1. Willfulness and Tax Evasion under Irc Section 7201
Tax evasion is a felony under IRC Section 7201 with a maximum sentence of five years per count, and the government must prove willfulness beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the element that most often separates a criminal prosecution from a civil tax penalty.
What Are the Elements of Federal Tax Evasion and How Is Willfulness Challenged?
Federal tax evasion is a felony carrying a maximum sentence of five years in federal prison per count and a fine of up to two hundred fifty thousand dollars, and the government must prove the existence of a tax deficiency, an affirmative act of evasion, and willful intent, all beyond a reasonable doubt. Willfulness requires the government to prove that the defendant subjectively knew of the legal obligation and deliberately chose to violate it, and a defense built on honest misunderstanding of the tax law, good faith reliance on a tax advisor, or a genuine dispute about the amount owed can defeat the charge even when a substantial tax deficiency exists.
Tax fraud and criminal defense counsel can advise on the specific elements of the federal tax evasion charge and develop the IRC Section 7201 defense strategy.
What Is an Eggshell Audit and How Should Taxpayers Respond to Protect Their Rights?
An eggshell audit is a civil tax examination that has quietly crossed into criminal territory, where the auditor has identified potential indicators of fraud but has not yet referred the matter to IRS Criminal Investigation, and a taxpayer unaware of this shift may voluntarily provide evidence the government later uses to build a criminal case. Experienced criminal tax counsel must immediately control all communications with the auditor, evaluate whether a Fifth Amendment privilege assertion is appropriate, and assess whether the case can be resolved civilly before a criminal referral is made.
| &Nbsp; | Civil Audit | Criminal Investigation |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Purpose | Accurate tax assessment and collection | Prosecution and imprisonment for tax crimes |
| Burden of Proof | Taxpayer bears burden of demonstrating accuracy | Government must prove willfulness beyond a reasonable doubt |
| Key Sanctions | Back taxes, penalties, and interest | Imprisonment, criminal fines, and permanent criminal record |
| Investigative Tools | Document requests and field examinations | Search warrants, grand jury subpoenas, and arrest warrants |
| Defense Priority | Accuracy of returns and substantiation of deductions | Attacking willfulness and suppressing improperly obtained evidence |
IRS audit defense and white collar crime counsel can advise on the risk that the current civil audit presents of converting to a criminal investigation and develop the eggshell audit defense strategy.
Tax evaders and defaulters and criminal defense counsel can advise on the specific eggshell audit risks and develop the eggshell audit response and criminal referral prevention strategy.
2. Offshore Accounts, Fbar/Fatca Violations, and Voluntary Disclosure
Unreported offshore accounts and undisclosed foreign assets expose taxpayers to criminal prosecution with severe penalties, and the IRS Voluntary Disclosure Program provides a pathway to limited criminal exposure for taxpayers who come forward before the government learns of the violation.
What Are the Criminal Penalties for Fbar and Fatca Violations?
Willfully failing to file an FBAR for a foreign financial account exceeding ten thousand dollars can result in criminal fines and up to five years in federal prison per violation, and the government has significantly increased its ability to detect unreported offshore accounts through international account-data sharing agreements with foreign financial institutions. A taxpayer who can demonstrate that the account was disclosed to a tax advisor or that the filing obligation was genuinely unknown has a meaningful defense against the willfulness element.
FBAR and FATCA compliance and money laundering counsel can advise on the criminal FBAR penalty exposure and develop the offshore account criminal defense strategy.
How Does the IRS Voluntary Disclosure Program Limit Criminal Exposure?
The IRS Voluntary Disclosure Program allows a taxpayer with unreported offshore accounts or unfiled returns to come forward with a truthful, timely, and complete disclosure in exchange for the IRS's commitment not to recommend criminal prosecution, and the program closes permanently once the IRS has already opened a civil examination or criminal investigation. Structuring a voluntary disclosure requires experienced criminal tax counsel to ensure the disclosure is consistent with all available evidence and that no admission is made that could be used against the taxpayer if the IRS declines to accept it.
FBAR reporting and tax fraud counsel can advise on the Voluntary Disclosure Program requirements and develop the voluntary disclosure and criminal exposure limitation strategy.
3. IRS Ci Investigations: Search Warrants, Summonses, and Hearings
Once a civil audit identifies indicators of fraud, the case can be referred to IRS Criminal Investigation, which has authority to execute search warrants, issue grand jury subpoenas, and conduct investigative hearings, and the taxpayer's response at each stage determines whether the matter escalates to indictment.
What Rights Does a Taxpayer Have during an IRS Ci Search and Seizure?
When IRS CI agents arrive with a search warrant, the taxpayer's most important obligation is to say nothing, because every statement made without counsel present is a potential exhibit in the government's criminal case. The taxpayer or a representative should note which areas the agents search and which documents and devices they seize, because evidence seized outside the warrant's stated scope may be suppressed in the subsequent prosecution.
Criminal evidence and criminal defense counsel can advise on the Fourth Amendment rights applicable during the IRS CI search and develop the search warrant challenge and evidence suppression strategy.
How Should Taxpayers Handle IRS Ci Investigative Hearings and Summonses?
An IRS CI summons for oral testimony is one of the highest-stakes events in a criminal tax investigation because every answer either builds or damages the defense, and no taxpayer should appear for a summons interview without counsel who has reviewed all documents the government has already obtained. Exercising the Fifth Amendment privilege in response to questions about transactions, accounts, or filing intent avoids giving the government the willfulness evidence it needs to support an indictment.
Criminal defense consultation and white collar crime counsel can advise on the Fifth Amendment rights applicable during the IRS CI summons and develop the summons response and investigative hearing strategy.
4. Sentencing, Plea Bargaining, and Appeals
When criminal tax prosecution becomes likely, the defense strategy shifts to minimizing exposure through plea negotiation and cooperation agreements, and the timeline from investigation to resolution typically spans two to four years.
Criminal appeals and criminal defense counsel can advise on the plea negotiation and sentencing strategy and develop the plea bargaining and appellate strategy.
30 Mar, 2026

