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Olympic gold (sort of)

By Mike Giangrande, J.D., LL.M.

Federal Tax Editor

I was shocked when I saw a news story recently when a U.S. gold medalist from the Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, was showing off her broken medal. Apparently, it broke while she was jumping around in excitement. That bit of cheap craftsmanship led me down a rabbit hole of investigating a little more about Olympic medals.

Did you know that Olympic gold medals are not made of solid gold? I was absolutely shocked by that until I learned that if they were made of solid gold, a single medal would cost about $45,000 at the current cost of gold. But, even then, you may think to yourself, as I did, that $45,000 is a worthy prize for taking the top spot in your sport.

That word “sport” is used rather loosely in the Olympics these days, isn’t it? I’m not one to make fun of curling (much); it’s a fun activity with a group of friends that’s played on a surface that doubles as a beer cooler. But is it a “sport”? Do we really want to give a $45,000 medal to all five members of an Olympic curling team? Isn’t curling just a Canadian version of cornhole? (Okay, fine, it was technically invented in Scotland, but let’s not get technical.)

And what about larger teams? Olympic hockey carries a 25-person roster (25 players × $45,000 gold medals = $1,125,000). That’s a hefty cost. You might suggest that hockey is a popular sport, so the medal cost is justified. I might agree with you on hockey, but when we get to the summer Olympics, there is no way you are going to convince me that Olympic handball, which carries a 14-person roster, is worthy of $45,000 medals per person! How on earth did handball become an Olympic sport? I would apologize to the Olympic handball teams, but I’m just saying what everyone else is thinking.

Moving away from the top of the podium, if you’re curious, Olympic silver medals are made of solid sterling silver and carry a cost of under $1,500 each, and third place carries solid, authentic bronze at a whopping cost of $6 apiece. Maybe we should give the marquee, one-athlete sports solid gold and give the handball players solid bronze and just tell them it’s gold. After all, someone told them handball was a real sport and they believed it.

olympic medal

Calculating a world record

By Austin Lewis

Managing Editor

On September 24, 2025, accounting industry groups including the Minnesota Society of CPAs gathered at the Target Center in Minneapolis to create the longest line of calculators.1 Their world record total added up to 1,094.

By our math that’s enough calculators to give one to every attendee at one of our tax update seminars in Anaheim, historically Spidell’s largest in-person location. But even that falls well short of the world record for the largest taxation lesson. In 2018, 3,378 people attended a class taught by the Institute of Company Secretaries of India.2

Some other sums

In 2011, General Electric filed a 57,000-page tax return.3

In 2012, the IRS paid $104 million, the largest amount ever to a single whistleblower, to Brad Birkenfeld in the UBS tax evasion case.4

In 2017, Florida man Ramon Blanchett received a tax refund of $980,000.5

What do your accomplishments add up to?

Do you have any tax-related triumphs that are worthy of an entry in the record books? The longest time spent on hold with the FTB or IRS in a single phone call? The most repeated requests for any one client to send you their documents in a tax season (their last tax season with you, presumably)? We don’t have any sway with Guiness Book of World Records, but send us an e-mail and your feat might show up in a future Tax Season Tribune.

The phishing pole: municipal utility falls for scam

By Kathryn Zdan, EA

Editorial Director

You know that old phrase “Go with your gut?” It’s one that some employees at Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) apparently forgot when they received an e-mail from a vendor requesting a bank account change. (TransAmerican Power Poles, Inc. v. Sacramento Municipal Utility District (August 26, 2025) Cal.App.3d, Case No. C100384)

A SMUD employee had been legitimately communicating with its steel pole supplier vendor, TransAmerican Power Poles located in Texas, about invoices totaling $248,885. Then, the employee received an e-mail from what appeared to be the same TransAmerican employee… only instead of the customary @tappinc.com domain, the sender had used @tappincs.com (the extra s is for “sneaky”). The employee failed to notice the difference.

Another e-mail arrived from the fake address requesting a bank account change regarding payment for the invoices. This e-mail appeared to CC the actual TransAmerican controller at his legitimate e-mail address, although he never received it.

The SMUD employee was suspicious. Another employee called the situation “sketchy” and a third labelled it “shady.” They decided to call TransAmerican and check it out. They even called twice… at 6:54 PM and 6:55 PM Texas time, which was after hours at TransAmerican, and so no one picked up. The SMUD employees didn’t leave a voicemail, overrode their guts, and wired $248,885 to the scammer’s account.

When the real TransAmerican came looking for payment, SMUD essentially replied, “we already paid you” and refused to pay again, arguing the imposter was TransAmerican’s “ostensible agent” and that paying twice would be an unconstitutional “gift of public funds.”

The shocking conclusion

The court held that SMUD had failed to exercise “ordinary care,” which is a very technical legal term meaning “call back during business hours.” The lesson for tax professionals: when a vendor suddenly changes their banking details, trust your gut and verify through a known contact method.

The court ruled that SMUD was liable to pay TransAmerican the full $248,885 for the steel poles that were actually delivered, even though SMUD had already lost $248,885 to the scammer.

A few fun facts about this week’s writers:

Mike Giangrande, J.D., LL.M.

Mike Giangrande, J.D., LL.M., is an Orange County native, and you can find him around his backyard smoker, working in his garage, or sipping lemonade at either a baseball or soccer game for this three children.

Kathryn Zdan, EA

Kathryn Zdan, EA, spends her non-Spidell hours on photography and watching horror films (and then sleeping with the light on). She also enjoys hiking, biking, and watching foreign films.

Austin Lewis

Austin Lewis loves music and the outdoors, and if he’s not going to a concert you can probably find him on a hike somewhere. A few years ago he traveled to Peru, where he spent seven days on the Salkantay Trek to Machu Picchu.

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