Year End MEGA Tax Planning “Tips” for Physicians

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For Medical Professionals … and Us All

[By PERRY D’ALESSIO CPA] http://www.dalecpa.com

A SPECIAL ME-P REPORT

perry-dalessio-cpaYear-end tax planning is especially challenging this year, for EVERYONE, because Congress has yet to act on a host of tax breaks that expired at the end of 2013. Some of these tax breaks may be retroactively reinstated and extended, but Congress may not decide the fate of these tax breaks until the very end of this year (and, possibly, not until next year).

For Individuals

These breaks include, for individuals: the option to deduct state and local sales and use taxes instead of state and local income taxes; the above-the-line-deduction for qualified higher education expenses; tax-free IRA distributions for charitable purposes by those age 70- 1/2 or older; and the exclusion for up-to-$2 million of mortgage debt forgiveness on a principal residence.

For Businesses

For businesses, tax breaks that expired at the end of last year and may be retroactively reinstated and extended include: 50% bonus first year depreciation for most new machinery, equipment and software; the $500,000 annual expensing limitation; the research tax credit; and the 15-year write-off for qualified leasehold improvement property, qualified restaurant property, and qualified retail improvement property.

Bigger Earners

Higher-income-earners, like some doctors, have unique concerns to address when mapping out year-end plans. They must be wary of the 3.8% surtax on certain unearned income and the additional 0.9% Medicare (hospital insurance, or HI) tax that applies to individuals receiving wages with respect to employment in excess of $200,000 ($250,000 for married couples filing jointly and $125,000 for married couples filing separately).

The surtax is 3.8% of the lesser of: (1) net investment income (NII), or (2) the excess of modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) over an un-indexed threshold amount ($250,000 for joint filers or surviving spouses, $125,000 for a married individual filing a separate return, and $200,000 in any other case). As year-end nears; a taxpayer’s approach to minimizing or eliminating the 3.8% surtax will depend on his estimated MAGI and net investment income (NII) for the year. Some taxpayers should consider ways to minimize (e.g., through deferral) additional NII for the balance of the year, others should try to see if they can reduce MAGI other than NII, and other individuals will need to consider ways to minimize both NII and other types of MAGI.

The additional Medicare tax may require year-end actions. Employers must withhold the additional Medicare tax from wages in excess of $200,000 regardless of filing status or other income. Self-employed persons must take it into account in figuring estimated tax. There could be situations where an employee may need to have more withheld toward year end to cover the tax.

For example, an individual earns $200,000 from one employer during the first half of the year and a like amount from another employer during the balance of the year. He would owe the additional Medicare tax, but there would be no withholding by either employer for the additional Medicare tax since wages from each employer don’t exceed $200,000.

Also, in determining whether they may need to make adjustments to avoid a penalty for underpayment of estimated tax, individuals also should be mindful that the additional Medicare tax may be over-withheld. This could occur, for example, where only one of two married spouses works and reaches the threshold for the employer to withhold, but the couple’s income won’t be high enough to actually cause the tax to be owed.

The Checklist[s]

I’ve have compiled a checklist of additional actions, for ME-P readers, based on current tax rules that may help you save tax dollars if you act before year-end. Not all actions will apply in your particular situation, but you (or a family member) will likely benefit from many of them.

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Next-Gen Physicians

[Future High Income-Earners?]

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Year-End Tax Planning Moves for Individual Medical Providers 

Realize losses on stock while substantially preserving your investment position. There are several ways this can be done.

For example, you can sell the original holding, then buy back the same securities at least 31 days later. It may be advisable for us to meet to discuss year-end trades you should consider making.

