office review, RA Ayadi provided a rebuttal to their protest, and, citing the requirements of section 6001, noted that they had not provided any documents or records to substantiate the source of the funds that they purportedly contributed to K3 Ventures. In response to petitioners' claim that the IRS had failed to deliver a notice of deficiency to them for the taxable year 2005, RA Ayadi stated: "This has no bearing on the outcome of the audit findings. The Notice of Deficiency was not sent by the Revenue Agent that was previously working thecase."



VII.      Appeals OfficeReview

Petitioners' case was subsequently transferred to the Appeals Office in Tampa, Florida, and assigned to Appeals Officer Thomas Bohne (AO Bohne). About this same time, on September 17, 2013, Mr. Lander was released from pnson.
On December 23, 2013, AO Bohne met with petitioners, and they renewed the argument that the underlying assessments for 2005 were invalid because the IRS had not issued a notice of deficiency to them.
By letter dated January 7, 2014, AO Bohne informed petitioners that a notice of deficiency for 2005 had been "delivered to the Morgantown WV and the Cross City FL addresses and were subsequently unclaimed." He also invited petitioners to meet with him if they wanted to continue the audit reconsideration process.
On January 21, 2014, petitioners sent a letter to AO Bohne challenging his conclusion that a notice of deficiency had previously been mailed to them, citing various factors, including the discrepancies between the certified mail numbers appearing on IRS file copies of the notice of deficiency and USPS.com track and confirm records. On February 3, 2014, AO Bohne wrote to petitioners and reiterated that, although he disagreed with their assertion that the period of



limitations governing assessment had expired, he would continue to work with themtoarriveatabasisforsettlementtakingintoaccountthehazardsoflitigation confronting bothparties.
On March 10, 2014, petitioners met with AO Bohne a second time. On March 24, 2014, they sent a letter to AO Bohne enclosing a portion of the transcriptfromMr.Lander'scriminalresentencinghearingheldinAugust2012. Thepartialtranscript waslimitedtothedirecttestimonyofawitnessthatMr.
Lander had called to testify about petitioners' interests in GenSpec and K3 Ventures.
On May 9, 2014, AO Bohne sent a letter to petitioners stating in relevant

part:

Your case was received in Appeals as a result of the Taxpayer Advocaterequestinga[sic]AuditReconsiderationoftheoriginal audit. * **
As the result of the agreement reached for the subsequent years of 2006 through 2008 the GenSpec flow thru loss of $174,588 and IRC [section] 6662 Accuracy Penalty were abated. Nothing could be done with the Capital Gains adjustment of $397,937.

Your contention was that there were adequate deposits made into the K-3 bank account in 2005 to cover the distributions and you are correct. However none of these monies were taxed to you, and hence could not provide you any basis. If the monies had not been classified as capital gains they would have had to be classified as unreported income and possibly be taxed at a greater rate.



If you have any questions, please call me at the above phone number.

AO Bohne's letter was accompanied by an Appeals Case Memorandum which provided a detailed explanation of the adjustments to petitioners' tax liability for 2005. With regard to the K3 Ventures capital gain, AO Bohne noted thataScheduleK-1,Partner'sShareofIncome,Deductions,Credits,etc.,reported that petitioners had organized K3 Ventures on October 6, 2005, and that they had contributed$416,020totheentityandreceivedcashdistributionsof$404,787that same year. AO Bohne explained that, although he considered the Drummond Community Bank records and the partial transcript from Mr. Lander's resentencinghearing,heneverthelessconcludedthattheK-3Venturescapitalgain should be sustained, asfollows:
Primary position: The taxpayers have failed to substantiate  the capital contribution amount to K3 Ventures, LLC which would support continued treatment of the cash distributions as a nontaxable return of capital under IRC [section]731(a)(1).

The taxpayers have failed to report and/or disclose any sources of taxable or non-taxable income to support the 2005, initial capital contribution to K3 Ventures LLC. Absent this documentation and substantiation of any amount of capital contributed, IRC [section] 731(b) provides that the recognized gain shall be treated as a gain fromthesaleofthepartnershipinterest.Sincethisisthefirstyearof operation, the taxpayers' gain will be treated as a short-term capital gam.



Alternative position: If the taxpayer substantiates the capital contributionamountandthesourceisnotanon-taxablesource,that amountshouldbeincludedasotherincomeunderIRC[section]61. The sources of income which the taxpayer has reported are significantly less than asserted amount of the capital contributions. Thecharacteroftheincomewillbedeterminedbythesourceofany substantiated amounts of capitalcontributions.

