Madoff, Stanford Victims Can Get Break From IRS

Taxpayers may deduct up to 95% of Ponzi losses: commissioner
By Matt Cantor,  Newser Staff
Posted Mar 17, 2009 12:35 PM CDT
Madoff, Stanford Victims Can Get Break From IRS
IRS Commissioner Douglas Shulman arrives on Capitol Hill today to testify before the Senate Finance Committee hearing on tax issues related to Ponzi schemes.    (AP Photo)

Victims of Ponzi schemes—including those perpetrated by Bernard Madoff and R. Allen Stanford—can claim big deductions on their taxes, the IRA commissioner told lawmakers today. The matter, unclear in the tax code, had been a concern for victims, the New York Times reports. The IRS “is issuing guidance articulating the tax rules that apply and providing ‘safe harbor’ procedures,” Douglas Shulman said.

The losses will be labeled theft losses instead of capital losses, meaning a bigger break for most, Bloomberg adds. Madoff investors who aren’t suing him can deduct 95% of their lost cash and claim the rest later; those who are suing can claim a 75% deduction.

(More Bernard Madoff stories.)

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