Although some civil settlement payments are deductible, their
deterrence factor could be lessened if companies can deduct certain
settlement payments from their income taxes. GAO was asked to (1)
identify federal agencies that negotiated some of the largest dollar
civil settlements, (2) determine whether selected federal agencies take
tax consequences into account when negotiating settlements and
officials' views on whether they should address payment deductibility
in settlement agreements, (3) determine whether companies with some of
the largest civil settlement payments deducted any of the payments on
their federal income taxes, and (4) determine what information the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) collects on civil settlements reached by
federal agencies.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and Department of Justice
(DOJ) negotiated civil settlements that were among the largest in the
federal government in fiscal years 2001 and 2002. Also, the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS) was involved in negotiating some of
the largest dollar False Claims Act (FCA) health-care civil settlements
for which DOJ has primary responsibility. The largest civil settlements
at these agencies ranged from about $870 thousand to over $1 billion.
Officials in the four agencies we surveyed said that they do not
negotiate with settling companies about whether settlement amounts are
tax deductible. They said it was IRS's role to determine deductibility.
In preparing to negotiate environmental settlements, EPA and DOJ may
consider certain tax issues in calculating the amounts they propose to
seek. This calculation estimates a company's economic benefit, that is,
the financial gain from not complying with the law. Some DOJ
environmental settlements with civil penalties have language stating
that penalties are not deductible. DOJ officials said since the law is
generally clear that civil penalties paid to a government are not
deductible, stating so in the agreement was merely restating the law
and is not necessary. The majority of companies responding to GAO's
survey on how they treated civil settlement payments for federal income
tax purposes deducted civil settlement payments when their settlement
agreements did not label the payments as penalties. GAO received
responses on 34 settlements totaling over $1 billion. For 20
settlements, companies reported deducting some portion or all of their
settlement payments. IRS does not systematically receive civil
settlement information from all four agencies. IRS officials said that
a permanent system for agencies to provide information would be useful.
IRS obtains information on a case-by-case basis from public sources and
agencies. IRS also has two temporary compliance projects focusing on
tax issues that affect settlement payment deductibility. In 2004, IRS
introduced a tax schedule to provide information on a company's fines,
penalties, and punitive damages.
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