From my family to yours. We are thankful for your friendship.
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Sunday, December 18, 2016
The Morning Line
I subbed for Paul Daugherty's The Morning Line Blog again on Friday. I compiled a Christmas Wish List for local sports teams and wished three lumps of coal for the University of Louisville. I hope you enjoy it.
Monday, December 5, 2016
Once a Deceiver
Robert Oesterland and Sarah Pursglove made an enormous fortune in various business such as promising people credit cards, forming membership style clubs for various items such as DVDs, and selling web browser toolbars promising to remove computer viruses. When Pursglove started divorce proceedings, Oesterland swore in court that he was only worth several million dollars. Although Pursglove was unaware of their financial details, she knew they had several assets alone worth more than that, including a $30 million Toronto penthouse and a yacht that cost several million dollars annually to operate. When Pursglove started investigating their finances, she discovered they were difficult to determine because of the opacity provided by the use of myriad LLCs and trusts in tax haven destinations. The divorce is still on-going.
Several points:
1. Wealthy individuals use off-shore trusts to protect their wealth from creditors as an advanced form of asset protection planning.
2. Wealthy individuals also use off-shore trusts to hide their assets from taxation in an illegal form of tax avoidance.
3. It is no surprise that a man who made money by signing people up for memberships that continually charged their credit cards, promised credit cards to people but only gave them a list of credit card companies, and sold browser toolbars with no benefits would deceive his wife in divorce proceedings.
Illustration from New York Times
License: Fair Use for Education Purposes
Several points:
1. Wealthy individuals use off-shore trusts to protect their wealth from creditors as an advanced form of asset protection planning.
2. Wealthy individuals also use off-shore trusts to hide their assets from taxation in an illegal form of tax avoidance.
3. It is no surprise that a man who made money by signing people up for memberships that continually charged their credit cards, promised credit cards to people but only gave them a list of credit card companies, and sold browser toolbars with no benefits would deceive his wife in divorce proceedings.
Illustration from New York Times
License: Fair Use for Education Purposes
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