On June 2, 2014, as a result of the audit reconsideration process, the IRS abated $61,318 of the tax assessed for 2005, and interest attributable thereto. The IRS also abated the accuracy-related penalty of $29,742.
VIII.     Collection Due ProcessProceedings

OnJanuary13,2015,theIRSmailedtopetitionersaNoticeofFederalTax LienFilingandYourRight toaHearingUnderIRC6320inrespectofthe
$183,057 balance then due on their account for 2005.  Petitioners timely submitted to the Appeals Office a Form 12153, Request for a Collection Due Process or Equivalent Hearing, asserting  that the underlying  assessment  was invalid because a notice of deficiency was not mailed to them for the year in issue. Petitioners also checked the following boxes on Form 12153:  "I  Cannot Pay Balance" and "Innocent SpouseRelief'.6





6ItdoesnotappearthatpetitionersattachedForm8857,Requestfor Innocent Spouse Relief, as Form 12153directs.



Petitioners' case was assigned within the Appeals Office to Settlement Officer Iris Reubel (SO Reubel). During the course of the Appeals Office administrative process, petitioners expressed disagreement with the amount assessed for the taxable year 2005 and asserted that they had never received a notice of deficiency. SO Reubel's case activity notes indicate that, rather than focusing on the question whether petitioners had received a notice of deficiency, she reviewed a TXMODA transcript of account and concluded that petitioners were not entitled to challenge their underlying tax liability for 2005 because they had previously settled the matter with the Appeals Office and agreed to a reduction in the balance of tax due. Petitioners responded that they had not settled the matter with the Appeals Office, which led SO Reubel to undertake a months­ long effort to retrieve IRS audit reconsideration records.
On September 3, 2015, the Appeals Office issued to petitioners a notice of determination sustaining the decision to file the Federal tax lien. Petitioners invoked the Court's jurisdiction under sections 6320 and 6330 by filing a timely petition for review of the collection action.
Afterfilingananswertothepetition,respondentfiledamotiontoremand the case to the Appeals Office for a further administrative hearing. Specifically, respondent conceded that SO Reubel had erred in not addressing thequestion



whether a notice of deficiency had been issued to petitioners for the year in issue. The Court granted respondent's motion to remand, and the Appeals Office ultimately concluded, in a supplemental notice of determination, that a notice of deficiency had been properly mailed to both petitioners at their last known address.
CONCLUSIONS  OF LAW

Section 6321 imposes a lien in favor of the United States upon all property and rights to property of a person liable for unpaid taxes after demand for payment. Section 6320(a) provides that, within five business days after the day a notice of lien described in section 6323 is filed, the Secretary must notify the person,inwriting,thatatax lienwasfiledandinformthepersonofhisorherright to an administrative hearing in the Appeals Office before an impartial officer or employee. Section 6320(c) provides that the Appeals Office hearing generally shall be conducted consistent with the procedures set forth in section 6330(c), (d), (e), and(g).
In conducting the administrative hearing, the Appeals Office must verify that the requirements of any applicable law or administrative procedure have been met. Sec. 6330(c)(1), (3)(A). The Appeals Office also must consider any issues raised by the person relating to the unpaid tax or the disputed collection action



including offers of collection alternatives, appropriate spousal defenses, and challenges to the appropriateness of the collection action. Sec. 6330(c)(2)(A), (3)(B). A person may challenge the existence or amount of his or her underlying tax liability if the person did not receive a notice of deficiency or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute such tax liability. Sec. 6330(c)(2)(B). Finally, the Appeals Office must consider whether the collection action balances the Government's need for efficient collection against the person's concern that collection be no more intrusive than necessary. Sec. 6330(c)(3)(C).
A person may invoke the Court's jurisdiction and obtain judicial review of the final administrative determination by filing a timely petition for review under section 6330(d)(l). If the person's underlying tax liability is in dispute, the Court
will review the matter de novo. Goza v. Commissioner,114 T.C. 176, 181-182 (2000). Otherwise, the Appeals Office administrative determination is reviewed for abuseofdiscretion.                        Id.at 182. An abuse of discretion occurs if the Appeals Officeexercisesitsdiscretion"arbitrarily,capriciously,orwithoutsoundbasisin
fact or law." Woodral v. Commissioner,112 T.C. 19, 23 (1999).



