State and Local Tax Lawyer Bucky Brannen Joins Bracewell’s Tax Team in Dallas

State and Local Tax Lawyer Bucky Brannen Joins Bracewell’s Tax Team in Dallas

Dallas, Texas–(Newsfile Corp. – April 17, 2023) –  Bracewell LLP introduced these days that Bucky Brannen has joined the firm’s tax practice as a lover in the Dallas workplace. Brannen most not long ago was at Baker Botts LLP, the place he advised shoppers on state and nearby tax challenges.

“We are thrilled to welcome Bucky to the business,” claimed Bracewell Managing Associate Gregory M. Bopp. “His broad expertise on point out and regional tax challenges delivers additional depth to our current market-foremost tax exercise.”

Brannen advises purchasers on ways to minimize condition and area taxes in every single stage of enterprise. He assists negotiate pre-financial investment economic incentives, structure operations to decrease tax, control audits and dispute assessments and assets tax valuations, and aid advancement via tax-productive restructurings, acquisitions and inclinations. Brannen’s apply is genuinely countrywide. He has working experience with all forms of condition and local taxes nationwide, together with taxes on profits, house, earnings, gross receipts, severance and motor fuels. In addition, he on a regular basis advises on multi-state functions.

“Bucky’s varied working experience strengthens our potential to fulfill the increasing needs of our clients for condition and neighborhood tax information,” reported Elizabeth L. McGinley, chair of Bracewell’s tax section. “Bucky will also operate closely with undertaking growth lawyers in assisting shoppers with proactive point out and community tax scheduling, which includes the negotiation of state tax incentives.”

Bracewell’s tax group has served as counsel on billions of bucks of transactions, which include community and non-public business mergers and acquisitions, tendencies, personal equity investments, joint ventures and money markets choices. The firm’s tax observe is nationally recognized for its knowledge involving tax matters associated to the electrical power business, which include chances below the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. Bracewell’s tax team also spearheaded the enhancement of one of the major multi-disciplinary lawful groups in the United States concentrated on carbon seize, utilization and storage (CCUS) initiatives.

“Bracewell’s solid federal and condition and community tax procedures, as effectively as its longstanding customer relationships, are an ideal platform to start the subsequent stage of my follow. I search forward to doing work with my new colleagues,” claimed Brannen.

Brannen graduated magna cum laude with a B.A. from Austin Faculty and received his J.D., magna cum laude, Purchase of the Coif from Southern Methodist University Dedman College of Legislation. He also gained a Master of Law in Taxation from New York College College of Regulation.

About Bracewell LLP

Bracewell is a major legislation and governing administration relations company mostly serving the energy, infrastructure, finance and technologies industries through the planet. Our industry target success in complete state-of-the-artwork expertise of the professional, lawful and governmental challenges faced by our clients and enables us to give modern answers to aid transactions and solve disputes.

Call:
Bob Schranz
T: +1.713.221.1470
E: [email protected]

Bucky Brannen Joins Bracewell’s Tax Workforce in Dallas

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Dallas has some of the best doctors (and the worst): Meet our neighborhood’s killer docs

Dallas has some of the best doctors (and the worst): Meet our neighborhood’s killer docs

In the 1870s, a bright young dentist — tall, lean, mustachioed and blonde, with a slight speech impediment and a nagging cough — opened his practice in Deep Ellum. 

The lanky Georgia native Henry John Holliday had earned a doctorate of dentistry at 19 and won three awards, including best set of gold teeth, at a Dallas County fair.

But Doc, as he was known, had a dark side. Not only was he sick with a terminal illness, tuberculosis, but he also had a gambling habit. Thus, he would never become the doctor he might have been.

 Like some other promising healers in this story (most of whom had far more formal medical training and credentials than our outlaw DDS), Doc Holliday would be remembered for less noble reasons. 

The law ran Doc out of town after a shootout at a Dallas saloon. He attempted several times to resume a dental practice, historians say, but his hacking concerned potential patients. He went on gaming and gunslinging until he died from his illness in Colorado in 1887. 

