2025 Standard Mileage Rates Released (Notice 2025-5; IR-2024-312)
The IRS released the optional standard mileage rates for 2025. Most taxpayers may use these rates to compute deductible costs […]
Read MoreThe American Institute of CPAs is encouraging business owners to continue to collect required beneficial ownership information as required by the Corporate Transparency Act even though the regulations have been halted for the moment.
AICPA noted that the while there a preliminary injunction has been put in place nationwide by a U.S. district court, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network has already filed its appeal and the rules could be still be reinstated.
“While we do not know how the Fifth Circuit court will respond, the AIPCA continues to advise members that, at a minimum, those assisting clients with BOI report filings continue to gather the required information from their clients and [be] prepared to file the BOI report if the inunction is lifted,” AICPA Vice President of Tax Policy & Advocacy Melanie Lauridsen said in a statement.
She continued: “The AICPA realizes that there is a lot of confusion and anxiety that business owners have struggled with regarding BOI reporting requirements and we, together with our partners at the State CPA societies, have continued to advocate for a delay in the implementation of this requirement.”
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas granted on December 3, 2024, a motion for preliminary injunction requested in a lawsuit filed by Texas Top Cop Shop Inc., et al, against the federal government to halt the implementation of BOI regulations.
In his order granting the motion for preliminary injunction, United States District Judge Amos Mazzant wrote that its “most rudimentary level, the CTA regulates companies that are registered to do business under a State’s laws and requires those companies to report their ownership, including detailed, personal information about their owners, to the Federal Government on pain of severe penalties.”
He noted that this request represents a “drastic” departure from history:
First, it represents a Federal attempt to monitor companies created under state law – a matter our federalist system has left almost exclusively to the several States; and
Second, the CTA ends a feature of corporate formations as designed by various States – anonymity.
“For good reason, Plaintiffs fear this flanking, quasi-Orwellian statute and its implications on our dual system of government,” he continued. “As a result, the Plantiffs contend that the CTA violates the promises our Constitution makes to the People and the States. Despite attempting to reconcile the CTA with the Constitution at every turn, the Government is unable to provide the Court with any tenable theory that the CTA falls within Congress’s power.”
By Gregory Twachtman, Washington News Editor
The IRS released the optional standard mileage rates for 2025. Most taxpayers may use these rates to compute deductible costs […]
Read MoreThe IRS, in partnership with the Coalition Against Scam and Scheme Threats (CASST), has unveiled new initiatives for the 2025 […]
Read MoreThe IRS reminded disaster-area taxpayers that they have until February 3, 2025, to file their 2023 returns, in the entire […]
Read MoreThe IRS has announced plans to issue automatic payments to eligible individuals who failed to claim the Recovery Rebate Credit on their […]
Read MoreFlorida has issued motor vehicle sales tax rates by state as of January 15, 2025. Florida law allows a partial […]
Read MoreFor purposes of calculating the 2025 intangible personal property tax on governmental leaseholds, the Florida Department of Revenue has issued […]
Read MoreThe IRS, along with Security Summit partners, urged businesses and individual taxpayers to update their security measures and practices to protect against […]
Read MoreThe IRS has issued its 2024 Required Amendments List (2024 RA List) for individually designed employee retirement plans. RA Lists […]
Read More