Let’s consider the following:

  • Postpone income until 2015 and accelerate deductions into 2014 to lower your 2014 tax bill. This strategy may enable you to claim larger deductions, credits, and other tax breaks for 2014 that are phased out over varying levels of adjusted gross income (AGI). These include child tax credits, higher education tax credits, and deductions for student loan interest. Postponing income also is desirable for those taxpayers who anticipate being in a lower tax bracket next year due to changed financial circumstances. Note, however, that in some cases, it may pay to actually accelerate income into 2014. For example, this may be the case where a person’s marginal tax rate is much lower this year than it will be next year or where lower income in 2015 will result in a higher tax credit for an individual who plans to purchase health insurance on a health exchange and is eligible for a premium assistance credit.
  • If you believe a Roth IRA is better than a traditional IRA, and want to remain in the market for the long term, consider converting traditional-IRA money invested in beaten-down stocks (or mutual funds) into a Roth IRA if eligible to do so. Keep in mind, however, that such a conversion will increase your adjusted gross income for 2014. If you converted assets in a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA earlier in the year, the assets in the Roth IRA account may have declined in value, and if you leave things as is, you will wind up paying a higher tax than is necessary. You can back out of the transaction by re-characterizing the conversion, that is, by transferring the converted amount (plus earnings, or minus losses) from the Roth IRA back to a traditional IRA via a trustee-to-trustee transfer. You can later reconvert to a Roth IRA, if doing so proves advantageous.
  • It may be advantageous to try to arrange with your PHO, medical group, clinic, hospital or employer to defer a bonus that may be coming your way until 2015.
  • Consider using a credit card to pay deductible expenses before the end of the year. Doing so will increase your 2014 deductions even if you don’t pay your credit card bill until after the end of the year.
  • If you expect to owe state and local income taxes when you file your return next year, consider asking your employer to increase withholding of state and local taxes (or pay estimated tax payments of state and local taxes) before year-end to pull the deduction of those taxes into 2014 if doing so won’t create an alternative minimum tax (AMT) problem.
  • Take an eligible rollover distribution from a qualified retirement plan before the end of 2014 if you are facing a penalty for underpayment of estimated tax and having your employer increase your withholding isn’t viable or won’t sufficiently address the problem. Income tax will be withheld from the distribution and will be applied toward the taxes owed for 2014. You can then timely roll over the gross amount of the distribution, i.e., the net amount you received plus the amount of withheld tax, to a traditional IRA. No part of the distribution will be includible in income for 2014, but the withheld tax will be applied pro rata over the full 2014 tax year to reduce previous underpayments of estimated tax.
  • Estimate the effect of any year-end planning moves on the alternative minimum tax (AMT) for 2014, keeping in mind that many tax breaks allowed for purposes of calculating regular taxes are disallowed for AMT purposes. These include the deduction for state property taxes on your residence, state income taxes, miscellaneous itemized deductions, and personal exemption deductions. Other deductions, such as for medical expenses, are calculated in a more restrictive way for AMT purposes than for regular tax purposes in the case of a taxpayer who is over age 65 or whose spouse is over age 65 as of the close of the tax year. As a result, in some cases, deductions should not be accelerated.
  • You may be able to save taxes this year and next by applying a bunching strategy to “miscellaneous” itemized deductions (i.e., certain deductions that are allowed only to the extent they exceed 2% of adjusted gross income), medical expenses and other itemized deductions.
  • You may want to pay contested taxes to be able to deduct them this year while continuing to contest them next year.
  • You may want to settle an insurance or damage claim in order to maximize your casualty loss deduction this year.
  • Take required minimum distributions (RMDs) from your IRA or 401(k) plan (or other employer-sponsored retired plan) if you have reached age 70- 1/2. Failure to take a required withdrawal can result in a penalty of 50% of the amount of the RMD not withdrawn. If you turned age 70- 1/2 in 2014, you can delay the first required distribution to 2015, but if you do, you will have to take a double distribution in 2015-the amount required for 2014 plus the amount required for 2015. Think twice before delaying 2014 distributions to 2015-bunching income into 2015 might push you into a higher tax bracket or have a detrimental impact on various income tax deductions that are reduced at higher income levels. However, it could be beneficial to take both distributions in 2015 if you will be in a substantially lower bracket that year.
  • Increase the amount you set aside for next year in your employer’s health flexible spending account (FSA) if you set aside too little for this year.
  • If you are eligible to make health savings account (HSA) contributions in December of this year, you can make a full year’s worth of deductible HSA contributions for 2014. This is so even if you first became eligible on Dec. 1st, 2014.
  • Make gifts sheltered by the annual gift tax exclusion before the end of the year and thereby save gift and estate taxes. You can give $14,000 in 2014 to each of an unlimited number of individuals but you can’t carry over unused exclusions from one year to the next. The transfers also may save family income taxes where income-earning property is given to family members in lower income tax brackets who are not subject to the kiddie tax.

