IRS agents are drilling dry holes during corporate audits, the Japanese version of Sarbox, a new spin on insider trading, issuing debt without all the paperwork, and how to keep workers safe, but also help them die.

When Mark Everson took office in 2003 as commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, he promised that collecting underpaid corporate taxes would be a top priority, and backed it up by increasing the number of large corporate audits. Results were quickly realized, with additional recommended taxes doubling in fiscal 2005 compared with the previous year (see “Crackdown,” January 2006). But now Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) suggests the effort may have run out of steam.

CFO.com: Not So Taxing?

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