I thought this would be of interest to just about everyone who reads this BB.
http://www.fortune.com:80/fortune/investor/2000/10/30/txc.html
But because even amateur gamblers are supposed
to pay taxes on their winnings (and can adjust for
their losses), the IRS mandates that he keep
precise records of every session he plays all year.
If Raymer, 36, plays one hand and then switches
tables--yep, he has to make a whole new entry. It's
as tedious as, well, filling out tax forms--only
Raymer has to do it hundreds of times a year.
Come tax season he'll compile all his notebook
entries for the year and tally up his wins and
losses for the IRS.
Serious collectors, for instance, who do a lot of
buying and selling, bear no small amount of IRS
scrutiny. "I have clients who are wine collectors,
coin collectors, art collectors, baseball collectors
... you name it," says Ralph Anderson, a partner
at Eisner tax consulting in New York City. "When
you have rare collectibles like that, you have to
keep meticulous records." The requirements, he
says, "drive all my clients nuts."
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