New Jersey FBAR Tax Attorney – IRS FBAR Defense & Litigation

Foreign account reporting problems often do not start with a warning. They surface later, when the filing history, the account history, and the gaps between them begin to matter.

As a New Jersey FBAR tax attorney, Anthony N. Verni uses his dual credentials as a CPA and MBA to help clients address these matters with sound legal and tax judgment.

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FBAR Enforcement Landscape in New Jersey

For New Jersey taxpayers, FBAR enforcement can turn a quiet reporting issue into a high-stakes legal matter. If foreign accounts were not disclosed properly, the risk is not just correction. The risk is how the IRS chooses to treat the failure.

Why New Jersey Taxpayers Face Elevated FBAR Scrutiny

What puts many New Jersey taxpayers at risk is not always obvious at first. The issue is often built into a person’s financial life long before anyone sees it as an FBAR problem.

That can include:

  • New York-connected income, business activity, or executive compensation.
  • Foreign pensions or retirement benefits.
  • Inherited accounts held outside the U.S.
  • Long-standing family banking ties abroad.
  • Cross-border financial relationships that remained open over time.

On their own, these facts may seem ordinary. But once foreign account reporting comes into question, they can quickly become part of a much larger penalty issue.

At Verni Tax Law, the focus is on reviewing these facts early, understanding the real exposure, and protecting you before the IRS defines the case its own way.

Typical FBAR Issues for NJ Residents

Many FBAR problems in New Jersey do not begin with obvious wrongdoing. They usually begin with financial facts that felt too normal to question until the reporting issue came to light.

Common situations include:

  • Multiple foreign accounts that cross the reporting threshold when looked at together.
  • Inherited assets that remained in an overseas account.
  • Joint or family-held accounts.
  • Signature authority over a parent’s, relative’s, or business account.
  • Foreign pensions and older banking relationships outside the U.S.

These situations can create real FBAR exposure when the accounts were not reviewed, disclosed, or explained properly.

Mr. Anthony N. Verni's review focuses on exposure, account history, and how to address the facts before they escalate into a larger penalty dispute.
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Foreign Account Situations That May Need Legal Review

Some FBAR matters begin with facts that did not seem serious at the time. That is often why they go unaddressed until the issue draws closer attention.

This may be relevant if the matter involves:

  • Foreign accounts that were not reported.
  • Inherited funds still held outside the U.S.
  • Joint or family-held accounts abroad.
  • Signature authority over a parent’s, relative’s, or business account.
  • Foreign pensions or overseas retirement arrangements.
  • Multiple foreign accounts that may need to be looked at together.
  • IRS questions, notices, or growing concern about past reporting.

When these facts are present, the issue often needs more than a filing fix. It needs a careful review of the reporting history, the exposure, and the best next step.

What You Do Next Can Shape How This Matter Develops

Once foreign account reporting needs legal review, the response should be timely, measured, and built around protecting your position before the issue becomes harder to contain.
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FBAR Penalty Defense in the Third Circuit

In New Jersey, FBAR penalty defense depends on more than the missed filing itself. It depends on how the IRS classifies the conduct, how the penalty is measured, and how the case stands under Third Circuit law.

Non-Willful vs Willful FBAR Penalties After Recent Case Law

Penalty exposure often turns on one issue first: whether the IRS is treating the case as non-willful or willful.

That difference can shape:

  • The size of the penalty.
  • The government’s theory of the case.
  • The strength of the available defense.
  • The pressure on Appeals or litigation strategy.

Recent case law has affected how non-willful FBAR penalties may be calculated.

At Verni Tax Law, this part of the case is reviewed closely to challenge overreach and protect against unnecessary penalty exposure.

Using IRS FBAR Mitigation Guidelines Effectively

IRS penalty decisions are not made in a vacuum. Internal guidelines and examiner discretion can affect the outcome when the facts are supported and presented the right way.

That may include:

  • Building the account timeline.
  • Organizing supporting records.
  • Showing how the reporting issue developed.
  • Identifying facts that support mitigation.
  • Addressing the case before the IRS position becomes harder to move.
Mitigation is part of the Verni Tax Law mechanism, which is a focused defense strategy that aims to reduce exposure and improve the client's position at every stage.
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FBAR Audits, Appeals, and Litigation in New Jersey

An FBAR matter needs a different level of handling once the IRS has already opened the issue.

At that point, the case is no longer only about the filing itself. It becomes a question of how the IRS is reading the facts, how penalties are being pushed, and what should be done next before the matter becomes harder to control.

IRS Appeals vs Litigation Strategy

Once the IRS has taken a position, the next step should be chosen carefully. In some cases, the issue may still be addressed through Appeals. In others, the dispute may need to be handled with litigation in mind from an earlier stage.

This part of the case may involve:

  • Reviewing the IRS position closely.
  • Challenging proposed penalties.
  • Strengthening the factual record.
  • Deciding whether Appeals is the right next step.
  • Preparing for litigation where needed.

The value at this stage is not in reacting quickly. It is in choosing the response that best protects the case based on where the matter stands now.

Federal Court Considerations for NJ FBAR Cases

Some FBAR disputes require a broader legal review because the matter may not end at the IRS level.