Dallas is home to substantial medical resources — Baylor Scott & White is the most awarded not for-profit health system in Texas (U.S. News & World Report); we have the No. 1 scientific health care research institution at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (Nature Index), the No. 10 overall hospital system in the nation (The Lown Institute) with Parkland Health and the country’s second largest Veterans Affairs hospital system. 

But with so many doctors, clinics and hospitals, on occasion a bad actor violates his vow to do no harm.

Dr. Christopher Duntsch became the subject of a Peacock original series for all the wrong reasons. He’s serving a life sentence for gross malpractice that resulted in two direct fatalities and the maiming of more than 30 neurosurgery patients, as told by Laura Beil, the journalist who hosts the Dr. Death podcast, on which the eponymous show is based.

Beil’s reporting was sensational and entertaining in a true-crime sense, but it served an important public service. It exposed a local health care system that allowed a dangerous doctor to move around to different hospitals rather than be scrutinized for his incompetence and, in some cases, willful destruction of patients’ health and lives. 

It’s important to remember, Beil says, that this “pass the trash” phenomenon, where institutions transfer a destructive employee rather than deal with them, is not consigned to medicine. 

Duntsch began his career at Baylor Scott & White in Plano, but after several of his surgeries ended in paralysis, permanent damage or death, as well as reports of him showing up to surgery inebriated, Baylor revoked his privileges. 

“The one ‘Holy Cow’ I had, was when I learned from the [then] president of the medical board that, had [Baylor] properly notified them of what was going on … they could have suspended him on an emergency basis while they investigated,” she says. “If that had happened, there are people who died who would have still been alive, because he would not have been able to immediately go somewhere else.”

Duntsch performed several surgeries and mangled more patients at South Hampton Community Hospital (now University General Hospital). He sliced through a man’s artery during a surgery at Methodist Hospital, and he left the sponge he used to soak the blood inside the patient when he sewed him up, causing a horrific infection. Duntsch’s reign of terror, reportedly, ended after that operation. 

As recently as 2021, his patients were still dying. Jerry Summers, a primary subject of the Dr. Death podcast, and Philip Mayfield both were left paralyzed with compromised immune systems and died from infections, according to what Summers’ lawyer and Mayfield’s wife told respective local reporters. 

Beil’s podcasts reveal that often hospitals do not report problematic physicians to governing boards such as the National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB), which is intended to flag them, because of costs associated with fighting and possibly losing wrongful termination suits. 

Beil, a resident of Southern Dallas County who has continued to report on deadly docs, says her stories are not meant to reflect negatively on the profession. 

“The vast majority of doctors are good and caring people who want the best for their patients,” she says. In fact, they are the heroes in the Duntsch story because they filed complaints, made phone calls and testified against him. 

“The thing you don’t want is to be the patient of the doctor who is the exception,” she says in one podcast episode. “We are limited in what we can find out about a doctor, but a skepticism of a doctor you don’t know is not a bad thing.”

If there’s an overriding good thing about getting this story out there, she says, it is that people will take that extra measure, to the degree that they can, to protect themselves. 

In 2021, Duntsch became the first doctor to be convicted of a crime committed in the operating room during the act of surgery.

While awaiting trial, Duntsch was arrested trying to walk out of the Walmart at Northwest Highway and Skillman Street without paying for $887 worth of sunglasses, watches,ties, briefcases, cologne and a pair of pants that he put on in the dressing room, according to a Dallas Police affidavit filed on April 8, 2015.

A woman known by her clients as Wee Wee operated a clandestine med spa in East Dallas where she offered black-market butt injections.

 In 2015, clients hoping to attain Kardashian-esque curves could ask for the “Wee Wee Booty,” and, 24 hours before their appointment, she would send them the address, 3800 East Side Ave.  

The amateur plastic surgeon, Denise Rochelle Ross (Wee Wee), and her assistant, Alicia Clarke, used material that was not safe to inject into clients’ bottoms. 

Wykesha Reid, 34, did not survive an injection of silicone caulk, which prosecutors said entered her veins, traveled through her heart and was trapped in her lungs. Reid died in the clinic after lying down, saying she felt unwell. Her injectors left her “to rest” overnight and discovered her dead the next day, when Clarke frantically called 911, according to court records. 