I.   Validity ofAssessments

As a threshold matter, petitioners maintain that respondent failed to show that the assessments entered against them for the taxable year 2005 are valid.
Specifically, petitioners aver that respondent failed to mail a notice of deficiency to them before the assessments were entered in July 2012. The Appeals Office determined, however, that respondent mailed a notice of deficiency to petitioners by certified mail at their last known address in November 2011, no petition for redetermination was filed with the Court, and therefore the assessments are valid.
Section 6212(a) provides that if the Secretary determines that there is a deficiency in a taxpayer's income tax, he is authorized to send notice of the deficiency to the taxpayer by certified or registered mail. Section 6212(b)(1) provides that it shall be sufficient if the notice of deficiency ismailed to the
taxpayer's last known address. See August v. Commissioner,54 T.C. 1535, 1536 (1970). The term "last known address" means the address that appears on the taxpayer's most recently filed and properly processed Federal tax return unless the Commissioner is given clear and concise notification of a different address. Sec. 301.6212-2(a), Proced. & Admin. Regs.
Section 6212(b)(2) provides that, in the case of a joint return, and where the Commissioner is aware that spouses have established separate residences, a



duplicate original of a joint notice of deficiency shall be sent to each spouse. "It is well settled that a notice of deficiency mailed to a taxpayer's last known address is
valid even though the taxpayer does not receive it." Yusko v. Commissioner,89 T.C. 806, 810 (1987).
The Commissioner bears the burden of proving proper mailing of a notice of

deficiency by competent and persuasive evidence. Cataldo v. Commissioner,60

T.C. 522, 524 (1973), affd per curiam,499 F.2d 550 (2d Cir. 1974); August v.

Commissioner,54 T.C. at 1536-1537. The act of mailing may be proven by evidence of the Commissioner's mailing practices corroborated by direct
testimony or documentary evidence of mailing. Magazine v. Commissioner,89

T.C. 321,326 (1987); Cataldo v. Commissioner,60 T.C. at 524; seeFed. R. Evid.

406. A Form 3877 reflecting that the USPS received an item of certified mail fromtheCommissionerrepresentsdirectdocumentaryevidenceofthedateandthe
fact of mailing. Magazine v. Cormnissioner,89 T.C. at 324, 327. A properly completed Form 3877 also reflects compliance with IRS established procedures
for mailing a notice of deficiency. Keado v. United States,853 F.2d 1209, 1212- 1213 (5th Cir. 1988).
Respondent offered the testimony of Corey Campbell, the group manager at the Jacksonville technical services office, Exhibit 5-R (a copy of the envelope and



the notice of deficiency mailed to the Cross City address which the USPS had returned to the IRS undelivered), Exhibit 6-R (a file copy of the notice of deficiency mailed to the FCI Morgantown address), and Form 3877 to show that a notice of deficiency was properly mailed to petitioners for the taxable year 2005. Petitioners, however, reserved evidentiary objections (foundation, authentication, hearsay, relevance, and materiality) to Exhibits 5-R and 6-R.7
Petitioners' objections to Exhibit 5-R are rooted in the fact that the certified mail numbers assigned to the notice of deficiency on Form 3877 do not match the certified mail numbers that TE McGhee placed on IRS file copies of those documents. In particular, Form 3877 shows that the copies of the notice of deficiency mailed to the Cross City and FCI Morgantown addresses were assigned certified mail Nos. 7010 0290 0002 4450 1988 and 7010 0290 0002 4450 1995,
respectively. In contrast, IRS file copies of the notice of deficiency show that TE




7Petitioners withdrew similar objections to other documents that respondent offered into evidence (i.e., Exhibits 7-R to 11-R and 13-R). Oddly enough, although petitioners reserved objections to Exhibit 6-R, they offered the same document into evidence as part of Exhibit 12-P which was admitted and made part of the record. In any event, the Court considers petitioners' objections to Exhibit 6-R to have been resolved at trial when respondent acknowledged that another file copy of the notice of deficiency sent to the FCI Morgantown address (which also is part of Exhibit 12-P) represents a "complete" file copy (i.e., it bears a certified mail number placed on the document by TE McGhee). Under the circumstances, petitioners' evidentiary objections to Exhibit 6-R (if any remain) are overruled.



