The Mafia. The Mob. La Cosa Nostra. Call it what you will,
this "certain Italian-American subculture" has a long and storied
history. Mobsters like Al Capone, Henry Hill, and John Gotti have become
folk heroes of a certain sociopathic sort. Fictional mobsters make
special guest appearances alongside pop culture icons — witness The Simpsons' "Fat Tony" D'Amico, crime boss of Springfield.
Organized crime also has a long history of tangling with tax
authorities. Try as they might, Elliot Ness and his fellow
"Untouchables" couldn't jail Al Capone for bootlegging, bribery, or the
St. Valentine's Day Massacre. It took IRS agent Frank Wilson three years
of dogged investigation to finally put Capone behind bars for the
pedestrian offense of failing to pay his taxes. Even Tony Soprano knew
enough to report a salary from his waste management business to keep the
IRS off his back.
Earlier this month, the Mob was back in the news as the FBI unsealed an indictment
and arrested 46 members of various New York and Philadelphia-area crime
families. The suspects sported the usual collection of colorful
nicknames like "Tony the Wig," "Anthony the Kid," "Tony the Cripple,"
and "Mustache Pat." But their actual crimes seemed a far cry from the
wars that defined the Mob's glory days. While the indictment included
old-school staples like gunrunning, loansharking, and bookmaking, it
also featured "participation trophy" offenses like health care fraud,
credit card fraud, and selling untaxed cigarettes.
Cigarette smuggling might sound like a penny-ante crime, especially
compared to the whacking, kneecapping, and "protection" rackets of mob
legend. ("Nice business ya got here. Be a real shame if anything
happened to it.") But the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives estimates that black-market smokes cost governments $5
billion per year. In New York, where the tax is $4.35 per pack, an
estimated 57% of all sales involve smuggled cigarettes. And every time
the tax goes up, so do the incentives to smuggle.
How does the scheme actually work? Simple arbitrage. Buy your
cigarettes someplace cheap like Virginia, where the tax is just 30 cents
per pack. Truck them up I-95 to New York City. Sell them at a discount
to bodegas and other independent retailers. Then conveniently "forget"
to tell the tax man about it. Smugglers generally make between $4 and $6
per pack. That means a single truckload, which contains 48,000 cartons,
can light up nearly $3 million in profit.
Numbers like that make "bootlegging" so attractive that terrorists
have fired up their own efforts. The 1993 World Trade Center bombing, in
fact, was financed by cigarette smuggling. In 2002, a federal jury
convicted a Lebanon native of smuggling cigarettes from North Carolina
to Michigan to funnel profits for Hezbollah. And investigators believe
that European cigarette smugglers help pay for ISIS's reign of terror,
too, both in the Middle East and throughout Europe.
Here's the lesson from today's sad story of Mob decline. Every financial move you make involves at least some tax consideration. Now, snuffing out those taxes shouldn't be your sole
priority. But once you've made the right financial choice, your next
step should be to find the most tax-efficient way to do it. That's where
we come in. So call us for the plan you need, and watch those unwanted taxes go up in smoke!
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