Share this article

Legitimate? IRS Defends Coinbase Customer Investigation in Court Filing

The IRS has submitted new arguments in its tax investigation dispute with cryptocurrency exchange startup Coinbase.

Updated Sep 13, 2021, 6:53 a.m. Published Sep 5, 2017, 11:00 a.m.
Justice statue

The U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has filed new court documents in its long-running lawsuit against cryptocurrency exchange startup Coinbase, public records show.

As previously reported by CoinDesk, the IRS is seeking to identify potential tax avoiders, years after it first moved to begin taxing bitcoin as a kind of intangible property.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

The tax agency had been given a September 1 deadline to issue its arguments in support of a narrowed summons for customer information between the years 2013 and 2015, and has submitted multiple filings, according to PACER. These include responses to outside advocacy groups that have moved to block the court effort with arguments of their own.

In response to Coinbase's petition to block the summons, the agency attacked the notion that it was looking to enforce it "for research or public relations reasons," calling the summons part of a "legitimate" investigation.

Lawyers for the agency wrote:

"The IRS sought and issued the summons to Coinbase because it suspects there is a tax compliance problem with U.S. taxpayers using virtual currency and it is duty-bound to investigate issues of tax non-compliance − not for research or any public relations purpose. Nevertheless, the summons is not made unenforceable because the IRS will benefit from the additional educational aspect of the summons and any research it may yield."

Elsewhere in the document, the IRS reiterates a key argument made earlier this year, stating that it believes Coinbase could have information regarding potential tax avoiders.

"The United States has offered evidence that, based upon the information available to the IRS there appears to be a reporting gap between the number of virtual currency users Coinbase claims to have had during the summons period (500,000) and U.S. bitcoin users reporting gains or losses to the IRS during the summoned years (807, 893, and 802)," the filing states.

Justice statue image via Shutterstock

Disclosure: CoinDesk is a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which has ownership stake in Coinbase.

The full opposition filing to Coinbase's petition can be found below:

UNITED STATES’ RESPONSE TO COINBASE INC. by CoinDesk on Scribd

Plus pour vous

‘Bitcoin to zero’ searches spike in the U.S., but the bottom signal is mixed

american-flag

Google Trends data shows the term hit a record high in the U.S. this month, though global interest has fallen since peaking in August.

Ce qu'il:

  • U.S. searches for “bitcoin zero” on Google hit a record high in February as BTC slid toward $60,000 after hitting a peak in October.
  • In the rest of the world, searches for the term peaked in August, suggesting fear is concentrated in the U.S. rather than worldwide.
  • Similar U.S. search spikes in 2021 and 2022 coincided with local bottoms.
  • Because Google Trends measures relative interest on a 0-to-100 scale amid a much larger bitcoin user base today, the latest U.S. spike signals elevated retail anxiety, but does not reliably guarantee a clean contrarian reversal.