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    Home»Nerd Voices»NV Health/Lifestyle/Travel»Small Biz Tax Expert Nicole Davis On Recent IRS Prosecutions:  In 2026 the Tax Man Has Definitely Not  Forgotten Covid
    Small Biz Tax Expert Nicole Davis On Recent IRS Prosecutions
    Nicole Davis
    NV Health/Lifestyle/Travel

    Small Biz Tax Expert Nicole Davis On Recent IRS Prosecutions:  In 2026 the Tax Man Has Definitely Not  Forgotten Covid

    Suleman BalochBy Suleman BalochJune 10, 20266 Mins Read
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    When it comes to skipped taxes, American small business culture runs on magical thinking. Or Hopeum, take your pick. So biz owners are repeatedly convincing themselves they’ll “catch up next quarter.” Restaurant owners quietly stop opening IRS mail while still obsessively checking Yelp reviews while legions of contractors who would never miss a truck payment somehow decide payroll taxes can wait another six months (because business is “temporarily weird”). But don’t think the IRS is too incompetent, understaffed, distracted, or backward to notice.

    Some SBE proprietors are finding out the hard way that the current IRS is not an exhausted bureaucracy. It is more like a data company with advanced AI tools and subpoena power- and now zooming in on money that disappeared during Covid.

    Nicole Davis, an enrolled agent and tax resolution specialist from OfferInCompromise.com, has been seeing this unfold and is now busy warning her clients that most tax disasters start with avoidance leading to disorganization (and maybe a little shame). They kept hoping the problem would somehow shrink while ignored. No, it does not shrink. So learn from the following case studies Davis provided:

    Payroll Taxes: Where the IRS Stops Being Patient

    The federal government treats payroll taxes very differently from ordinary tax debt, and many small business owners do not grasp that distinction until it is much too late.

    This year, a former Houston CPA named Harry Lamar Curtis III was sentenced to federal prison after prosecutors said he withheld payroll taxes from employee checks and failed to send the money to the IRS. Authorities alleged the diverted amount exceeded $1.6 million. Now here’s where entrepreneurs start lying to themselves.

    A struggling owner looks at payroll withholding money sitting in an account and thinks: temporary liquidity. Short-term bridge loan. Emergency float. The IRS hears: you spent government money. That is not semantic nuance. That is the entire ballgame.

    Payroll withholdings are considered trust fund taxes. The government believes employees already paid them the moment deductions left the paycheck. So when owners use that money to keep the lights on, cover suppliers, or limp through another quarter, investigators may interpret the conduct less like “falling behind” and more like misappropriation.

    Davis has repeatedly warned that taxpayers underestimate how quickly civil tax problems can mutate into conduct the government considers intentional. And once intent enters the room, things get expensive fast.

    Pandemic Fraud Cases Are Still Coming

    Somewhere along the way, people convinced themselves pandemic loan enforcement was over. Maybe because COVID itself became psychologically exhausting. Maybe because the sheer scale of fraud made accountability seem impossible. Or maybe because America collectively decided to memory-hole 2020 and move on to arguing about AI replacing interns. Unfortunately for taxpayers, the IRS did not move on.

    Investigators are still comparing PPP and EIDL applications against tax filings, payroll records, banking activity, incorporation records, and prior-year returns. What looked chaotic in real time now looks highly searchable.

    One Southern California businessman pleaded guilty after prosecutors alleged he secured more than $1 million in relief funds tied to companies that had reportedly stopped operating before the pandemic even began. According to court filings, some of the money financed luxury purchases, including a Porsche Turbo Cabriolet.Which is a deeply American detail, honestly. If you’re going to commit federal fraud, apparently somebody always ends up buying a luxury car.

    But beneath the tabloid optics sits a broader issue. A huge number of small businesses filed rushed paperwork during the pandemic. Incomplete records. Inflated estimates. Contradictory filings. Sloppy accounting done under stress.Not every discrepancy becomes criminal.That part matters.

    Davis has emphasized that many taxpayers catastrophize too early and then make even worse decisions because they panic. Some stop filing entirely after one bad year because they assume they’re already doomed. Others avoid speaking to professionals because they think contact itself creates risk.

    In reality, the IRS often escalates cases because people disappear, ignore notices, or continue compounding the same conduct year after year. The cover-up mentality creates half the damage.

    Three Things Putting Business Owners on the IRS Radar Unfiled Returns

    A shocking number of business owners believe “not filing” somehow delays enforcement indefinitely. What it actually does is surrender control.

    The IRS can file Substitute for Returns on your behalf using whatever income information it already possesses. Those calculations are rarely charitable. No strategic deductions. No nuanced accounting. No effort to reduce liability. Just maximum extraction mode. And once penalties and interest start stacking, the numbers become surreal. 1099-K Reporting

    Payment apps turned millions of casual operators into accidentally traceable businesses.

    Venmo. Stripe. PayPal. Cash App.

    For years, people treated digital payment platforms like invisible side-door banking systems. Now the IRS receives reporting data directly. Which means the government may already know roughly what your gross receipts look like before your accountant even opens QuickBooks.

    This does not automatically mean you are a criminal.

    But it does mean invisibility is over.

    “Borrowing” Tax Money

    Small business owners love euphemisms.

    “We floated payroll.”

    “We redirected funds.”

    “We had a temporary cash crunch.”

    Federal investigators use different wording.

    That disconnect destroys people.

    Because many entrepreneurs still psychologically frame unpaid payroll taxes as business debt when the government increasingly frames them as diverted public funds. Those are not remotely the same thing.

    The Real Mistake Is Waiting Too Long

    The tax resolution industry itself has not helped matters. Late-night commercials spent years convincing desperate taxpayers that the IRS was some cartoon villain that could instantly be neutralized with one weird trick and a toll-free number. Reality is less dramatic and much more bureaucratic.

    There are legitimate resolution programs. Installment agreements. Penalty abatements. Offers in Compromise. Voluntary disclosure procedures. In some cases, taxpayers can absolutely stabilize ugly situations before they spiral further.

    But timing matters.

    Documentation matters.

    Cooperation matters.

    And contrary to internet mythology, the IRS rarely rewards people for disappearing.

    Davis has argued that taxpayers often wait until garnishments begin or revenue officers physically appear before seeking professional help. By then, options narrow sharply.

    Which brings us back to the central delusion driving so many small business tax problems in America:

    The belief that time itself is somehow solving the issue. Very often, time is the thing quietly building the case.

    Do You Want to Know More?

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    Suleman Baloch

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