How the world’s wealthy hide millions offshore - from their spouses
Why an
Alaska plastic surgeon took a sudden road trip to Panama with millions of
dollars
When Michael Brandner, a plastic surgeon in
Anchorage, packed his bags and drove more than 4,000 miles from Washington
state to Costa Rica in 2007, he wasn’t just getting away from it all. Not long
before, Brandner’s wife of 28 years had filed for a divorce. According to a
later indictment and court documents, the doctor "collected" $3
million of his and his wife’s assets, converted them into cashier’s checks and
set off on a secret trip.
In Costa Rica, Brandner opened a bank account
to deposit some of the money and put a thousand ounces of gold in a safety
deposit box. Then he traveled to Panama, where he opened an account in the name
of a sham organization, Dakota Investment, according to prosecutors' documents
from the case. In 2008, he deposited $4.6 million into the account. Brandner
also did not report the accounts to the Internal Revenue Service. During the
divorce proceedings, Brandner claimed the money was tied up in these
investments and could not be returned, and that the investments were then lost.
Brandner went to all this trouble, the
Justice Department says, to conceal assets from his wife, who could have been
awarded some of them. Ultimately, U.S. investigators seized the assets. The
doctor pleaded not guilty to the charges, but on April 4 of this year, he was
sentenced to 48 months in prison for wire fraud and tax evasion.
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Brandner's case draws attention to a less
widely recognized use of offshore accounts -- hiding assets from a spouse in
divorce -- that was highlighted by the leak this month of the Panama Papers,
which contain many details about the secretive offshore companies and accounts
of public officials, drug kingpins and money launderers. The Washington Post
has not reviewed the 11.5 million documents.
Brandner declined to be interviewed directly,
but his lawyer, Randall Ensminger, offered several defenses. He says that
Brandner did not evade taxes on purpose — he just didn’t know that he needed to
file for the offshore accounts — and that he took the money to Panama not to
defraud his wife but to protect their assets during a time of emotional
upheaval in their relationship. Brandner's intent in taking the money to Panama
was "to protect it on behalf of his heirs," says Ensminger.
Experts in the industry say that Americans
are still hiding money offshore from
litigious spouses and tax officials alike, but it is getting harder for
them to do so. In the last few years, the Obama administration and the Treasury
department have erected staggering penalties for those who hide their wealth
offshore, as well as many new reporting requirements, says Daniel Jones, a
forensic accountant who specializes in the issue.
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