18.
Memorandum re Standard Language
for Pleas and Orders in Criminal Tax Cases Involving Restitution
| | To: | EOUSA
| | From: | Joint IRS/DOJ Task Force on Restitution
| | Subject: | Standard Language for Pleas and Orders in Criminal Tax Cases
involving Restitution
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In 2002, in response to a growing perception that many criminal
defendants, despite being convicted of violating the tax laws, are
nevertheless escaping all responsibility for the payment of the taxes
associated with the offenses for which they had been convicted, a joint
IRS/Department of Justice Task Force was formed to study the issue of
restitution in criminal tax cases.
In May 2005, the Attorney General issued new guidelines on Victim and
Witness Assistance. Those guidelines require that prosecutors in all cases
"must consider 'requesting that the defendant provide full restitution to
all victims of all charges contained in the indictment or information,
without regard to the counts to which the defendant actually plead[s].'
(Pub. L. No. 104-132 § 209; 18 U.S.C. 3551 note)." Guidelines at
39.
On June 23, 2005, the Administrative Office of the United States Courts
informed all of the Clerks of the United States Courts that the IRS has
designated a centralized office for the collection and processing of all
restitution payments made to the IRS. On June 30, 2005, the Executive
Office for United States Attorneys informed all United States Attorneys'
Offices, Financial Litigation Unit Supervisors, Financial Litigation Units,
and Victim Witness Coordinators of the new IRS restitution office. In order
for the IRS to be able to properly process and account for restitution
payments made by defendants in criminal tax cases, it is vital that it
receive information detailing the tax periods or years for which the
restitution payments are being made.
In order to help Assistant United States Attorneys and other federal
prosecutors, as well as the defendants and the Clerks of the United States
District Courts, to provide the required information to the IRS, the Joint
Task Force has developed
proposed plea language for the restitution portion
of a plea agreement and a
proposed restitution order. Prosecutors should
use the relevant proposed language in criminal tax cases involving
defendants who agree or are ordered to pay restitution. The proposed
language for the restitution portion of plea agreements is intended to be
used when a defendant agrees, as part of the plea negotiations, to pay
restitution for the portion of the tax liability caused by his or her
criminal conduct. The proposed language
may be modified to conform to local practices, but Assistant United
States Attorneys should not compromise the IRS's ability to assess and
collect civil taxes and penalties (see paragraphs eight and nine of the
proposed plea agreement language).
The proposed order language is intended to be used in two circumstances:
first, when a judge orders a defendant to pay restitution pursuant to a plea
agreement; and second, when a defendant is convicted after a trial and the
prosecutor seeks restitution for the portion of the tax liabilities caused by
the defendant's criminal conduct.
To ensure that the IRS can properly account for and retain restitution
payments made in the context of criminal tax cases, it is incumbent on all
prosecutors handling criminal tax matters to arrange the assignment of an IRS
agent who will prepare the documentation the defendant will be required to
sign to enable the IRS to assess the amount ordered as restitution. If you
have any questions regarding restitution in criminal tax cases, or questions
about the use of the standard language, please contact Karen Quesnel,
Assistant Chief, Criminal Appeals and Tax Enforcement Policy Section, Tax
Division, Department of Justice, at (202) 514-2946, or the IRS case agent
assigned to your case.
[added September 2006]
[cited in USAM 6-4.370]
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