United States of America v. Civ. Annette B. DeMauro

2021 DNH 085P
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedMay 18, 2021
Docket17-cv-640-JL
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2021 DNH 085P (United States of America v. Civ. Annette B. DeMauro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America v. Civ. Annette B. DeMauro, 2021 DNH 085P (D.N.H. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

United States of America

v. Civ. 17-cv-640-JL Opinion No. 2021 DNH 085P Annette B. DeMauro

MEMORANDUM ORDER Annette B. DeMauro has moved to amend the verdict1 and judgment against her in

this case under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e). After a two-day bench trial and post-trial briefing,

the court found that the United States had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that DeMauro’s failure to timely report the existence of nearly $ 3 million she had hidden

away in foreign banks during the 2007, 2008, and 2009 calendar years was willful, as that

term is generally construed in the civil context, and was thus subject to enhanced

penalties under applicable law. See 31 U.S.C. § 5314 and 31 C.F.R. § 1010.350. The

court also found that the United States had not proven by clear and convincing evidence

that DeMauro’s failure to timely file tax returns during that period evinced the specific

fraudulent intent to evade tax, as required for the assessment of separate, enhanced

penalties for late tax filings. See 26 U.S.C. § 6651.

In the instant motion, DeMauro challenges the first aspect of the court’s verdict under the guise that the court’s conclusion—that she willfully failed to timely file Foreign

Bank and Accounting Reports (“FBARs”)—was clearly erroneous. At best, her

arguments amount to mere disagreement with how the court judged each witness’s

1 See August 28, 2020 Memorandum Order and Verdict After Bench Trial (doc. no. 48) at 35 (“Aug. 28, 2020 Mem. Order and Verdict”). credibility and weighed the evidence of record—evidence which DeMauro never objected to (or sought to limit under Federal Rule of Evidence 105) at any point prior to

the court’s verdict. These arguments do not meet the exacting standard for granting

Rule 59 relief. Nor do they persuade the court that it materially misapprehended the law or facts of this case, or erred in weighing how the totality of the evidence affected the

ultimate question of DeMauro’s intent. Accordingly, the court denies DeMauro’s motion.

Background The court has provided a thorough account of this case’s background in its

August 28, 2020 Memorandum Order and Verdict. The following draws from that

Order’s findings, restating the facts most pertinent to the instant motion.

A. Annette DeMauro’s foreign accounts and failure to file tax returns Annette DeMauro is an 83-year old resident of Rye Beach, New Hampshire, who

up until 2002, never filed a tax return or financial disclosure for herself or her family. In

2000—the same year she finalized a contested divorce—DeMauro opened a numbered

bank account with UBS AG—a bank based in Switzerland—to protect her divorce

proceeds from her vengeful ex-husband. Under the divorce decree, the court awarded

DeMauro a $35 million cash judgment, as well as several properties across the east coast of the United States. DeMauro’s ex-husband never paid the cash judgment, prompting

DeMauro to sell some of the properties awarded to her to cover her personal expenses

and considerable litigation bills.

In 2001, DeMauro sold a property in Florida for approximately $7 million, earning

about $3.5 million in net sale proceeds after paying approximately $2.5 million in

property taxes and legal fees and remitting nearly $1.0 million to the IRS in anticipation of her 2001 federal income tax liability. The following year, DeMauro’s counsel retained

2 certified public accountant Ronald Ouellet to prepare a tax return reporting the sale of the property for DeMauro and claiming a refund for an overpayment of tax. This was the

first tax return filed by DeMauro. That same year, DeMauro instructed her counsel to

transfer the proceeds from the real estate sale to her UBS account in Switzerland rather than to her domestic bank account at USAA Bank.

From 2002 to 2013, DeMauro’s foreign bank accounts (first at UBS and then at

two other banks) accumulated considerable interest annually. As interest accrued,

DeMauro regularly transferred portions of her foreign savings to her domestic account at

USAA, most times through the client account at her divorce attorney’s law firm.

Notably, DeMauro neither paid taxes on interest income earned from these accounts nor reported the existence of these accounts to federal authorities until investigated by the

IRS. In fact, DeMauro filed no timely tax returns after 2001 and no timely FBARs

whatsoever until investigated.2 DeMauro testified at trial that it was her “understanding . . . that whatever [she] received from the - - [her] divorce decree was [hers] and [hers]

alone and that went for anything that [she] had received and it was nontaxable.”3

DeMauro further asserted that she reached this conclusion without consulting any of the

attorneys or other professionals she had historically relied on for advice throughout her

nine-year-long contested divorce proceeding, despite having paid taxes on gains

2 The record shows that Ouellet prepared a draft tax return for 2005 after the sale of another divorce property, but this return was never filed. 3 Aug. 28, 2020 Mem. Order and Verdict (doc. no. 48) at 3-4 (quoting Feb. 18, 2020 AM Tr. (doc. no. 34) at 110:1-7) (internal quotation marks omitted).

3 associated with her sale of real property and having prepared a draft tax return identifying interest income earned from her domestic bank accounts.4

In 2006, DeMauro’s account manager at UBS took a position with a competing

bank, Zürcher Kantonalbank, also located in Switzerland, prompting DeMauro to transfer her account holdings, nearly $3.2 million at the time, to a new, numbered bank account

with Zürcher Kantonalbank. Then, in 2009, she moved her money to Oberbank, located

in the Czech Republic, after her account manager had told her that the Swiss government

was making Americans close their Swiss bank accounts. DeMauro never inquired as to

why the Swiss government purportedly took this action. When opening her Oberbank

account, DeMauro listed her Rye Beach home address but did not use her own name. Instead, she listed her distant Czech relatives—Ivo Strunc and Eva Struncova—as the

account owners. Eventually, she visited the Czech Republic and opened additional

accounts in her own name before completely liquidating the remainder of her Zürcher accounts.

From 2009 to 2013, DeMauro made several transfers from her foreign bank

accounts to her domestic account at USAA Bank using her attorney’s client account as an

intermediary. Occasionally, she made direct transfers to her USAA account. She also

made withdrawals by making checks out to Ivo Strunc, on one occasion, in the amount of

nearly $540,000. Around 2010, the IRS commenced an investigation related to DeMauro’s income tax liabilities. Between 2012 and 2013, she completely liquidated her

foreign accounts by transferring the remaining money—by then over $1.3 million—to her

4 See Aug. 28, 2020 Mem. Order and Verdict (doc. no. 48) at 29-30 (citing Feb. 18, 2020 PM Tr. (doc. no. 37) at 80:21-84:7); DeMauro’s 2005 Draft Return (Trial Ex. 8).

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Related

United States v. DeMauro
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2021 DNH 085P, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-v-civ-annette-b-demauro-nhd-2021.