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Criminal Tax Restitution, Fines and Forfeiture

Quick Answer

Criminal tax sentencing includes four financial consequences: (1) restitution — mandatory repayment of tax loss; (2) fines — up to $250K per count typically; (3) forfeiture of proceeds from tax fraud; and (4) civil tax liability with interest and civil fraud penalty still applicable. The short version is that criminal conviction doesn’t eliminate civil tax owed. In our experience, defendants often focus on prison but overlook the lasting financial consequences that persist long after release.1

Restitution question? A 15-minute consultation is free.

Four financial consequences of criminal tax conviction.

The Four Criminal Tax Financial Consequences

RestitutionTax Loss
Fines$250K Per Count
ForfeitureProceeds
CivilTax + Penalty
Restitution.
Consequence Authority2
Restitution 18 USC §3663A MVRA
Fines Per statute + §3571
Forfeiture 18 USC §981/982
Civil Tax Civil fraud + interest

Quick Reference

Jump to: restitution, fines, forfeiture, or civil.

1. Restitution

Mandatory repayment of tax loss per MVRA.

If this is you: Convicted of tax crime. Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (MVRA) — full tax loss repayment. Ordered at sentencing. Enforceable as judgment.

Restitution Strategy

  1. Challenge tax loss calculation.
  2. Identify legitimate offsets.
  3. Negotiate scope.
  4. Plan payment schedule.
  5. Preserve assets for civil tax.

2. Fines

Up to $250K per count typically (§3571).

If this is you: Convicted. Fines per 18 USC §3571. Typical felony: up to $250K. Misdemeanor: up to $100K. Discretionary within range.

3. Forfeiture

Forfeiture of proceeds of tax fraud.

If this is you: Benefits from tax fraud forfeited. Cash, property, accounts. Civil or criminal forfeiture procedures.

4. Civil Tax Liability

Tax + interest + 75% civil fraud penalty still apply.

If this is you: Criminal conviction establishes civil fraud. Civil tax + interest + 75% fraud penalty. Not dischargeable in bankruptcy.

Criminal conviction? Book consultation.

Restitution Document Lookup

Restitution docs.
Authority Purpose
18 USC §3663A (MVRA) Mandatory restitution
18 USC §3571 Fines
18 USC §981 / §982 Forfeiture
IRC §6663 75% civil fraud penalty
PSR Pre-sentence report

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Restitution Statute

  • Restitution enforceable 20 years (like judgments).
  • Civil tax statute preserved.
  • Not dischargeable in bankruptcy.

Restitution Patterns

Restitution outcomes. Source: Brotman Law practice.
Situation Outcome
Negotiated restitution Specific amount
Government calculation Full tax loss
Cooperation credit Possible reduction
Multi-year cases Substantial total

Restitution Process

PSR

Pre-sentence report calculates.

Sentencing

Court orders restitution.

Enforcement

Collection post-sentence.

First 48 Hours After Conviction

  1. Review PSR restitution calculation.
  2. Identify challenges.
  3. File PSR objections.
  4. Negotiate scope.
  5. Plan civil tax response.
Brotman Law handles restitution and post-conviction civil tax. Based in San Diego.

The ROI Question

Restitution + fines + civil tax can exceed original tax many times. Careful calculation challenge saves real money.

When to Engage

  • Pre-sentencing.
  • PSR review.
  • Restitution challenge.
  • Post-conviction civil.

Restitution question?

15-min consultation free.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is restitution?

Mandatory repayment of tax loss under MVRA (18 USC §3663A). Ordered at sentencing for tax crimes. Enforceable as federal judgment for 20 years.

What are fines?

Up to $250K per felony count under §3571. Up to $100K misdemeanor. Court discretion within range. Stacked across counts.

What is forfeiture?

Government seizure of proceeds from tax fraud. Cash, property, accounts. Separate from restitution. 18 USC §981 / §982.

Does civil tax still apply?

Yes. Criminal conviction doesn’t eliminate civil tax. Tax + interest + 75% civil fraud penalty. Civil exam continues.

Is restitution deductible?

Generally no under current law. Tax loss restitution = the tax owed. No double benefit.

Can I challenge restitution amount?

Yes at sentencing. PSR contains calculation. Object to errors, inflation, misattribution. Evidence-based challenge.

How long to pay?

Payment schedule set by court / probation. 20-year enforcement period. Monthly payments typical.

Can I discharge in bankruptcy?

No. Restitution and most criminal tax obligations non-dischargeable. Permanent liability.

What about interest on restitution?

Interest accrues per statute. Post-judgment interest rate. Compounds over time.

Can cooperation reduce restitution?

No. Cooperation affects sentence, not restitution amount. Restitution = tax loss.

What’s the PSR?

Pre-sentence report. Prepared by probation. Calculates guidelines, restitution, sentencing factors. Defense objection opportunity.

Does plea affect restitution?

Plea agreements can address but cannot waive. Court retains authority. Negotiation possible.

What happens post-release?

Restitution continues. Supervised release conditions may include payment. Civil enforcement via IRS collection.

If you have read this far, you have a notice and you are trying to understand it before doing anything that makes it worse. That instinct is correct.

The next right move is a 15-minute call. We will identify the audit type, confirm your deadline, and tell you honestly whether you need representation. There is no cost and no obligation.

Get a Candid Assessment — Free

Or call us directly at (619) 378-3138

Next Steps

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