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PCAOB local forums coming to 5 cities

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The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board plans to host a series of five in-person forums this year, with different members of the board visiting cities including Chicago, Los Angeles, Denver, Miami and Jersey City.

The forums will focus on auditing in the small business environment and on auditing broker-dealers. The initial forum will feature PCAOB chair Erica Williams in Chicago on May 22. Another board member, George Botic, will be hosting a forum in Los Angeles this summer, followed by forums this fall hosted by board members Kara Stein (Denver), Christina Ho (Miami) and Anthony Thompson (Jersey City). The exact dates and locations for those four forums will be announced as those events get closer.

The PCAOB plans to livestream the forums in Chicago and Jersey City over the internet and recordings of all five forums will be made available on the PCAOB’s website for those won’t be able to attend in person. 

“Smaller firms play an important role in our work to protect investors,” said Williams in a statement Wednesday. “These forums allow the PCAOB to share valuable resources and information with small firms to help them improve audit quality, while giving us a chance to hear from them directly about their unique needs and challenges.”

Some firms are likely to be giving the PCAOB board members an earful about some of its recent proposals. Last week, the PCAOB proposed two far-reaching standards on firm and engagement metrics and firm reporting, which together would impose new requirements for reporting on information such as audit resources, fees, governance structure, engagement metrics, workload, experience of audit personnel, financial information, any lawsuits and regulatory actions they’re facing, leadership, network membership and more. The PCAOB is already facing pushback from audit firms over its so-called NOCLAR proposal, which would toughen the requirements for auditors to be on the lookout for signs of fraud and noncompliance with laws and regulations at their clients, effectively putting them in the role of whistleblowers. The Center for Audit Quality organized a letter-writing campaign last year to spur comments opposing the proposal and a number of state CPA societies, CPA firms and business groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce registered their opposition to the proposals. The PCAOB pushed back the deadline for receiving comments and heard concerns and feedback for and against the NOCLAR proposal during a roundtable discussion webcast last month. 

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The Pennsylvania Institute of CPAs is among the groups expressing their opposition to the NOCLAR proposal. “This is one of the most important proposals that I’ve seen come out from standard-setters in my career,” said Allison Henry Allison Henry, PICPA’s vice president of professional and technical standards. “I think it highlights a significant issue that we have in terms of the expectation gap and the differences of perspective from what investors think that we provide in terms of assurance and what we actually are capable of providing.”

PICPA and other accounting organizations are concerned about the scope and the pervasiveness of what is actually being asked for by the PCAOB with the NOCLAR proposal. “When we work, for example, with attorneys, and in many cases, the legal profession, people expect that they are going to use conditional language, and they’re not going to give definitive answers in terms of what’s going to happen in the future,” said Henry. “But then they turn to the auditors, and it’s almost like they want absolute certainty, and absolute assurance, relative to what the opinion is driving at without any limitations whatsoever. And I get the sense from what is being proposed that they want that absolute assurance. They’re looking at what the investors want, and what is being proposed is impossible in terms of the scope.”

She explained her views in a recent article.

The PCAOB is likely to be hearing from auditors at those forums about such proposals. The forums are tailored to PCAOB-registered firms that audit smaller public companies or broker-dealers, giving firms the chance to interact directly with representatives from the PCAOB as well as other regulators in an educational setting. The PCAOB has held similar forms since 2004, and Thompson hosted them virtually in 2022 and 2023. This year marks the first time the forums will be held in person since 2019, as many such events went virtual due to the pandemic.

Participants at this year’s forums will receive a refresher on various auditing requirements as well as learn about new requirements that will become applicable in the near future. In addition to remarks from PCAOB board members, the agenda includes the following:

  • Presentations by PCAOB staff from the Office of the Chief Auditor, the Division of Registration and Inspections, and the Division of Enforcement and Investigations;
  • Illustrative examples related to revenue, critical audit matters, and fraud/journal entries, among other topics; and
  • Presentations by staff of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Registration is required for the May 22 forum in Chicago. There’s no fee to attend it either in-person or virtually, but advance registration needs to be done here. CPE credits will be available only for in-person attendees.

Forum attendees can submit questions in advance via email and attendees will also be able to submit questions during the forum. Registration info, event location and other details for the rest of the in-person forums this year will be announced closer to the date of each event.

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Tax Fraud Blotter: Crooks R Us

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The shadow knows; body of evidence; make a Note of it; and other highlights of recent tax cases.

Newark, New Jersey: Thomas Nicholas Salzano, a.k.a. Nicholas Salzano, of Secaucus, New Jersey, the shadow CEO of National Realty Investment Advisors, has been sentenced to 12 years in prison for orchestrating a $658 million Ponzi scheme and conspiring to evade millions in taxes.

Salzano previously pleaded guilty to securities fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to defraud the U.S., admitting that he made numerous misrepresentations to investors while he secretly ran National Realty. From February 2018 through January 2022, Salzano and others defrauded investors and potential investors of NRIA Partners Portfolio Fund I, a real estate fund operated by National Realty, of $650 million.

Salzano and his conspirators executed their scheme through an aggressive multiyear, nationwide marketing campaign that involved thousands of emails to investors, advertisements, and meetings and presentations to investors. Salzano led and directed the marketing campaign that was intended to mislead investors into believing that NRIA generated significant profits. It in fact generated little to no profits and operated as a Ponzi scheme.

Salzano stole millions of dollars of investor money to support his lavish lifestyle, including expensive dinners, extravagant birthday parties, and payments to family and associates who did not work at NRIA. He also orchestrated a separate, related conspiracy to avoid paying taxes on his stolen funds.

He was also sentenced to three years of supervised release and agreed to a forfeiture money judgment of $8.52 million, full restitution of $507.4 million to the victims of his offenses and $6.46 million to the IRS.

