Structures tax controversy management with audit defense, protest, and appeals documentation. Use when managing tax audits, preparing protest letters, or documenting audit defense positions.
A client receives an IRS or state audit notice (e.g., CP2000, Letter 950, IDR) and needs a structured defense strategy
Preparing a formal protest letter to IRS Appeals or state equivalent after an adverse examination result
Coordinating multi-year or multi-entity audit defense across federal, state, and international jurisdictions
Tracking statute of limitations, consent-to-extend deadlines, and procedural milestones during an active controversy
Evaluating settlement posture at any stage — examination, Appeals conference, or pre-litigation
Inputs To Gather
Audit notice or IDR: Full copy of the notice, information document request, or revenue agent report (RAR) with proposed adjustments
Tax returns at issue: Filed returns for all periods under examination, including amended returns and elections
Supporting documentation: Workpapers, substantiation records, third-party statements, and prior correspondence with the examining agent
Entity and jurisdictional details: Entity type, filing jurisdictions, transfer pricing exposure, treaty positions, and any pending related examinations [VERIFY — confirm all open audit years and jurisdictions]
相關技能
Statute of limitations status: Dates of original filing, any extensions (Form 872 / 872-A), and current expiration dates
Prior controversy history: Past audit outcomes, closing agreements, or Appeals settlements that may establish precedent or consistency positions
Client risk tolerance and objectives: Settlement authority, appetite for litigation, reputational considerations, and budget constraints
Workflow
Triage the Notice
Classify the controversy type: correspondence audit, office exam, field exam, TEFRA/BBA partnership proceeding, or international (LMSB/LB&I campaign) [VERIFY — confirm current IRS organizational structure and campaign applicability]
Identify the proposed adjustments and compute the tax, interest, and penalty exposure
Check statute of limitations — determine whether a consent to extend has been or should be requested
Confirm whether the issue is a factual dispute (documentation gap) or a legal/interpretive dispute (authority-based)
Build the Defense File
Organize documents by issue, mapping each proposed adjustment to the taxpayer's position and supporting authority
Prepare an issue-by-issue analysis: state the facts, cite the applicable IRC section, regulation, and relevant case law or rulings
Identify weaknesses — flag positions where documentation is thin, authority is adverse, or the factual record is ambiguous
For international issues, address treaty-based positions, transfer pricing methodology (IRC §482, OECD Guidelines), and any Competent Authority considerations
Draft the Protest or Response
For 30-day letter responses: prepare a formal written protest including the required elements — taxpayer identification, tax periods, itemized adjustments, statement of facts under penalties of perjury, and statement of law [VERIFY — confirm current IRS protest requirements per IRM 8.6.1]
For IDR responses: provide responsive documents with a cover letter preserving objections and limiting scope
For state controversies: follow the specific protest format and deadline rules of the taxing jurisdiction [VERIFY — state-specific rules vary significantly]
Manage the Appeals Process
Prepare a pre-conference memorandum summarizing the issues, hazards of litigation for both sides, and settlement range
Develop a concession strategy — identify issues to concede early to strengthen credibility on high-value positions
Track the Appeals officer's settlement authority and escalate to IRS Counsel referral if necessary
Document all oral communications with contemporaneous memos
Assess Litigation Readiness
If Appeals is unsuccessful, evaluate forum selection: U.S. Tax Court (pre-payment), U.S. District Court or Court of Federal Claims (refund suit requiring full payment) [VERIFY — confirm jurisdictional requirements and filing deadlines]
Prepare a litigation risk assessment with probability-weighted exposure analysis
Output
Controversy Status Report: Summary of all open issues, current stage, exposure (tax + interest + penalties), statute dates, and next action items
Protest Letter or Formal Response: Issue-by-issue written protest or IDR response ready for filing
Appeals Strategy Memo: Pre-conference memorandum with hazards analysis, concession strategy, and recommended settlement range
Exposure Analysis: Probability-weighted matrix showing best case, likely case, and worst case outcomes per issue
Milestone Tracker: Timeline of all critical deadlines — response due dates, statute expirations, conference dates, and filing windows
Quality Checks
Verify all statute of limitations dates are current and no deadlines are at risk of expiring without action
Confirm each proposed adjustment is addressed individually — no issues are left uncontested without an explicit concession decision
Cross-check cited authority (IRC sections, regulations, case law) for accuracy and current validity
Ensure the protest letter meets all procedural requirements for the specific jurisdiction and forum
Validate exposure calculations including interest computation methodology (IRC §6621 rates, compounding) and applicable penalties (accuracy-related under §6662, fraud under §6663) [VERIFY — confirm current underpayment interest rates]
Confirm the defense strategy is consistent with positions taken on filed returns and in prior audit cycles
Flag any positions requiring disclosure under IRC §6694 (preparer penalties) or §6662 (substantial authority / reasonable basis thresholds)