The Chicago Tribune reports on the consequences of BDO Seidman's love affair with the Daugerdas shelters. See Ameet Sachdev, Tax shelters put BDO Seidman in middle of firestorm with federal prosecutors, Chicago Tribune, Business (6/4/11). It is interesting to consider what additional retribution, if any, the Government may visit on BDO now that its former chief executive, Denis Field, has been convicted and others down the BDO food chain have pled. For all of the firms participating in this genre of shelters, one has to ask where the gatekeeper was or the gatekeepers were. Was anyone concerned about the well-being of the firm?
Someone has asked that question about Jenkens & Gilchrist, the Dallas based firm with national ambitions that drove it to expand, inter alia, into Chicago and pick up the now disgraced and convicted tax shelter promoter par excellence, Paul Daugerdas. I have written about Daugerdas before and want to discuss here a variation of the Jenkens & Gilchrist story recounted in a recent article, Milton C. Regan, Jr., Taxes and Death: The Rise and Demise of an American Law Firm, STUDIES IN LAW, POLITICS AND SOCIETY: LAW FIRMS, LEGAL CULTURE, AND LEGAL PRACTICE, Vol. 52, pp. 107-144, Austin Sarat, ed., JAI Press 2010; Georgetown Law and Economics Research Paper No. 11-08.
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