In 2017, Wee Wee and her assistant, Clarke, were sentenced to prison for murder in two separate trials. They were not doctors, but were practicing medicine without a license, according to police and court documents; thus their malpractice amounted to murder. 

Police documents show Wee Wee was arrested at an Oak Cliff address shortly after they issued a warrant. She was sentenced to 60 years. She was denied parole in 2020. 

It is uncertain whether Wee Wee or Clarke administered the fatal injection. Each woman refused to testify against the other. 

The dangers of pursuing the perfect rump are not relegated to the black market. 

In 2017, a woman from Oklahoma, Rolanda Hutton, sued several cosmetic surgeons and nurses associated with the Dallas Plastic Surgery Center after she was left paralyzed following what she said at a press conference was a “botched Brazilian Butt Lift.”

The BBL procedure involves transferring fat from other areas into the buttocks. It’s both an in-demand and dangerous surgery, reports the New York Times. “The procedure has the highest mortality rate of any cosmetic surgery, but many women are undaunted,” the paper reported in 2021. In 2020 alone, there were 40,320 buttock augmentations, per the Aesthetic Society.

It’s common practice to move patients to unlicensed post-operative hotels after procedures — in Hutton’s case, The Cloister at Park Lane — but that is dangerous, her lawyers alleged. The defendants —doctors and nurses with offices in Lake Highlands, East Dallas and University Park among them — said, officially, that her claims are without merit. 

Court records reveal no settlement reached at this time. 

In 2014, a YouTube video went up showcasing a shiny new medical facility serving Dallas’ affluent, well-insured residents. 

Located off Central Expressway, the gleaming five-level doctor-owned Forest Park Medical Center featured a luxurious lobby with fine art, modern furnishings and a two-story waterfall. A posh cafe and a Starbucks sat opposite a branch of Dougherty’s (a trusted high-end pharmacy and gift shop with a Preston Hollow store). Above bougie, lounges were floors of doctors’ offices, state-of-the-art operating areas and commodious recovery rooms. Similar facilities emerged in Southlake and Fort Worth, and surgeons and specialists from all over Dallas can be seen in videos singing Forest Park Medical’s praises. 

Seven years later, 14 people — the group’s managing partner, Wilton “Mac” Burt, a number of spinal and bariatric surgeons, a pain management doctor, anesthesiologists, nurses and a chiropractor among them — would be convicted in a bribery scam. 

These individuals were sentenced to a combined 74 years in federal prison and ordered to pay a total $82.9 million in restitution (one of the largest ever medical fraud cases, according to the Department of Justice).

According to a report from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the $200 million scheme was designed to induce doctors to steer lucrative patients — particularly those with high-reimbursing, out-of-network private insurance — to the now defunct hospital.

Hospital manager Alan Andrew Beauchamp testified for the government during his co-conspirators’ 2021 trial and pleaded guilty in August 2018 to one count of conspiracy to pay health care bribes and one count of commercial bribery. He admitted that Forest Park “bought surgeries,” and then “papered it up to make it look good.” 

Beauchamp is serving 63 months (five-plus years) in federal prison. Burt, the group’s managing partner, was found guilty on 10 of 12 counts—one count of conspiracy, two counts of paying kickbacks, six counts of commercial bribery and one count of money laundering. Burt faced the stiffest sentence, 12 1/2 years. Other defendants received sentences that ranged from probation to 96 months. 

Acting U.S. Attorney Prerak Shah said of the case that his staff was pleased with the harsh sentences, which issued a “strong deterrent message: Violate anti-kickback laws, and you will face consequences.” 

Many good health care professionals worked at the hospital, and hundreds of patients reported their excellent experiences on sites like Yelp. No injuries or malpractice have been publicized in connection with this scam. 

At the time, however, Shah said that allowing money to influence medical decisions puts patients in danger.

As the lawyer said following the 2021 trial, “Patient needs, not physician finances, should dictate where, when and how patients are treated.”

Dr. Carlos L. Venegas — who operated what appears to have been a legitimate clinic in the Preston Hollow area — also ran a series of sham medical offices, including one in Oak Cliff’s Wynnewood Shopping Center, where he oversaw the illegal prescription of almost a million units of narcotics with no legitimate medical purpose, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Erin Nealy Cox said in May 2013. After Venegas was convicted of conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance, he was sentenced to 13 years in a federal prison. 