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Target MD

[Future IRS Targets?]

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Year-End Tax-Planning Moves for Medical Practices & Physician Executives 

  • Medical practices, clinics and businesses should buy machinery and equipment before year end and, under the generally applicable “half-year convention,” thereby secure a half-year’s worth of depreciation deductions for the first ownership year.
  • Although the business property expensing option is greatly reduced in 2014 (unless legislation changes this option for 2014), don’t neglect to make expenditures that qualify for this option. For tax years beginning in 2014, the expensing limit is $25,000, and the investment-based reduction in the dollar limitation starts to take effect when property placed in service in the tax year exceeds $200,000.
  • Businesses may be able to take advantage of the “de minimis safe harbor election” (also known as the book-tax conformity election) to expense the costs of inexpensive assets and materials and supplies, assuming the costs don’t have to be capitalized under the Code Sec. 263A uniform capitalization (UNICAP) rules. To qualify for the election, the cost of a unit-of-property can’t exceed $5,000 if the taxpayer has an applicable financial statement (AFS; e.g., a certified audited financial statement along with an independent CPA’s report). If there’s no AFS, the cost of a unit of property can’t exceed $500. Where the UNICAP rules aren’t an issue, purchase such qualifying items before the end of 2014.
  • A corporation should consider accelerating income from 2015 to 2014 where doing so will prevent the corporation from moving into a higher bracket next year. Conversely, it should consider deferring income until 2015 where doing so will prevent the corporation from moving into a higher bracket this year.
  • A corporation should consider deferring income until next year if doing so will preserve the corporation’s qualification for the small corporation alternative minimum tax (AMT) exemption for 2014. Note that there is never a reason to accelerate income for purposes of the small corporation AMT exemption because if a corporation doesn’t qualify for the exemption for any given tax year, it will not qualify for the exemption for any later tax year.
  • A corporation (other than a “large” corporation) that anticipates a small net operating loss (NOL) for 2014 (and substantial net income in 2015) may find it worthwhile to accelerate just enough of its 2015 income (or to defer just enough of its 2014 deductions) to create a small amount of net income for 2014. This will permit the corporation to base its 2015 estimated tax installments on the relatively small amount of income shown on its 2014 return, rather than having to pay estimated taxes based on 100% of its much larger 2015 taxable income.
  • If your business qualifies for the domestic production activities deduction for its 2014 tax year, consider whether the 50%-of-W-2 wages limitation on that deduction applies. If it does, consider ways to increase 2014 W-2 income, e.g., by bonuses to owner-shareholders whose compensation is allocable to domestic production gross receipts. Note that the limitation applies to amounts paid with respect to employment in calendar year 2014, even if the business has a fiscal year.
  • To reduce 2014 taxable income, consider disposing of a passive activity in 2014 if doing so will allow you to deduct suspended passive activity losses. If you own an interest in a partnership or S corporation consider whether you need to increase your basis in the entity so you can deduct a loss from it for this year.

Assessment

These are just some of the year-end steps that you can take to save taxes. So, contact your CPA to tailor a particular plan that will work best for you. We also will need to stay in close touch in the event Congress revives expired tax breaks, to assure that you don’t miss out on any resuscitated tax saving opportunities.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

Financial Planning MDs 2015

Comprehensive Financial Planning Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants

9 Responses

  1. IRS Commissioner Predicts Miserable 2015 Tax Filing Season

    According to Forbes, Internal Revenue Service Commissioner John Koskinen warned that close to half the people trying to reach the IRS by phone might not get through during the upcoming 2015 tax filing season. “Phone service could plummet to 53%,” he told an audience of tax practitioners at the AICPA National Tax Conference in Washington, D.C. today. That would be down from an already unacceptable 72% during the 2014 filing season. What’s to blame? Budget woes. “All we can do is try to maximize our services as well as we can; as well as we can is still going to be miserable. You really do get what you pay for,” he said.

