Another thanks to Kennf1:
Then in theory, SCA could get another $12-15 million back, no? The $10 million is not to pay back any of the amount he owed, it?s just to punish him for not paying it back. And if SCA does get back additional money for what was actually owed, this will be another textbook example of how LA's fighting the charges against him have multiplied his costs. Not only all the legal costs, which I guess are in the millions, but this $10 million just for fighting the charges in the way that he did.
I think it will also finally put to rest hog's theory that LA could have made money by investing the ill-gotten gains. When you add $10 million to all the legal fees (and who knows whether the outcome of the SCA case, particularly all the perjury, may end up costing LA extra in the federal case), it's pretty clear that any money LA might have made investing the SCA windfall would be more than lost.
Very interesting analysis:
[Concludes LA can easily pass the first three tests]
Great typo there, reveled.
So the conclusion, based on another case establishing precedent just last year, is that LA's confession to Oprah will disqualify him from meeting the fourth criterion, and thus not allow him to offset previous incomes with this loss and get a $3.5 million tax break. And the potential tax break that he won't be able to get could I guess have been even larger if SCA gets back the $12-$15 million in actual payout. We'd be talking about nearly $9 million in tax benefits, money he might have gotten back if he hadn't confessed to Oprah.