- Moderna posts surprise profit as Covid vaccine sales impress, cost cuts take hold
- Boeing Starliner astronauts who were supposed to be in space for nine days returning to Earth after nine months on ISS
- DraftKings tests a subscription service as it looks to offset high New York taxes
- ‘Dumpster fire’: Retailers urge shoppers to buy now before tariffs raise prices
- U.S. will again offer free at-home Covid tests starting in late September
- Nike warns of guidance cut as it posts slowest non-pandemic sales gain in 14 years
People walk in the rain past the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 11, 2025.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters
A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.
Wesley Stanovsek was a dream hire for the IRS in 2024.
With $80 billion in new funding from Congress, the IRS went shopping for young, tech savvy accountants and engineers who could deconstruct the complex returns of the wealthy and private companies. Stanovsek, based in Columbus, Ohio, specialized in S-corps, trusts and partnerships before getting hired by the IRS’s High Wealth division.
In February he was fired, along with other IRS agents who were considered “probationary” since they had been there less than a year. Stanovsek was working on three so-called “enterprise” cases at the time – two involving partnerships and one involving a wealthy sports team owner, totaling millions of dollars of potential additional taxes.
When he left, the cases were dropped due to lack of staff.
- Peloton staved off the cash crunch that threatened its business. Where does it go now?
- Wall Street trading desks are feasting on the volatility from Trump’s global upheaval
- Even at $8 million per Super Bowl commercial, ad executives say it’s still bang for your buck
- T.J. Maxx owner raises full-year guidance, posts 5.6% sales gain for the most recent quarter
- Why Ford believes its $1.9 billion shift in EV strategy is the right choice for the company, investors
- Chrysler parent Stellantis laying off 400 salaried U.S. workers due to ‘unprecedented uncertainties’