McGhee assigned certified mail number ending in 1995 to the notice mailed to the Cross City address and certified mail number ending in 1988 to the notice mailed to the FCI Morgantown address. Petitioners maintain that these discrepancies, coupled with RA Ayadi's statement that "[t]he Notice of Deficiency was not sent by the Revenue Agent that was previously working the case", casts doubt on the proposition that the IRS mailed a notice of deficiency to them for the year in issue. We disagree.
Contrary to petitioners' objections, respondent laid a proper foundation for and authenticated Exhibit 5-R. The Court finds that the document is exactly what respondent claims it is: a copy of the original envelope and notice of deficiency that respondent mailed to petitioners by certified mail at the Cross City address on November 16, 2011. The record reflects that the USPS was unable to deliver the Cross City notice of deficiency and returned it to the IRS.
IRS personnel prepare and mail thousands of notices of deficiency to taxpayers annually. In this case, respondent established a proper foundation for Exhibit 5-R through the testimony of Mr. Campbell, who reviewed the documents in petitioners' administrative file, explained the routine and standard procedures that IRS personnel follow in preparing and mailing notices of deficiency, described the various recordkeeping activities that the IRS undertakes in



connection with notices of deficiency including the preparation and retention of both Form 3877 and file copies of notices of deficiency, and the routine handling of any notices of deficiency that the USPS returns to the IRS undelivered.
Mr. Campbell identified Exhibit 5-R as a public record maintained in the normal course by the Jacksonville technical services office, and petitioners'
counsel was pennitted to inspect the original documents at trial. SeeFed. R. Evid. 90l(a), (b)(7). Mr. Campbell's testimony established that Exhibit 5-R falls within the exception to hearsay for records of a regularly conducted business activity set forth in rule 803(6) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Exhibit 5-R is clearly relevant and material to the matters in dispute in this case.
The Court finds that the information recorded on Form 3877 and confirmed by USPS.com track and confirm records is correct and accurate and that TE McGhee inadvertently switched the certified mail numbers associated with the Cross City and FCI Morgantown notices when he prepared the file copies in question. Although TE MCGhee's error caused confusion, it does not undermine the trustworthiness of the cumulative evidence related to the mailing of the notice



of deficiency by certified mail outlined above. Consistent with the foregoing, petitioners' objections to the admission of Exhibit 5-R are overruled.8
In sum, the record contains ample and persuasive evidence that the IRS mailed the notice of deficiency to petitioners by certified mail at the Cross City and FCI Morgantown addresses. Respondent having carried his burden of proof on this point, and there being no dispute that the Cross City address was petitioners' last known address, it follows that the assessments entered against petitioners for the taxable year 2005 are valid.9
II.    Challenge to the Underlying TaxLiability


As is relevant here, section 6330(c)(2)(B) authorizes a taxpayer to challenge "the existence or amount of the underlying tax liability" so long as the taxpayer "did not receive any statutory notice of deficiency for such tax liability or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute such tax liability." Although the parties
8RA Ayadi's statement that "[t]he Notice of Deficiency was not sent by the Revenue Agent that was previously working the case", although vague and perhaps incomplete, is consistent with other documents in the record (summarized above) which show that the notice of deficiency was prepared by RA McElhattan and issued by TE McGhee, as opposed to RA Sports, who had conducted the original examination.
9The Court finds no fault with respondent's effort to comply with sec.
6212(b)(2) by mailing a duplicate original of the joint notice of deficiency to Mr. Lander at the FCI Morgantown address. Mr. Lander was in fact held at that facility on the date that the notice of deficiency was mailed.



agree that petitioners did not receive the notice of deficiency when it was mailed to them in November 2011, respondent maintains that petitioners took advantage of an opportunity to challenge their underlying tax liability before the Appeals Office as part of a postassessment audit reconsideration process. Thus, respondent contends that the Appeals Office correctly rejected petitioners' attempt to challenge their underlying tax liability a second time as part of the collection review process under sections 6320 and 6330.
Petitioners counter that they were not given a full and fair opportunity to challenge their underlying tax liability during the audit reconsideration process, that AO Bohne did not give full consideration to the matter, and, in any event, they are entitled to an opportunity for prepayment judicial review.
Although the phrase "opportunity to dispute" is not defined in the Code, the Secretary has promulgated regulations regarding section 6330(c)(2)(B) pursuant to the authority prescribed in section 7805(a). Consistent with the statute, section 301.6330-1(e)(1), Proced. & Admin. Regs., provides in pertinent part:
(e) Matters considered at CDP hearing--(!) In general.*** Thetaxpayeralsomayraisechallengestotheexistenceoramountof the underlying liability* * * for any tax period specified on the CDP Notice ifthetaxpayerdidnotreceiveastatutorynoticeofdeficiency