When that risk is present, attention should be given to:

  • The strength of the government’s position.
  • The level of penalty exposure.
  • The condition of the existing record.
  • The steps already taken in the case.
  • What needs to be protected going forward.

A case that may move toward federal court should be reviewed with greater care early, while there is still room to shape the record and the defense position in a meaningful way.

If an FBAR matter is already under IRS review, the next step in any FBAR penalty defense in a New Jersey case should be based on strategy, not guesswork. Discuss the case, the current posture, and the available defense path before the matter becomes harder to manage.
Discuss FBAR Defense Strategy

Experience, Credentials, and Personal Attention Matter

The right representation in an FBAR matter is not only about technical knowledge. It is also about judgment, consistency, and knowing the case is being handled with care from start to finish.

Decades of Focus in Federal Tax Matters

Anthony N. Verni brings more than 25 years of experience handling complex federal tax matters, including compliance, enforcement, and litigation.

A Broader View of Tax Risk

His background as an attorney, CPA, and MBA allows him to look at tax matters from legal, financial, and reporting angles at the same time.

Personally Handled Representation

Anthony N. Verni gives each matter direct attention, which is especially important when the facts need careful review and the response needs to be handled thoughtfully.

Trusted by U.S. Taxpayers in New Jersey and Worldwide

Anthony N. Verni represents U.S. taxpayers in New Jersey, across the country, and abroad wherever U.S. tax obligations continue to apply.
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How a New Jersey FBAR Attorney Can Protect You

FBAR matters are best handled by counsel who can assess the legal, tax, and financial sides of the case together.

Anthony N. Verni is an FBAR attorney in New Jersey with dual credentials as a CPA and MBA, which provide him with the background to help clients deal with foreign account reporting issues, IRS penalty exposure, and more serious enforcement concerns with a careful and informed approach.

Audit Defense & Penalty Negotiation

When the IRS starts reviewing an FBAR issue, Anthony reviews the account history, filing history, and penalty exposure to determine how the case should be handled.

He approaches this stage with a focus on protecting the client’s position through a clear and well-supported response.

Criminal Investigation Risk Management

Some FBAR matters require a higher level of caution because the facts may raise concerns beyond civil penalties.

In matters with that level of exposure, Anthony reviews the facts carefully to assess risk, protect the record, and determine the right next step before the situation becomes harder to manage.

A Careful Response Now Can Protect Against Bigger FBAR Problems Later

Audit concerns, penalty exposure, and deeper IRS scrutiny should be addressed early. The right next step can make a real difference in how the matter moves forward.

Frequently Asked Questions

Don’t ignore the notice; check the 30-day deadline right away. Gather your account records and prove it was an honest mistake. Send a full response to the IRS to stop penalties and open appeal options. A local attorney makes sure you cover all bases in time.

If the IRS has not contacted you, use their Delinquent FBAR rules to file missing forms with a simple note. For non-willful cases with tax reporting done, Streamlined Procedures often mean no fines. Check your audit status first to pick the safe path.

Attorneys have deep experience spotting FBAR gaps in inherited accounts, and Anthony N. Verni, as an attorney, CPA, and MBA, can review your inheritance papers alongside past filings to find any reporting misses quickly.

He files late FBARs through IRS safe programs if the account hits over $10,000 after you receive it. Using exact dates and documents as proof, he shows the IRS that this was not willful, protecting your full balance from heavy penalties.

Yes, if you can sign or move money on family accounts abroad and the totals are over $10,000 any day. This catches many NJ families with overseas ties. List the details on your FBAR, but no tax is owed unless it’s income. Early review spots these issues.

Yes, IRS handbook rules let them drop fines with proof of cooperation and a clean history. Attorney gathers records and facts for 50-100% cuts. In NJ cases, this ties to local court strengths for better results.

Non-willful errors mean fines up to $16,000 per form per year, not per account, under recent court rules in New Jersey. Willful cases hit up to $161,000 or 50% of each account balance yearly. Third Circuit law makes the IRS prove intent clearly, helping defenses.

They check if the pension counts as reportable if it is controllable and over the threshold. File late forms and prove income reported for non-willful status. Use docs to negotiate lower risks, common for NJ with past global jobs.

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Hear from relieved
taxpayers who trusted Verni Tax Law

Anthony was creative in helping me resolve some past issues in a way that they never became a problem so that is greatly appreciated and I feel confident I can now enjoy my retirement with peace of mind. Thanks for that.

Ken B.

Cebu City, Philippines

I came to Anthony Verni with FBAR issues. I was not sure what to expect and felt that I was going to be put in a difficult position financially as well as legally. My fears were unfounded and I was very satisfied with his professionalism and the outcome of my case.

Douglas R.

Osaka, Japan

Anthony’s help with Swift & Secure Systems Inc., CheckWare Workstations LLC and my personal taxes have been of great value. Since moving to Florida (and my Connecticut Accountant retiring) I have tried various other methods of keeping the accounting and taxes under control.

Phil Y

President, Swift & Secure Systems Inc., Boynton Beach, FL

I would like to thank Anthony N. Verni.   Mr. Verni has successfully represented us before the Internal Revenue Service. We had foreign bank accounts that we inadvertently didn’t report and we were subject to steep penalties. As a result his efforts, the FBAR penalties were waived by the IRS.
Thank You

Yassin and Eva, B.

Farmington Hills, Michigan