Cox said these “pills mills,” fronts for distributing hydrocodone and alprazolam (Xanax), contributed to an opioid crisis that was, that year, killing 116 Americans a day. 

At trial, witnesses testified that participants in this conspiracy paid homeless and indigent people to pose as patients seeking pain medication. Runners coached these men and women on how to describe their (nonexistent) symptoms, drove them to the clinics and paid for their appointments. Seven other defendants including nurses and property owners went on to serve sentences ranging from 18 months to 11 or more years. 

In June 2022, anesthesiologist Melanie Kaspar was feeling unwell. So the 55-year-old doctor grabbed a bag of what she believed was saline IV fluid from the Preston Hollow area surgery clinic where she worked, returned to her Lakewood home, got comfortable, and began filling her veins with the contents of the bag. A few hours later, she was dead. Investigators would learn that she died from toxic effects of bupivacaine, a local anesthetic that’s fatal when improperly administered. Investigators would also find evidence of the same drug in more IV bags at the clinic and more patients suffering complications. Fortunately, those patients were in a hospital setting where they were saved from Kaspar’s fate. 

Her fellow anesthesiologist, Dr. Ray Ortiz, was arrested in September, suspected of tampering with IV bags at the clinic. 

Criminal allegations against Ortiz are not evidence nor proof of guilt, notes the Department of Justice in a press release. He is presumed innocent until proven guilty in court. Meanwhile, the Texas Medical Board has suspended his license. 

As documented in court, clinic personnel identified more than 10 cardiac emergencies during otherwise unremarkable surgeries between May and August 2022, and exclusively when Ortiz was in the room. 

Ortiz is charged with tampering with a consumer product and with intentionally adulterating drugs. If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of life in prison. 

This isn’t the doctor’s first time in a courtroom. He was fined $3,000 in August 2022 in relation to a November 2020 incident in which a patient he was anesthetizing required resuscitation and emergency transportation to another hospital. 

Ortiz also had relinquished medical staff privileges at North Garland Surgery Center for failing to disclose to the board a prior criminal conviction and arrest “for cruelty to a non-livestock animal,” according to the Texas Medical Board. In June 2016, a Collin County jury found Ortiz guilty of cruelty to an animal, for shooting and wounding his neighbor’s dog. 

The motive, the jury decided, was retaliation after the neighbor testified against Ortiz at a protective order hearing and helped one of Ortiz’s domestic violence accusers escape his home. According to documents from the State Medical Board, Ortiz was arrested in 1995 over accusations of assault causing bodily injury to his former spouse. 

Dallas family law attorney Paula Lock Smyth joins the Texas Bar Foundation

Dallas family law attorney Paula Lock Smyth joins the Texas Bar Foundation
Paula Lock Smyth Logo

Paula Lock Smyth – Lawyer & Counselor at Law

Paula Lock Smyth

Paula Lock Smyth

Smyth to advertise the trigger of justice along with best Texas lawyers

DALLAS, TEXAS, UNITED STATES, December 6, 2022 /EINPresswire.com/ — Dallas household regulation lawyer Paula Lock Smyth has turn out to be a Fellow in the Texas Bar Foundation, the biggest charitably funded bar foundation in the nation. She joins the fewer than 1 {c024931d10daf6b71b41321fa9ba9cd89123fb34a4039ac9f079a256e3c1e6e8} of Texas attorneys who make up the basis.

“It’s these kinds of an honor to be invited to join the Texas Bar Foundation and advertise the bring about of justice along with a network of top lawyers in the state,” Paula Lock Smyth mentioned. “I appear ahead to carrying out the foundation’s mission to guidance packages that supply authorized support for the underserved and uphold ethics in the lawful career.”

Regarded as “The Locksmith” for shielding the interests of her consumers, Smyth has more than 25 years of knowledge assisting families navigate divorce, kid custody, baby aid, spousal assist and adoption. Her apply also specializes in divorce mediation and collaborative divorce as out-of-court docket dispute resolutions.