for that tax liability or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute that tax liability. * * *
Section 301.6330-l(e)(3), Q&A-E2, Proced. & Admin. Regs., illustrates the provisions of paragraph (e) of the regulation in pertinent part as follows:
Q-E2. When is a taxpayer entitled to challenge the existence or amount of the tax liability specified in the CDP Notice?

A-E2. A taxpayer is entitled to challenge the existence or amount of the underlying liability for any tax period specified on the CDP Notice if the taxpayer did not receive a statutory notice of deficiency for such liability or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute such liability. Receipt of a statutory notice of deficiency for this purpose means receipt in time to petition the Tax Court for a redetermination of the deficiency determined in the notice of deficiency. An opportunity to dispute the underlying liability includes a prior opportunity for a conference with Appeals that was offered either before or after the assessment of the liability. An opportunity for a conference with Appeals prior to the assessment of a tax subject to deficiency procedures is not a prior opportunity for this purpose.

In Lewis v. Commissioner,128 T.C. 48, 61 (2007), the Court upheld an earlier version of this regulation as a reasonable interpretation of section 6330 in the context of the assessment and collection of a tax not subject to the deficiency procedures. The Courts of Appeals that have reviewed the regulation have
reached the same conclusion. See Our Country Home Enters., Inc. v.

Commissioner,855 F.3d 773, 787 (7th Cir. 2017); Keller Tank Servs. II, Inc. v.



Commissioner,854 F.3d 1178, 1199 (10th Cir. 2017); lames v. Commissioner,

850 F.3d 160, 164 (4th Cir. 2017).

As the Court explained in Lewis v. Commissioner,128 T.C. at 60-61:

Ultimately, while it is possible to interpret section 6330(c)(2)(B) to mean that every taxpayer is entitled to one opportunity for a precollection judicial review of an underlying liability, we find it unlikely that this was Congress's intent. As we seeit,ifCongresshadintendedtoprecludeonlythosetaxpayerswho previously enjoyed the opportunity for judicial review of the underlying liability from raising the underlying liability again in a collection review proceeding, the statute would have been drafted to clearly so provide. The fact that Congress chose not to use such explicit language leads us to believe that Congress also intended to preclude taxpayers who were previously afforded a conference with the Appeals Office from raising the underlying liabilities again in a collection review hearing and before thisCourt.

Although the collection action at issue in Lewisconcerned a tax for which the Commissioner was not required to issue a notice of deficiency before assessment, the Court's reasoning and analysis in that case apply equally to the facts at hand. The operative provisions of section 6330(c)(2)(B) are stated in the disjunctive and require the Court to consider whether petitioners "did not receive any statutory notice of deficiency for such tax liability or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute such tax liability." There is no question that petitioners did not receive the notice of deficiency for the year in issue. Consistent with the
Court's analysis in Lewis,however, we must also consider whether petitioners



were afforded a conference with the Appeals Office (i.e., "an opportunity to dispute" the tax liability).
The record shows that petitioners were afforded a postassessment conference with the Appeals Office. After the IRS sent petitioners a notice and demand for payment of the tax due for 2005, they requested a reexamination of their tax liability. The audit reconsideration process that followed began with a review of the matter by the Examination Division. When the Examination Division reaffirmed the adjustments to petitioners' tax liability as determined in thenoticeofdeficiency, theyrequestedandweregrantedanindependentreviewin the Appeals Office. AO Bohne engaged with petitioners, took a fresh look at the record, conceded certain issues, and abated a significant portion of the tax previously assessed against them.  Only then did the IRS file the tax lien that led to the additional collection review proceedings in the Appeals Office and this action.
Petitioners' argument that they were not given a full and fair opportunity to challenge their tax liability during the audit reconsideration process is belied by the record. In early 2014 petitioners met with AO Bohne and submitted additional documentation and written argument challenging the GenSpec and K3 Ventures tax adjustments. In May 2014 AO Bohne sent a letter to petitioners, along with an