    http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/personalfinance/irs-commissioner-predicts-miserable-2015-tax-filing-season/ar-BBcYk0W

    Koskinen’s remarks followed National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson who was even gloomier:“The filing season is going to be the worst filing season since I’ve been the National Taxpayer Advocate {in 2001}; I’d love to be proved wrong, but I think it will rival the 1985 filing season when returns disappeared.”

    http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/will-the-new-congress-change-the-tax-code/ar-BBd1KXc

    Quillen

    Like

  2. 10 Year-End Tax Tips

    As 2014 draws to a close, there may be more planning opportunities than ever before, but also more traps for the unwary, according to Grant Thornton LLP.

    http://www.financial-planning.com/gallery/fp/10-year-end-tax-tips-2690980-1.html?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&st=email

    How to Ease Your Client’s Tax Burden

    Recent tax laws added complexity—not to mention “sticker shock”—to clients’ tax obligations. But, with smart planning, you can alleviate some of the pain.

    http://www.financial-planning.com/news/tax_planning/how-to-ease-your-clients-tax-burden-2690982-1.html?utm_campaign=daily-nov%204%202014&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&ET=financialplanning%3Ae3286825%3A86235a%3A&st=email

    Bartokomy

    Like

  3. Doesn’t look like any major new tax legislation will come through by year end

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – When the U.S. Congress returns to work next week after Tuesday’s midterm elections, one of its first tasks will be dealing with dozens of expired corporate tax breaks, whose renewal and extension are seen as likely though not guaranteed.

    Known as “extenders,” the 55 temporary laws – including tax breaks for depreciation and research – have been in limbo since the end of 2013, when their last authorized extension ran out.

    Corporations have been clamoring for months for Congress to renew the laws, which also involve offshore finance, green energy and narrow interests such as Puerto Rican rum production. But lawmakers, deeply divided over fiscal issues, have not acted and now are under heavy pressure to deal with the extenders in the “lame duck” session that ends in December.

    The session is expected to cover only 14 legislative days, so lawmakers will have to work fast and stay focused, with must-pass budget items also on their agenda, analysts said. “The fate of the 55 expired special interest tax breaks … will be the marquee legislative fight of the lame duck session,” said Guggenheim Securities senior policy analyst Chris Krueger.

    In a research note, Krueger offered a 70 percent probability that Congress will renew retroactively and extend the entire package through 2015. Others around Washington are not so sure. “Suddenly, passage of the extenders no longer looks certain,” said Greg Valliere, chief political strategist at Potomac Research Group, in a research note last week.

    Young fiscal hawks may resist renewal, arguing that many of the extenders provisions are egregious examples of Washington picking winners and losers in the private sector, he said. Some of the laws could be in danger, such as a tax break for NASCAR race tracks, testing “whether the pro-business (Republican) leadership can fend off restive Young Turks who don’t see this as a proper role of government,” Valliere said.

    The extenders also include tax deductions for individuals for college tuition costs, state and local sales taxes paid, schoolteacher expenses and the child tax credit.

    A wild card will be whether Democrats try to add new curbs on tax “inversions” to extenders legislation. A 2013-2014 surge in these deals – in which U.S. companies reincorporate overseas to cut U.S. tax costs – has faded, but some Democrats want action beyond a recent Treasury Department crackdown. Anti-inversion legislation is unlikely to win approval this year, said Height Securities analyst Henrietta Treyz on Monday. Such measures will likely be put forward during the lame-duck session as possible offsets for government tax revenue losses that would be presented by separate Republican proposals to make certain temporary extender laws permanent.

    “However, we do not believe at this time that a permanent extension of any of the tax credits sought by members of Congress will be enacted into law this year,” Treyz said.

