Pentacycle said:This would be okay if Riis had paid back his prize money too. The 1997 Tour was outdated, but the 1999 not?It's getting worse and worse ...
and what about all the other fees the USPS team collected during those tours?
Pentacycle said:This would be okay if Riis had paid back his prize money too. The 1997 Tour was outdated, but the 1999 not?It's getting worse and worse ...
BroDeal said:CSE promotes a lot of stuff.
My suspicion about Mellow Jonnny's is that it could be an ego driven money loser. It's like ex-athletes who open a bar or restaraunt or night club. There is a lot of potential to lose money. Maybe he opened it just to stick it to Andersatan.
He might be able to sell assets, settle all the civil stuff for $20M and then rebuild. If he and his business advisors are smart then five years could erase whatever hit he takes to his current assets. Ten years from now he could be considerably more wealthy than he is today.
bbohica said:I heard once that most of MJ's revenue is from merchandise sales like shirts, hats, jerseys, kits, etc... Sure they sell bikes too, but I'll bet that the they make 50% less next year. He'd probably be smart to sell it off asap.
Square-pedaller said:I wondered about this, since this is a fairly unusual situation. As I understand it, the first child was conceived 'accidentally' because LA wasn't sterile as previously thought.
Sarcastic Wet Trout said:Assuming it's his.
Call Maury. Time for the paternity test.
benzwire said:Mellow Johnny's location (5th/Nueces) is on some prime real estate in downtown Austin. Does Lance own the property or does he lease the building? I would estimate that the property alone is worth several million bucks. I think it would be a shame to lose that shop, it is actually quite nice. Actions have consequences, however, and there will be a lot of collateral damage as a result.
bbohica said:Looks like it is owned by "Mellow Johnnys LLC" and was assessed a taxable value of $1.34M in 2012. It also has a legal description of "PERSONAL PROPERTY COMMERCIAL MELLOW JOHNNY'S BIKE SHOP" which makes me think that he owns it outright.
He also seems to have another property, owned by "Mellow Johnnys Aviation LLC" legal description "PERSONAL PROPERTY COMMERCIAL ARMSTRONG PERFOMANCE LLC". This was assessed a taxable value of $4.23M Does he own his own private airport too?
mountainrman said:Perhaps so, perhaps not. Go back through the history of the Likes of Jonathan Aitken, and Jeffrey Archer, and the action they faced and lost in similar situation was for perjury, not for fraud. So it seems their prosecution lawyers do not agree with you...
I have said repeatedly, that Armstrong faces potentially a more likely criminal liability here in UK because of the short SOL in the US on perjury rendering the 2005 hearings out of time. <snip>.........
Express Newspapers said in a statement: "Archer has repaid the newspaper the original sum, plus the majority of the substantial legal recovery costs.
"The 1987 judgment against the Daily Star, and its then editor Lloyd Turner, has been set aside by the courts as it was obtained by fraud."
doolols said:My best guess would be an out of court settlement for a few million, subject to confidentiality clause.Having seen his performance on Friday night, I'm now convinced he will never confess. In his mind, he's drawn a line. No matter what anyone does, he thinks he won the titles fair and square, and he'll continue to hob-*** with the great and the good (Robin Williams et al) and appear at Livestrong events, "dedicating his life to fighting this terrible disease" etc etc ad nauseum.
.
If the doomsday predictions surrounding Armstrong’s future income stream are to be believed, it’s possible Armstrong may pay out more in bonus restitution during 2013 than he takes in as income. As a result, he may not be able to reap the full tax benefit of the deductions related to his repayments.
And even in the event Armstrong is able to fully utilize his deductions in the current year, he may have been subject to a higher tax rate when the bonuses were originally earned — particularly during the pre-Bush tax cut years of 1999-2001 — than he is today. In either scenario, Armstrong would likely enjoy a larger tax benefit if he could travel back in time, exclude the bonus payments from income in the year they were received, and redetermine his prior years’ tax liability…
To illustrate, assume Armstrong repays $20 million in race winnings during 2013 and deducts the payment on his 2013 tax return, yielding $3 million in tax benefit. If he qualifies to use Section 1341, Armstrong optinstead to go back to the years he received the payments and perform a hypothetical computation (he does not actually amend the previous years’ returns, which are closed by statute) in which he redetermines the tax liability for each year by excluding the amount of income that has subsequently been repaid. If the result of these computations is a total decrease in previous years’ tax of $5 million, Armstrong may opt to forego the current year deduction related to the repayment, and instead reduce his 2013 tax liability by the $5 million in tax savings that would have resulted from excluding the income in the year originally received.
The income must have been originally included in the taxpayer’s income because the taxpayer believed he had an unrestricted right to the income. This requirement poses a significant threat to Armstrong’s ability to use Section 1341 to obtain the most advantageous result from any bonus repayments. Because Armstrong has been accused of knowingly violating race rules and the terms of his sponsorship contracts by doping throughout his seven Tour victories, it is difficult to envision the IRS concluding that Armstrong could have believed he had an unrestricted right to his bonus money. Stated in another way, because Armstrong knew his doping was against the rules, he couldn’t have believed he had an “unrestricted right” to the bonus payments. Rather, he would have accepted the bonus money knowing that a subsequent failed drug test — or as it happened, an investigation eight years after his last race — could result in his being forced to forfeit the bonuses.
Merckx index said:The second issue the article addresses is that if LA has to pay back income received from winning races, he is entitled to a refund, in effect, of the tax he paid on this income. But there are two ways to figure this refund: at today’s tax rates, or at the rates existing when the income was received. Because of changes in the tax code, the latter would probably be more favorable to him:
double negative needs to be corrected^Ferminal said:What if say, not all his original earnings were undeclared?
Might be playing with fire trying to get everything out of the taxman.
The UCI being his personally preferred entity of jurisdiction over his doping case, even.Velodude said:Armstrong's perjury in the SCA case and Times case has just been proven by UCI accepting USADA's reasoned decision.
TheEnoculator said:It truly would be sweet if Armstrong goes broke. He has caused enough harm to cycling and helped scare away enough sponsors for him to just get away with having his results stripped.
Armstrong still hasn't gotten the comeuppance he deserves.
DominicDecoco said:Should Lance lose every civil lawsuits in the nearest future, he would still be having happy conversations with his banker for the rest of his life.
No_Balls said:The Guardian writes Armstrong faces "financial meltdown":
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/ot...ance-Armstrong-facing-financial-meltdown.html
jam pants said:He probably wouldn't have a personal banker any longer.
Claims that Armstrong is awash in liquid wealth aren't accurate.
DominicDecoco said:I don't think he's suffering...