Appeals Case Memorandum, explaining that the IRS had conceded the GenSpec adjustment, interest related to that adjustment, and the section 6662(a) penalty. He went on to explain in detail, however, that after considering the information that petitioners had provided regarding the K3 Ventures capital gain, he would sustain that adjustment. Although AO Bohne invited petitioners to contact him with any additional questions, they did not do so.
The record shows that petitioners were fully engaged with AO Bohne, that he reviewed the evidence and arguments that they presented to him, and that in the end petitioners enjoyed a full and fair opportunity to challenge their underlying tax liability before the Appeals Office during the course of the audit reconsideration process. Under the circumstances, the Court is satisfied that the Appeals Office correctly determined, within the context of the collection review process, that petitioners had an opportunity to dispute their tax liability within the meaning of section 6330(c)(2)(8).10








10Petitioners are not left without an opportunity for judicial review.
Petitioners may pay the tax, file a claim for refund, and if that claim is denied, file a refund suit in a Federal District Court or the Court of Federal Claims. See sec. 7422(a).



III.    RemainingIssues

As previously mentioned, petitioners checked the following boxes on Form 12153: "I Cannot Pay Balance" and "Innocent Spouse Relief'.11 SO Reubel acknowledged in her case activity notes that petitioners had raised these two issues, and she initially requested that petitioners submit financial records to show that they were eligible for a collection alternative. Nevertheless, those issues were put aside as the parties engaged in a prolonged debate and investigation as to whether petitioners would be permitted to challenge the amount of their underlying liability for the year in issue.
Petitioners alleged in their petition, inter alia, that their spousal relief claim had not been considered by the Appeals Office and that they were interested in making installment payments to satisfy their tax liability. Having resolved that petitioners are barred from challenging the amount of their underlying liability in this proceeding, the Court will remand the case to the Appeals Office for a determination regarding petitioners' claim for spousal relief and whether petitioners are in a position to pay the balance due for the year in issue.


11A taxpayer's assertion that he or she cannot pay tax that is due, without more, is normally considered a request that the account be placed in currently not collectible status. See, e.g., Ragsdale v. Commissioner,T.C. Memo. 2019-33, at
*34-*35.



To reflect the foregoing,

An appropriate order will be issued.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Deducting Automobile Expenses in 2019 by David Selig of Selig & Associates



If you travel for business you’re allowed to deduct the dollar value of business miles you drove on your individual income tax return. Taxpayers can file their actual expenses incurred, or use the standard mileage rate, which is 58 cents in 2019. If you use your actual car expenses you should include payments, insurance, depreciation, registration, licenses, repairs and maintenance, garage rent (if applicable) along with parking and tolls.  Alternatively, if you use the standard mileage rate, you should keep a record of your millage, and be prepared to prove what percentage was for personal use and what percentage was for business. 

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Fraudster Pleads Guilty to False Tax Return Scheme


More Than 200 Stolen Identities in His Backpack   A Las Vegas resident pleaded guilty today to aggravated identity theft, wire fraud, theft of government property, and access device fraud, relating to a stolen identity tax fraud, announced Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard E. Zuckerman of the Justice Department’s Tax Division and U.S. Attorney Nicholas A. Trutanich for the District of Nevada. 

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According to court documents and statements made in court, Josiah Ntekume was involved in a scheme to file false tax returns using stolen identities in order to obtain tax refunds. Coconspirators provided Ntekume with names, addresses, dates of birth, and social security numbers, and Ntekume used these stolen identities to establish prepaid debit card accounts. The coconspirators then caused fraudulently obtained federal tax refunds to be deposited into those accounts.
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When Ntekume was arrested on March 13, 2012, he had in his backpack approximately 250 prepaid debit cards in others people’s names on which more than more than $200,000 in fraudulent tax refunds had been loaded. The backpack also contained several pages of paper listing stolen identities for nearly 200 individuals that were used either to file false tax returns or to establish additional prepaid debit cards. 
Sentencing is scheduled for March 4, 2020. At sentencing, Ntekume faces a statutory maximum sentence of up to 20 years in prison on the wire fraud count, as well as up to ten years in prison on each count of theft of government property and fraud in connection with access devices. He also faces a mandatory minimum of two years for aggravated identity theft. In addition to a prison sentence, Ntekume faces a period of supervised release, restitution, and monetary penalties.
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Zuckerman and U.S. Attorney Trutanich thanked special agents of IRS Criminal Investigation, who conducted the investigation, and Tax Division Trial Attorneys Thomas W. Flynn, Stephen K. Moulton, and Arthur Ewenczyk who are prosecuting the case.