    “We expect that, while the road to a final bill will be rocky, it will ultimately result in a short-term extenders package being authorized,” she said.

    We need to plan on the current law being the final law for this year. Please let me know if you have any questions. Now is the time to contact us so we can run year end projections and determine if there are any tax strategies that can be employed to reduce the impact the lost deductions and higher marginal rates in 2014.

    Bobby Whirley CPA
    Managing Partner
    Whirley & Associates, LLC + ProActive Advisory

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  4. More end of year tax strategies

    As 2014 draws to a close, my wife and I have sprung into action to save on our 2014 taxes. Here are a few things we do. We are no CPAs, so what we do is pretty easy to mimic.

    Donate all the garbage.

    I couldn’t believe how many items in my household we literally didn’t touch, not even once, in the whole of 2014. Things like that are immediate candidates for donation. Things that fall into this category could be electronics, furniture, books, clothes, kitchenware, bedroom sets, used toothbrushes, etc. Ok, maybe not used toothbrushes, but just about anything you don’t use, you can find a better home for, and get a tax deduction for doing so. In some years, we’ve gotten $10,000 worth of deductions.

    Donate appreciated assets.

    If you were to give a monetary donation to your place of worship or a charity you care deeply about, don’t give cash, give appreciated assets. What I usually do is examine all my securities such as stocks and mutual funds, and give away the one that has the highest appreciation. This way, I avoid the capital gain tax while still getting the tax deduction for the full amount donated.

    Set up a donor advised fund.

    If you made a lot of money this year, and you are charitably inclined but you don’t yet know where to donate your money, it may make sense to set up a donor advised fund controlled by yourself. When you give money to your donor advised fund, you get the tax deduction right away, and you can decide which charity to allocate the money to later on.

    Contribute to your 401k.

    If you have cash sitting around collecting dust, you might as well contribute to your 401k, which has a limit of $17,500 if you are under 50, plus an additional $5,500 if you are over.

    Create a Defined Benefit Plan (DBP).

    If you have your own business and you made shit loads of money in 2014, a DBP might be a good way for you to salt away a good chunk tax deferred. By a good chunk I mean $150k to $200k depending on your situation. Usually a DBP makes economic sense when you only have a few employees, and they are a lot younger than you.

    Open a 529 plan account.

    If you have kids, there is no reason not to open a 529 plan account. You get to save for your kids’ college education and save state taxes all at once. Take myself for example, I have two boys and one wife. Therefore I can open 4 Maryland 529 plan accounts. Each account has a state tax deductible limit of $2,500. So I can put aside $10,000 state-tax deductible. If you live in Virginia, you are luckier, the tax deductible limit is $4,000 per parent per kid.

    Fund your Flex Spending Account.

    If you employer offers flex spending as a benefit then you should definitely use it. You can put aside $5,000 for healthcare and another $5,000 for dependent care pre-tax. That’s huge!

    Make a baby.

    Naaaah! There are exemptions, deductions and tax credits associated with a baby, but I am afraid it’s too late for 2014 if you have not started yet.

    Michael Zhuang MS PhD [candidate]
    http://www.mzcap.com

    Like

  5. U.S. HOUSE BACKS 1-YEAR RENEWAL OF ‘EXTENDERS’ TAX BREAKS‏

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Moving to allay uncertainty about the 2014 tax year, the U.S. House of Representatives voted on Wednesday in favor of renewing a wide-ranging package of temporary tax breaks, known as “extenders,” postponing further debate on them to 2015.

    The 55-item package of tax breaks includes ones for business research costs and depreciation schedules, multinational corporations’ tax avoidance strategies, teachers, commuters, green energy, racehorse owners and Hollywood studios.

    Let’s wait to see if this clears the Senate. The President has threatened to veto the bill.

    Bobby
    [Managing Partner]
    Whirley & Associates, LLC + ProActive Advisory
    certified public accountants
    2500 Northwinds Parkway
    Suite 190
    Alpharetta, GA 30009
    770.932.1919

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  6. For S-Corporation Shareholders,

    The year is coming to an end and we would like to send you a few important reminders.

