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The Jewish Home | MARCH 31, 2022

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From Russia With Love by Allan rolnick, cPA

OctOber 29, 2015 | the Jewish Home

V

6

Money

ladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has made it an uncharacteristically rough time to be a Russian oligarch. Everyone, from western central banks to amateur yacht-tracking sleuths, has joined the effort to track down their riches. But a former Wall Street Journal columnist caught our attention in one especially entertaining report: “Western governments have quietly contracted multiple teams of ‘combat bookkeepers’ to secure the estimated hundreds of billions of dollars worth of sanctioned assets the Russian president and his oligarch cronies have spent the past 27 years legitimately laundering through international capital markets.” There’s a lot to unpack in that single sentence. “Hundreds of billions”? “Legitimately laundered”? But the reference to “combat bookkeepers” probably made you laugh. Did you know the Venn diagram illustrating “combat” and “bookkeepers” had any overlap at all? Did you suspect the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants has a paramilitary wing? Can you close your eyes and picture their Special Forces rappelling out of helicopters with Brooks Brothers suits, briefcases in their hands, and Ka-bar knives in their teeth? Seriously, though, it shouldn’t sur-

prise you to learn how big a role the IRS is going to play in chasing Putin’s cronies. The IRS Criminal Investigations (CI) unit, with 3,000 employees, has launched more than 20 cases related to oligarch money laundering since 2017. Those efforts will kick into overdrive as sanctions tighten. Special Agents – who are the only IRS employees authorized to pack heat on the job – will scour the world like truffle

wards to snitches, including a $104 million payment to Bradley Birkenfeld, the whistleblower who ended illegal Swiss banking for most Americans. (Of course, Birkenfeld didn’t face potential retaliation from the sort of goons the oligarchs might enlist as bodyguards.) This won’t be the Service’s first rodeo when it comes to helping enforce sanctions. In 2004, CI agents flew to Bagh-

Can you close your eyes and picture their Special Forces rappelling out of helicopters with Brooks Brothers suits, briefcases in their hands, and Ka-bar knives in their teeth?

pigs for dirty money, sniffing out signs of new shell companies, suspicious crypto transactions, and efforts to park money in real estate, jewelry, and art. The Treasury has also launched a Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Reward program paying bounties up to $5 million for information leading to stolen assets linked to Russia. The IRS has a successful history of dangling cash re-

dad to track down Saddam Hussein’s hidden riches and uncovered $2 billion the dictator had looted from his country. Six of those agents even earned a medal, the Joint Civilian Service Achievement Award, the second-highest award that military commanders can present. The Service’s biggest roadblock moving into this role is going to be staffing and resources. For example, there are

only five agents in the entire CI unit right now who can use a specific software tool that lets them track oligarchs through international local government databases. And budget-cutters in Congress aren’t helping. Last week’s omnibus federal spending bill included $12.9 billion for IRS operations but specifically blocked administration requests for more money for criminal investigations. Florida Senator Rick Scott’s “Rescue America” plan would go even further by cutting IRS funding by 50%. (Naturally, IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig sees this as folly. “If the IRS budget was cut by 50%, you might be better off and save more money by just shutting it down completely,” he said last week.) Several of Putin’s oligarchs have already called for an end to his war. It’s too soon to say if sanctions (and seizing a dozen of their yachts!) have helped push them to that conclusion. But taxpayers who are used to grumbling about the IRS may be delighted to see the Service play a part in ending the conflict.

Allan J Rolnick is a CPA who has been in practice for over 30 years in Queens, NY. He welcomes your comments and can be reached at 718-896-8715 or at allanjrcpa@aol.com.


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Articles inside

Still Counting Down by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

2min
pages 142-144

Your Money

3min
pages 140-141

Against All Odds by Avi Heiligman

6min
pages 132-133

A General’s Retirement is a Chance to Reflect by David Ignatius

4min
page 131

Free Speech Gets Tossed by Marc A. Thiessen

4min
page 130

Madeleine Albright Shaped a Generation by David Ignatius

4min
page 129

Notable Quotes

10min
pages 126-128

The Aussie Gourmet: Salmon Pistachio

1min
pages 124-125

JWOW

4min
pages 122-123

TJH Speaks with David Lobl, Candidate for Assembly

14min
pages 104-107

Love Your Kids by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

6min
pages 116-117

The Up-and-Coming Chickpea by Cindy Weinberger, MS RD CDN

3min
pages 118-119

Parenting Pearls

7min
pages 120-121

Teen Talk

5min
pages 110-111

My Mission to Ukraine by Shoshana Rockoff

14min
pages 108-109

TJH Speaks with Ari Brown, Candidate for Assembly

13min
pages 100-103

Rescuing Anna by Rafi Sackville

5min
pages 96-99

Delving into the Daf by Rabbi Avrohom Sebrow

4min
pages 94-95

Looking Forward by Rav Moshe Weinberger

11min
pages 86-89

The Jewish Approach to Leadership by Rabbi Shmuel Reichman

11min
pages 90-93

Community Happenings

1hr
pages 40-81

National

15min
pages 30-35

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

3min
pages 84-85

Israel News

14min
pages 22-29

Global

12min
pages 12-21

Centerfold

2min
pages 82-83
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