Tax Season Tribune

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The tribe has spoken (so has the IRS)

By Renée Rodda, J.D.

Contributing Editor

Twenty-six years ago, Richard Hatch outwitted, outplayed, and outlasted 15 competitors to become the first winner of the television show Survivor. Hatch walked away with a $1 million prize and, apparently, the firm belief that no one at the IRS watches TV.

A federal judge in Providence, Rhode Island, recently ordered Hatch to pay $3.3 million in back taxes, interest, and penalties. By my math, that’s more than three times what he won on the show, which has accumulated through the magic of compounding penalties.

To be fair, the prize money was just the beginning. Hatch also neglected to report $321,000 in radio appearance fees and $27,000 in rental income. But my personal favorite is the $11,500 in charitable donations that he had quietly redirected for personal use. In other words, it wasn’t just that he didn’t pay taxes on his winnings… he was thorough about it.

Hatch spent 51 months in federal prison following a 2006 tax evasion conviction, and then an additional nine months after failing to file his amended returns as ordered. He has represented himself throughout the recent proceedings, which he describes as a case of prosecutorial misconduct and judicial bias. “People think I’m crazy,” Hatch told the Boston Globe, “but I’m really, really hopeful.”

Tax professionals, of course, will immediately recognize this as the statement of a man who has never met a statute of limitations he couldn’t outlast, which, in its own strange way, is a very Survivor-like approach to tax compliance.

The government has also placed liens on two properties it claims Hatch transferred to his sister to avoid collection. Hatch denies the allegation.

The final tally is still climbing, as the judgment continues to accrue interest. At this rate, by the time the appellate court weighs in, Hatch may owe more than the entire prize pool of the first three seasons combined.

Final Tribal Council vote: IRS, unanimous.

National Day

Another type of wealth transfer: snap, crackle, steal

By Sandy Weiner, J.D.

California Editor

It's that time of year again. The birds are singing, the flowers are blooming, and apparently, criminals across Europe have decided that tax season is the ideal time to launch their own version of income redistribution. Why wait for a tax refund when you can access wealth in a much more daring, flaring way?

Let's start in Italy, where four hooded thieves pulled off what may be the most efficient job anyone has completed this spring. On the night of March 22, they broke into the Magnani Rocca Foundation museum near Parma, grabbed three masterworks, a Renoir, a Cézanne, and a Matisse, and were back over the garden fence in under three minutes.1

Three. Minutes.

I don't know about you, but I've spent more time than that trying to locate a client's prior-year AGI. These thieves walked away with approximately $10.3 million in Impressionist paintings before most of us had finished reading the first page of a Schedule C. The museum, admirably committed to the element of surprise, didn't even announce the theft publicly for a week, about the time it takes to finally get through to someone at the IRS.

Not to be outdone, a separate crew somewhere between Italy and Poland decided that fine art was so last week. Their target? A truck carrying 413,793 KitKat bars, a full 12 tons of chocolate, en route from a factory in Italy to distributors in Poland.2 The entire vehicle and its contents remain missing. KitKat, demonstrating the kind of crisis communications we can all aspire to, noted that thieves had "taken the message too literally and made a break" with their product.

A break. With a KitKat. Get it?

But the thieves may not have known one thing — that each KitKat bar has its own unique identifying number. KitKat has launched a stolen KitKat tracker on its website so you can report if you’ve got one of the stolen bars.3 Think of it as the sweetest identity theft tracker out there. So go dig into that bowl of chocolate bars in the breakroom (no pun intended) now and see if you can find one of those elusive Kit-Kat-napped bars.

How to make entertainment taxing

By Kathryn Zdan, EA

Editorial Director

Picture this: It’s April 16. All returns have been dealt with, and the phones and your inbox are quiet. You re-emerge into the world, blinking in the bright sun. What will you do with your newfound free time? In order to not shock your system, here are some movies that feature tax in the plotline.

The Blues Brothers (1980):

  • Plot: Jake and Elwood are on a mission to raise money to save their childhood orphanage from a property tax bill. To do so, they must reunite their R&B band and organize a performance to earn the $5,000 needed.
  • Rotten Tomatoes rating: 71%
  • Pair with: Deep-dish Chicago style pizza and Miller beer

The Untouchables (1987):

  • Plot: The most famous tax story in cinema. Al Capone, untouchable by conventional law enforcement, is ultimately brought down by an IRS investigation into his unreported income.
  • Rotten Tomatoes rating: 83%
  • Pair with: Baked ziti

The Firm (1993):

  • Plot: A hotshot young lawyer discovers his prestigious firm is a front for money laundering and tax fraud.
  • Rotten Tomatoes rating: 76%
  • Pair with: Memphis dry rub ribs

Lucky Numbers (2000):

  • Plot: A local TV weatherman schemes to rig the Pennsylvania lottery, with tax fraud baked into the plot.
  • Rotten Tomatoes rating: 23%
  • Pair with: Pierogis and Yuengling

Stranger Than Fiction (2006):

  • Plot: An IRS auditor begins hearing a narrator’s voice in his head that seems to narrate the text of a novel in which it is stated that he, the main character, will soon die. He frantically seeks to somehow prevent his death.
  • Rotten Tomatoes rating: 73%
  • Pair with: Home-baked cookies

The Accountant (2016; Part 2, 2025):

  • Plot: An autistic CPA makes his living sanitizing fraudulent financial and accounting records of criminal and terrorist organizations experiencing internal embezzlement.
  • Rotten Tomatoes rating: 53% (2016), 75% (2025)
  • Pair with: A lonely sack lunch and sliced cantaloupe

A few fun facts about this week’s writers:

Renée Rodda, J.D.

Renée Rodda, J.D., when not writing, researching, and helping Spidell customers, enjoys riding horses.

Sandy Weiner, J.D.

Sandy Weiner, J.D., as California editor, loves all things California. Whether it's hiking at Big Sur or playing at the beach in San Diego where she lives, Sandy takes full advantage of all that California has to offer as a way to clear her head after trying to comprehend and explain California's Revenue & Taxation Code.

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.

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