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- NATION, Page 25American NotesTAXESThe Ultimate Penalty
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- "It's purely a business decision," said the note left by
- Alex Council for his wife Kay in their High Point, N.C., home
- in 1988. "You will find my body on the lot on the north side
- of the house." In a chilling tale for taxpayers, the widow last
- week told a Senate subcommittee that her husband, 49, killed
- himself so she could use his $250,000 life insurance policy to
- fight a claim by the Internal Revenue Service that the Councils
- owed $300,000 in taxes.
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- "We didn't do anything wrong," Kay Council, 48, testified.
- "We just got caught up in the middle of a big IRS screw-up."
- She said she sold their house, paid lawyers $70,000 to take on
- the IRS and "was cheated of growing old with the man I love."
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- It was cold comfort, but a federal tax court in October 1988
- ruled that the Councils did not owe $300,000 to the IRS. The
- court said they owed nothing.
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