Marina del Rey, California: Tax preparer Lidiya Gessese has been sentenced to 41 months in prison for preparing and filing false returns for her clients and for not reporting her income.

Gessese owned and operated Tax We R/Tax R Us and Insurance Services from 2013 through 2019 and charged clients $300 to $800. Gessese would then prepare returns that included claims to deductions and credits she knew her clients were not entitled to, including falsely claiming dependents, earned income credits, the American Opportunity Credit, Child Tax Credits, business deductions, education expenses or unreimbursed employee business expenses. The illegitimate claims led to some $1,135,554.64 issued by the IRS for 2010 through 2018.

She failed to report, or underreported, her own income for 2010 through 2018, some of which included improperly diverted funds from clients’ inflated or fraudulent refunds, causing a tax loss of $488,276.

Gessese, who pleaded guilty in April, was also ordered to pay $1,096,034.01 to the IRS and $53,526.95 to her other victims.

Fullerton, California: In Chun Jung of Anaheim, California, owner of an auto repair business, has pleaded guilty to filing false returns for 2015 to 2022, underreporting his income by at least $1,184,914.

He owned and operated JY JBMT INC., d.b.a. JY Auto Body, which was registered as a subchapter S corp. Jung was the 100% shareholder.

Jung accepted check payments from customers that he and his co-schemers then cashed at multiple area check cashing services; the cashed checks totaled some $1,157,462. Jung withheld the business receipts and income from his tax preparer and omitted them on his returns.

He will pay $300,145 in taxes due to the IRS and faces a $250,000 penalty and up to three years in prison. Sentencing is Jan. 31.

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Tucson, Arizona: Tax preparer Nour Abubakr Nour, 34, has been sentenced to 30 months in prison.

Nour, who pleaded guilty a year ago, operated the tax prep business Skyman Tax and for tax years 2016 through 2018 prepared and filed at least 27 false individual federal income tax returns for clients.

These returns included falsely claimed business income that inflated refunds so that he could pay himself large prep fees. Nour’s clients had no knowledge that he was filing false tax returns under their names.

Nour was also ordered to pay $150,154 in restitution to the United States for the false tax refunds.

Farmington, Connecticut: Tax preparer Mark Legowski, 60, has been sentenced to eight months in prison, to be followed by a year of supervised release, for filing false returns.

From January 2015 through December 2017, Legowski was a self-employed accountant and tax preparer doing business as Legowski & Co. Inc. He prepared income tax returns for some 400 to 500 individual clients and some 50 to 60 businesses.

To reduce his personal income tax liability for 2015 through 2017, Legowski underreported his practice’s gross receipts by excluding some client payment checks. He then filed false personal income tax returns that failed to report more than $1.4 million in business income, which resulted in a loss to the IRS of $499,289.

Legowski, who pleaded guilty earlier this year, has paid the IRS that amount in back taxes but must still pay penalties and interest. He has also been ordered to pay a $10,000 fine.

Wheeling, West Virginia: Dr. Nitesh Ratnakar, 48, has been convicted of failing to pay nearly $2.5 million in payroll taxes.

Ratnakar, who was found guilty of 41 counts of tax fraud, owned and operated a gastroenterology practice and a medical equipment manufacturer in Elkins, West Virginia. He withheld payroll taxes from employees’ paychecks and failed to make $2,419,560 in required payments to the IRS. Ratnakar also filed false tax returns in 2020, 2021 and 2022.

He faces up to five years in prison for each of the first 38 tax fraud counts and up to three years for the remaining counts.

Orlando, Florida: Two men have been sentenced for their involvement in the “Note Program,” a tax fraud.

Jasen Harvey, of Tampa, Florida, was sentenced to four years in prison and Christopher Johnson, of Orlando, was sentenced to 37 months for conspiring to defraud the U.S.

From 2015 to 2018, they promoted a scheme in which Harvey and others prepared returns for clients that claimed that large, nonexistent income tax withholdings had been paid to the IRS and sought large refunds based on those purported withholdings. The conspirators charged fees and required the clients to pay a share of the fraudulently obtained refunds to them.

Overall, the defendants claimed more than $3 million in fraudulent refunds on clients’ returns, of which the IRS paid about $1.5 million.

Both were also ordered to serve three years of supervised release. Johnson was also ordered to pay $864,117.42 in restitution to the United States; Harvey was ordered to pay $785,858.42 in restitution. Co-defendant Arthur Grimes will be sentenced on Jan. 13.

Ft. Lauderdale, Florida: Tax preparer Jean Volvick Moise, 39, has been sentenced to three years in prison for filing false income tax returns.

Moise prepared false returns for clients to inflate refunds. He prepared returns which included, among other things, false dependents, false 1099 withholdings, false educational credits and false Schedule C expenses, often for businesses which did not exist. Moise’s fee was larger than the typical one charged by a tax preparer.

Moise filed hundreds of false returns that caused the IRS to issue more than $574,000 in fraudulent refunds.

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Accounting

Accounting in 2025: The year ahead in numbers

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With 2025 almost upon us, it’s worth thinking about what the new year will bring, and what accounting firms expect their next 12 months to look like.

With that in mind, Accounting Today conducted its annual Year Ahead survey in the late fall to find out firms’ expectations for 2025, including their growth expectations, their hiring plans, their growth expectations, how they think tax season will play out and much more. The overall theme: Thing are going well, but there are elements of friction holding them back, particularly when it comes to moving to more of a focus on advisory services.

You can see the full report here; a selection of key data points are presented below.

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Accounting

On the move: Withum marks over a decade of Withum Week of Caring

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Citrin Cooperman appoints CIO; PKF O’Connor Davies opens new Fort Lauderdale office; and more news from across the profession.

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