68Camaro wrote:No idea what "structuring" is (guess that's something else I'll have to look up), but if the windfall was of such a large amount that it would have created inheritance taxes then anything they do to avoid those taxes would be a problem if they were found out. If the inheritance wouldn't have generated taxes then it wouldn't matter how they do it IMHO - in that case if they prefer to keep it low profile and want to split it into little piles I believe that's their business.
68Camaro wrote: The only issue would be if their mutiple $9900 deposits raised a flag and the government claimed that they were doing something illegal, and then confiscated it lacking that they had proof it was theirs.
IdahoCopper wrote:Tell the OP to come over here and start buying AG.
creshka46 wrote:First of all, if I was going to receive an inheritance like that, I'd just go ahead and do it the legit way. Money received from an inheritance is not taxable to to recipient but it would only be distributed out after the estate itself is taxed. However, the threshold for triggering estate taxes is quite high (somewhere around $5 million I think) so this $30,000 probably wouldn't be taxed anyway. Granted, I'm just assuming that the total estate is less than $5m.
However, if he did wish to not disclose this, I would say a good route to go would be to start using this cash to pay for as much as possible: groceries, gas, clothes, car repairs, etc. and then he'd be able to save that much more from his paychecks. It doesn't have that instant gratification feeling, but he could probably work through $30,000 in 2-3 years and then he would be sitting on a savings account of equal value that was funded entirely by his own paychecks, not some mysterious cash lump sum.
68Camaro wrote:The money is theirs. It doesn't need to be disclosed. It's no one's business. AFAIK it is not illegal to deposit money that is yours in any amounts you choose. The only issue would be if their mutiple $9900 deposits raised a flag and the government claimed that they were doing something illegal, and then confiscated it lacking that they had proof it was theirs. So their question really is what do they need to do to fly under the radar. That one I can't really answer with any certainty. When the government chooses to operate illegally themselves then all bets are off.
JerrySpringer wrote:I was reading on another forum how someone got a windfall inheritance in cash and needed advice. One reply was to add it to their bank account periodically in small deposits. That was called structuring and is illegal (remember Spitzer?) according to another reply. So, when we have many bank accounts to make deposits and buy coins with, etc, is that structuring technically? And if not, how do banks or the government for that matter ever know the aggregate value of those accounts? Do you think banks report account values routinely to the fed with SSN info and then the fed can see who is mysteriously having money move around from account to account?
highroller4321 wrote:68Camaro wrote:... When the government chooses to operate illegally themselves then all bets are off.
...
So no it isn't anyone's business....but somehow it becomes their business.
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