gogojira_sl
shitlord
- 2,202
- 3
How is this not fraud? Taking money that's invested into a project and just paying off personal shit?How is that cash advance not illegal?
This is just bad bad bad bad.
I LOL'd hard when I saw this.Yes. Rerolledzbollah
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DEAR NSA: THIS IS SATIRE.
You will be audited for suggesting it.If we can get Brad to saying something horrible about Obama then the IRS will surely audit.
The NSA thing was the best part!I'm not even joking when I added the NSA note![]()
If I disappear, you know why.
lawl.haha i love the idea of some trust fund retard (and I mean probably a LITERAL retard) giving brad $35k and his Ben Stein accountant putting a stop to another $200k going Brad's way
this shit is like gold for a movie
Man even the most ridiculous sounding lie would have sounded better than admitting he ripped off the project."Brad was having personal problems at the time and needed to take a cash advance from the project."
Naa; the only money that even needs to be reported is the 35k, and he doesn't have any other income, that's so easy to zero out a child could do it. Also, if it's a straight up gift, the giver is probably going to take responsibility for the taxes because of certain record keeping needs.there will definitely be tax implications here. nowadays more than $10k can't move around electronically without it getting reported to the IRS. I would bet Brad didn't set anything up correctly and if a couple mad "donors" report his ass to the IRS hotline they will definitely check his returns carefully next year.
Are we talking about Brad the brilliant accountant or Brad the brilliant MMO visionary here?Naa; the only money that even needs to be reported is the 35k, and he doesn't have any other income, that's so easy to zero out a child could do it.
Man, it would be an incredible fictional novel. A man lucksacks his way into a wildly profitable Internet business. He gets rich and decides to go it alone again. Corporate intrigue sabotages his second project which gets bailed out by an old friend. He's living on easy street after this second "success" which nets him even more cash as he devolves into a drug and alcohol binge that takes him to the depths of depression. After realizing he can't hold a job in his state, he gets an investor friend to put all his money in a fool-proof plan to make money on mortgage-backed securities just in time for the Great Recession. He crawls back to his original employer but is outclassed by all the new hipsters who don't respect a veteran of the industry. He decides to strike out on his own using this new crowd funding system that several of his contemporaries have used to make small fortunes. After getting a small amount of funding, a loved one falls seriously ill and he is forced to make a choice: take some of the money from his fledgling company to save his beloved or hold on to the faith that the project will succeed like his original project did 15 years earlier. He chooses the fast money and wrecks everything. He's audited by IRS, nailed for drug possession, and ends up spending time in federal prison on several different charges. Meanwhile, one of the other members of the new project offers to buy him out of it for a small sum, which he takes. The project then goes on to be a tremendous success.haha i love the idea of some trust fund retard (and I mean probably a LITERAL retard) giving brad $35k and his Ben Stein accountant putting a stop to another $200k going Brad's way
this shit is like gold for a movie
there will definitely be tax implications here. nowadays more than $10k can't move around electronically without it getting reported to the IRS. I would bet Brad didn't set anything up correctly and if a couple mad "donors" report his ass to the IRS hotline they will definitely check his returns carefully next year.