The Texas Bar Foundation is comprised of find Texas lawyers who are committed to the regulation and to the lead to of justice. Its associates are nominated dependent on their devotion to the administration of justice and their substantial skilled standing among their peers. The foundation will award more than $1.5 million in grants this yr to organizations and charities throughout the point out that assistance victims of domestic violence, little one abuse, elder abuse and human trafficking.

Visit dallasfamilylawattorney.com or call (214) 420-1800 to learn much more about Paul Lock Smyth Law Offices or to routine a totally free preliminary session with an skilled family members legislation law firm.

Take a look at txbf.org to learn much more about the Texas Bar Foundation and its users.

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Paula Lock Smyth is a trained collaborative attorney and a constitution member of Collaborative Divorce Texas. She supplies helpful and effective representation to clients in Dallas, Texas and the surrounding communities.

The Texas Bar Foundation is the greatest charitably funded bar foundation in the country and is by invitation only. It has awarded much more than $24 million in grants to in excess of 1,700 charitable organizations across Texas considering the fact that its founding in 1965.

Collin Renfro
The Crouch Group
+1 940-383-1990
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Dallas Attorney and Members of Accounting Firm Charged with Promoting Illegal Tax Shelter | OPA

Dallas Attorney and Members of Accounting Firm Charged with Promoting Illegal Tax Shelter | OPA

A superseding indictment was returned by a federal grand jury in Dallas today charging a Texas law firm and three co-conspirators with wire fraud, conspiracy to dedicate wire fraud, serving to their purchasers file phony tax returns, and conspiracy to defraud the United States, all primarily based on an illegal tax shelter they promoted and aided apply. Joseph Garza, of Dallas, was earlier charged on Oct. 18. The superseding indictment adds prices towards 3 tax gurus, Kevin McDonnell, James Richardson and Craig Fenton.

In accordance to the authentic indictment, from approximately 2012 to 2021 Garza promoted a tax shelter that allowed higher-earnings clientele to declare fraudulent tax deductions that decreased the taxes they owed to the IRS. Garza and his co-conspirators allegedly directed the customers to transfer funds into shell organizations, then returned this revenue to the consumers, untaxed, for their particular use. To conceal the round movement of funds, Garza and the co-conspirators allegedly commissioned fictitious business valuation stories, established invoices for phony small business charges, and drafted sham contractual agreements.

The superseding indictment alleges that Garza directed clientele to use hand-picked CPAs and other tax specialists, including McDonnell, Richardson and Fenton. McDonnell and Richardson, both CPAs, allegedly owned and operated McDonnell Richardson, P.C., an accounting, tax preparation, and lawful solutions business positioned in Waxahachie. McDonnell allegedly is also a accredited legal professional. Fenton allegedly was employed as a tax manager at McDonnell Richardson.

McDonnell, Richardson and Fenton allegedly assisted Garza operate the illegal tax shelter by planning and submitting fraudulent tax returns for the higher-cash flow shoppers and the shell businesses, among the other entities. The scheme allegedly permitted consumers to conceal $1 billion from the IRS and brought on a whole tax reduction exceeding $200 million.

McDonnell, Richardson and Fenton will all make their first appearances at a later day prior to a U.S. Magistrate Decide of the U.S. District Courtroom for the Northern District of Texas. If convicted, all 4 adult males deal with a greatest penalty of 20 a long time in prison for every single rely of wire fraud, 20 years in jail for conspiracy to dedicate wire fraud, 3 many years in prison for each and every depend of aiding and aiding in the submitting of false tax returns, and five a long time for conspiracy to defraud the United States. A federal district court docket judge will figure out any sentences just after thinking of the U.S. Sentencing Suggestions and other statutory aspects.

Acting Deputy Assistant Lawyer Basic Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice Department’s Tax Division and U.S. Legal professional Chad E. Meacham for the Northern District of Texas made the announcement.

IRS Legal Investigations and the FBI are investigating the scenario.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Renee Hunter, Katherine Miller and Marty Basu and trial attorney Robert A. Kemins of the Tax Division are prosecuting the scenario.

An indictment is merely an allegation and all defendants are presumed innocent until finally tested guilty over and above a sensible doubt in a court of law.