The Swiss Account follows the Hazeltinesâ descent into an ethical gray zone as they wrestle with their anguished consciences and navigate a minefield of legal peril. Are they decent people trapped by circumstance or clever schemers rationalizing their path to riches?
Switzerlandâs majestic peaks and remote valleys form a natural fortress at the heart of Europeâbeautiful, prosperous, and long insulated from the political and military upheavals of its neighbors. This isolation, combined with the governmentâs unwavering commitment to banking secrecy, has made the country a discreet haven for foreign wealth, both legitimately earned and dubiously acquired.
While most countries donât forbid their citizens from holding Swiss accounts, they do require such assets to be reported and taxed. Which is why many account holders, reluctant to comply with their own tax authorities, prefer to keep their holdings secret.
Leo Beckwith was one of themâa highly successful American entrepreneur who left behind a tidy Swiss fortune. But without explanation he willed his shady hoard not to his favored children but to Lynn his long overlooked daughterâa hard-working real estate agent in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The windfall promises lifelong financial security for Lynn, her husband Jerry Hazeltine, a modestly paid art history professor, and their family.
Thereâs just one problem: Leo never reported the account to the US Treasury.
Now the Hazeltines face a profound moral and legal dilemma. If they come clean, the IRS will likely seize the fortune to settle Leoâs long-evaded tax bill. If they donât, they become tax evadersâliving on Easy Street, but under constant threat of discovery and prosecution.
The Swiss Account follows the Hazeltinesâ descent into an ethical gray zone as they wrestle with their anguished consciences and navigate a minefield of legal peril. Are they decent people trapped by circumstance or clever schemers rationalizing their path to riches?
Switzerlandâs majestic peaks and remote valleys form a natural fortress at the heart of Europeâbeautiful, prosperous, and long insulated from the political and military upheavals of its neighbors. This isolation, combined with the governmentâs unwavering commitment to banking secrecy, has made the country a discreet haven for foreign wealth, both legitimately earned and dubiously acquired.
While most countries donât forbid their citizens from holding Swiss accounts, they do require such assets to be reported and taxed. Which is why many account holders, reluctant to comply with their own tax authorities, prefer to keep their holdings secret.
Leo Beckwith was one of themâa highly successful American entrepreneur who left behind a tidy Swiss fortune. But without explanation he willed his shady hoard not to his favored children but to Lynn his long overlooked daughterâa hard-working real estate agent in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The windfall promises lifelong financial security for Lynn, her husband Jerry Hazeltine, a modestly paid art history professor, and their family.
Thereâs just one problem: Leo never reported the account to the US Treasury.
Now the Hazeltines face a profound moral and legal dilemma. If they come clean, the IRS will likely seize the fortune to settle Leoâs long-evaded tax bill. If they donât, they become tax evadersâliving on Easy Street, but under constant threat of discovery and prosecution.