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Proven Results We solve Tax Problems so you can get on with your life. Specializing in unpaid Income, Sales and Payroll taxes. We negotiate excellent Payment Plans, Offers in Compromise, Audits and all other tax matters. 

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Case No. 2:17-CR-63 JCM (NJK) 
10-02-2019 
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff(s), v. JOSIAH N. NTEKUME, Defendant(s).

ORDER 
Presently before the court is defendant Josiah Ntekume's ("defendant") motion to dismiss counts 2 and 4 of the indictment as time-barred. (ECF No. 49). The United States of America ("the government") filed a response (ECF No. 50), to which defendant replied (ECF No. 51). 

I. Background

The government alleges that defendant "fraudulently obtained[ed] and falsely possess[ed] social security numbers and other personal information" and used that information "to obtain money by filing false and fraudulent state and federal income tax returns claiming refunds." (ECF No. 1 at 1). At the time of his arrest, defendant had approximately 250 pre-paid debit cards and roughly 50 sheets of paper containing the personal identification information of 195 people. Id. at 2. The debit cards had been loaded with over $200,000 from federal tax refunds, much of which had been spent. Id
In a nine-count indictment, defendant is charged with one count of fraud in connection with access devices in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1029(a)(3), six counts of theft of public money in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641, and one count of wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343Id. The indictment was returned on February 22, 2017. (ECF No. 1). 
Defendant moves to dismiss counts two and four, both of which are theft-of-public-money charges, as time-barred. (ECF No. 49). Because the indictment alleges that the federal tax refund money was deposited onto pre-paid debit cards on February 1, 2012, for count two, and February 17, 2012, for count four, defendant argues that the claims became time-barred on February 1 and February 17, 2017, respectively. Id

II. Legal Standard

In order to protect defendants from unfairly facing criminal liability for conduct in the distant past, "a statute of limitations . . . limit[s] exposure to criminal prosecution to a certain fixed period of time following the occurrence of those acts . . ." Toussie vUnited States397 U.S. 112, 114-15 (1970). Congress sets the limitation period by statute, which "should not be extended 'except as otherwise expressly provided by law.'" Id. at 115 (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3282). 
"Statutes of limitations normally begin to run when the crime is complete." Pendergast vUnited States317 U.S. 412, 418 (1943). "A crime is complete when each element of the crime has occurred." United States vSmith740 F.2d 734, 736 (9th Cir. 1984) (citing United States vDrebin557 F.2d 1316, 1332 (9th Cir. 1977)). Determining when a crime is completed depends on whether the offense is "continuing" or not. The Ninth Circuit has held that: 
[A] criminal offense is typically completed as soon as each element of the crime has occurred. For example, a larceny is completed as soon as there has been an actual taking of the property of another without consent, with the intent permanently to deprive the owner of its use. The offense does not "continue" over time. The crime is complete when the act is complete. A "continuing offense," in contrast, is an unlawful course of conduct that does perdure.... The classic example of a continuing offense is conspiracy.
United States vMorales11 F.3d 915, 921 (9th Cir. 1993) (quoting United States vMcGoff831 F.2d 1071, 1078 (D.C.Cir.1987)). "Thus, the Court in Toussiedistinguished between offenses that involve a 'continuing process' and those that occur as 'instantaneous events.'" Id. (citing Toussie397 U.S. at 122). 
Finally, "criminal limitations statutes are 'to be liberally interpreted in favor of repose.'" Toussie397 U.S. at 115 (quoting United States vHabig390 U.S. 222, 227(1968) (quoting United States vScharton285 U.S. 518, 522 (1932))). 

