Microsoft put their tax-evasion in writing and now they owe $29 billion
The process is the punishment.
I’m coming to Minneapolis! Oct 15: Presenting The Internet Con at Moon Palace Books. Oct 16: Keynoting the 26th ACM Conference On Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing.
If there’s one thing I took away from Propublica’s explosive IRS Files, it’s that “tax avoidance” (which is legal) isn’t a separate phenomenon from “tax evasion” (which is not), but rather a thinly veiled euphemism for it:
https://www.propublica.org/series/the-secret-irs-files
That realization sits behind my series of noir novels about the two-fisted forensic accountant Martin Hench, which started with last April’s Red Team Blues and continues with The Bezzle, this coming February:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865847/red-team-blues
A typical noir hero is an unlicensed cop, who goes places the cops can’t go and asks questions the cops can’t ask. The noir part comes in at the end, when the hero is forced to admit that he’s being going places the cops didn’t want to go and asking questions the cops didn’t want to ask. Marty Hench is a noir hero, but he’s not an unlicensed cop, he’s an unlicensed IRS inspector, and like other noir heroes, his capers are…