    Be certain that you have taken an adequate salary from your S-Corporation. The practice of taking cash distributions from your S-Corporation without drawing a salary or without drawing an adequate salary is increasingly being challenged by the IRS. The IRS is winning.

    If the company is paying your health insurance premiums, please be sure that those premiums will be included in your W-2. If they are not, you will lose the self-employed health insurance deduction that is available to you on your own personal income tax return.

    Have a wonderful holiday!

    Cindy Freking CPA
    [Tax Manager]

    Like

  7. “individual mandate” under the Affordable Care Act

    Beginning in 2014, the “individual mandate” under the Affordable Care Act became effective. Not only are all individuals required to have insurance but all people who are required to file a 2014 tax return must report their insurance on that return, probably due on April 15, 2015. So we will need quite a bit of additional information to prepare your 2014 return.

    In reporting their insurance, people will fall into one of four categories:

    • You got qualifying insurance through the exchange (the Marketplace);
    • You got qualifying insurance through some other source such as an employer or Medicare;
    • You did not get qualifying insurance and you do not have an exemption which means you will be subject to the penalty for not having insurance;
    • You did not get qualifying insurance but you are entitled to an exemption from the penalty.

    To complicate matters, the above four categories apply to each member of your family and may apply differently to each member (for example, different members of the family have insurance from different sources).

    Moreover, any one member of your family may have changed categories during the year. The information we request below must cover each family member on a month-to-month basis. If a family member’s situation was the same for the entire year, then you can document that member’s insurance on a yearly basis.

    Exchange: If you got insurance through the exchange, the exchange will send you a Form 1095-A, Health Insurance Marketplace Statement. This form will be used to claim any Premium Tax Credit to which you may be entitled. Note that we cannot give you this tax credit if you don’t provide us with the form.

    Other source: If you got insurance from another source, you will need to send us documentation. If it is government insurance, such as Medicare, the government will send you the documentation. If it is employer insurance, the employer may provide you with Form 1095-B or Form 1095-C. If they do not provide either form, we can accept documentation such as a copy of the insurance policy. If you cannot provide any documentation, but you are sure you had qualifying coverage, we will have you sign a statement to that effect.

    Exemption: Some exemptions are claimed on the tax return and others require a certificate from the exchange. We cannot claim an exchange exemption without that certificate.

    Examples of exemptions that require certification from the exchange include:

    • You are a member of certain religious sects;
    • You did not have access to affordable coverage at the beginning of the year due to your household income;
    • ou were notified that your health insurance plan would not be renewed and other plans were not affordable; or
    • You experienced other problems that prevented you from getting insurance. This broad category includes homelessness, evictions or foreclosures, domestic violence, bankruptcy, illness or death in the family, and many other hardships.

    If you think you qualify for an exchange exemption, visit http://marketplace.cms.gov to learn more and to get an application for exemption. We suggest you file the application as soon as possible.

    Sincerely,
    Perry D’Alessio CPA
    D’ALESSIO TOCCI & PELL CPA

    Like

  8. New Year Tax Reminders for 2015

    Remember to file your business, personal, and property tax returns in a timely manner.

    • January 15 – 4th quarter estimated taxes due for individuals and trusts
    • February 2 – 4th quarterly and annual payroll tax returns due (i.e. employers must issue W-2s to employees by this date).
    • February 2 – 2014 1099s due to vendors and investors (1099-MISC, 1099-INT, 1099-DIV, etc)

    Bobby Whirley CPA
    [Managing Partner]
    Whirley & Associates, LLC
    + ProActive Advisory

    Like

  9. Tax Audits?

    Although the overall individual audit rate is a little less than one in 100, the odds increase dramatically as your income goes up. IRS statistics for 2013 show that people with incomes of $200,000 or higher had an audit rate of 3.26%, or one out of every 30 returns.

    Report $1 million or more of income? There’s a one-in-nine chance your return will be audited. The audit rate drops significantly for filers making less than $200,000: Only 0.88% of such returns were audited during 2013, and the vast majority of these exams were conducted by mail.

    Ralph

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