Discussion

The parties agree on two things. First, 18 U.S.C. § 641 charges must be brought within five years. See 18 U.S.C. § 3282. Second, the five-year limitation period begins to run from the time the offense is completed. Toussie vUnited States397 U.S. 112, 115 (1970). The parties do not agree on when the offense conduct underlying counts two and four was completed. If counts two and four are continuing offenses, they are timely. If they are not continuing offenses, they are time-barred. 
Counts two and four allege violations of 18 U.S.C. § 641, which "criminalizes two distinct acts. . . . In short, paragraph one covers stealing from the United States and paragraph two covers knowingly receiving stolen United States property." United States vFairley880 F.3d 198, 204 (5th Cir. 2018) (citing Milanovich vUnited States365 U.S. 551, 554 (1961)). 
Defendant is charged with violating paragraph two of § 641. (ECF No. 1). The Ninth Circuit has not expressly decided whether violations of § 641 paragraph two are continuing offenses. Seee.g., United States vNeusom, 159 Fed. Appx. 796, 799 (9th Cir 2005) (explaining that there is no controlling Supreme Court or Ninth Circuit precedent and the other circuits are split on this issue)). 
A court should not conclude that an offense is a continuing offense "unless the explicit language of the substantive criminal statute compels such a conclusion, or the nature of the crime involved is such that Congress must assuredly have intended that it be treated as a continuing one." Toussie397 U.S. at 115. Statutory language explicitly compels a continuing-offense conclusion when it "clearly contemplates a prolonged course of conduct." Id. at 120. Therefore, the court must first consider the explicit language of the statute: 
Whoever embezzles, steals, purloins, or knowingly converts to his use or the use of another, or without authority, sells, conveys or disposes of any record, voucher, money, or thing of value of the United States or of any department or agency thereof, or any property made or being made under contract for the United States or any department or agency thereof; or
Whoever receives, conceals, or retains the same with intent to convert it to his use or gain, knowing it to have been embezzled, stolen, purloined or converted—

Shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both; but if the value of such property in the aggregate, combining amounts from all the counts for which the defendant is convicted in a single case, does not exceed the sum of $1,000, he shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.

The word "value" means face, par, or market value, or cost price, either wholesale or retail, whichever is greater.
18 U.S.C. § 641
Here, defendant is accused of "conceal[ing] and retain[ing] money belonging to the United States Treasury in the form of federal tax refunds, with intent to convert the same to his use and gain, knowing the money to have been stolen, purloined, and converted." (ECF No. 1 at 4). However, the statute requires that defendant receive, conceal, or retain the federal tax refunds at issue "with the intent to convert it to his use or gain." 18 U.S.C. § 641. Thus, under the plain language of the statute, "concealing" or "retaining" the money is an ongoing offense with a purpose: conversion to the defendant's use and gain. Id. Therefore, the continuing offense of concealing or retaining necessarily ends with the conversion of public funds to the defendant's use or gain. 
Conversion under § 641 paragraph one is not a continuing offense. Seee.g., United States vBeard713 F.Supp. 285, 291 (S.D. Ind. 1989); United States vReynolds, No. 1:16-CV-0081-LJO-SKO, 2018 WL 1071303 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 23, 2018); United States vCrary, No. CR 13-35-M-DLC, 2013 WL 6054607 (D. Mont. Nov. 15, 2013); United States vPease, No. CR-07-757-PHX-DGC, 2008 WL 808683 (D. Ariz. Mar. 24, 2008). Thus, once the elements of conversion are met, the statute of limitations begins running. United States vLopez484 F.3d 1186, 1192 (9th Cir. 2007) ("A crime is complete when each element of the crime has occurred."). Indeed, the parties agree that the first paragraph consists of a series of discrete criminal acts—that is to say, the statute of limitations begins to run the moment the defendant  embezzles, steals, purloins, converts, sells, conveys, or disposes of anything of value belonging to the United States. 18 U.S.C. § 641; (see also ECF Nos. 49 at 6 (collecting cases); 50). 
Defendant converted the tax refunds when—as the government alleges in the indictment—"[t]his money was deposited onto pre-paid debit cards registered to the individuals . . . on or about the '[d]ate of [d]eposit." (ECF No. 1 at 4). Because defendant converted the refund to his use, defendant no longer concealed or retained the federal tax refund in count two as of the date of deposit: February 1, 2012. Because defendant converted the refund to his use, defendant no longer concealed or retained the federal tax return in count four as of the date of deposit: February 17, 2012. 
Thus, the limitations period began under paragraph one when the defendant converted his ill-gotten gains to his use on February 1 and February 17, 2012. 
As a result, counts two and four are time-barred. 

III. Conclusion

Accordingly, 
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, and DECREED that defendant's motion to dismiss counts 2 and 4 of the indictment as time-barred (ECF No. 49) be, and the same hereby is, GRANTED. 
DATED October 2, 2019. 
/s/ James C. Mahan 
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE


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