Rushie
En-Route
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2006
- Messages
- 3,017
- Display Name
Display name:
Rushie
I've got a friend who works for a small company. She recently discovered that her paycheck withholdings have not been sent to her 401k plan for several months now. (My understanding is companies with less than 100 employees have 7 days to send it in.) Also, apparently the tax withholdings haven't been sent either. She has discovered that the IRS is sending letters to the owner (but doesn't know the content of those letters). She has also discovered the county is doing an investigation, but doesn't know why (non-payment of property tax?)
It's a husband and wife who own the company, and she's been working there about 30 years, never had a problem before, they are "good people" but they must be getting pretty old, they started the business in '79. She can't believe they'd be drug addicts or otherwise pilfering the money for such like that. She confronted the wife who said, "Oh yeah, ha ha ha! I am behind on the paperwork!" The husband had a closed head injury a couple years ago with a long recovery; possibly they are just overwhelmed and mismanaging everything but it sure looks fishy from here, looks like might be having money problems, although business is booming, they have so many orders coming in my friend works a lot of overtime. She can't believe they're going under, but I guess it's possible.
Googling tells me she can report them to the Department of Labor, for the 401k matter. But if they don't send in her taxes she will be on the hook for it all come April 15, right? Quitting outright isn't an option; she is still getting a paycheck. She is in her late 50s and fears she has "no skills" and couldn't get another job. Plus, if the wife truly is just behind on all the paperwork and they're good for it, she doesn't want to mess up the long term working relationship.
I'm thinking her options are:
1) contact the DOL and the IRS and let them take it from there, while dusting off the resume and start looking
2) pay for a lawyer consult and let him tell you what to do
3) go to the owners and give them x number of days to send the funds in or else, and get their side of the story. This is a long term relationship with historically good people. Between old age and head injury, plausible they just are way behind. If the cash is piling up in the bank and it's just not been sent in, they can remedy this (including making up the 401k interest loss). Maybe the IRS letters and county tax office stuff is nothing - she has not read those letters. But she has verified with her 401k plan that it has not received the funds.
My feeling is she should do number 2 first, but she says she cannot afford a lawyer. This is not a high paying job. She has talked to another employee who also says her stuff hasn't been sent in either. I'm thinking the two of them maybe can pool together and pay for at least one hour of a lawyer's time. I feel she cannot afford NOT to talk to a lawyer about this; she's losing her 401k growth, and she's going to be paying her taxes double if they don't send in the cash or give it back to her, right? Does the IRS come after you for this or do they go after the employer? And if the employer but they're bankrupt does the IRS come back to you?
Any of you ever had a similar situation, and if so how did you handle it?
It's a husband and wife who own the company, and she's been working there about 30 years, never had a problem before, they are "good people" but they must be getting pretty old, they started the business in '79. She can't believe they'd be drug addicts or otherwise pilfering the money for such like that. She confronted the wife who said, "Oh yeah, ha ha ha! I am behind on the paperwork!" The husband had a closed head injury a couple years ago with a long recovery; possibly they are just overwhelmed and mismanaging everything but it sure looks fishy from here, looks like might be having money problems, although business is booming, they have so many orders coming in my friend works a lot of overtime. She can't believe they're going under, but I guess it's possible.
Googling tells me she can report them to the Department of Labor, for the 401k matter. But if they don't send in her taxes she will be on the hook for it all come April 15, right? Quitting outright isn't an option; she is still getting a paycheck. She is in her late 50s and fears she has "no skills" and couldn't get another job. Plus, if the wife truly is just behind on all the paperwork and they're good for it, she doesn't want to mess up the long term working relationship.
I'm thinking her options are:
1) contact the DOL and the IRS and let them take it from there, while dusting off the resume and start looking
2) pay for a lawyer consult and let him tell you what to do
3) go to the owners and give them x number of days to send the funds in or else, and get their side of the story. This is a long term relationship with historically good people. Between old age and head injury, plausible they just are way behind. If the cash is piling up in the bank and it's just not been sent in, they can remedy this (including making up the 401k interest loss). Maybe the IRS letters and county tax office stuff is nothing - she has not read those letters. But she has verified with her 401k plan that it has not received the funds.
My feeling is she should do number 2 first, but she says she cannot afford a lawyer. This is not a high paying job. She has talked to another employee who also says her stuff hasn't been sent in either. I'm thinking the two of them maybe can pool together and pay for at least one hour of a lawyer's time. I feel she cannot afford NOT to talk to a lawyer about this; she's losing her 401k growth, and she's going to be paying her taxes double if they don't send in the cash or give it back to her, right? Does the IRS come after you for this or do they go after the employer? And if the employer but they're bankrupt does the IRS come back to you?
Any of you ever had a similar situation, and if so how did you handle it?