Amy Short's practice investigates across tax, securities, custody, and cross-border operations to map failure points at the boundaries between systems, uncovering structural deficiencies in how foreign funds sell and report to U.S. investors.
What Will You Learn
Attorneys will learn how a single Golden Visa fund investment can simultaneously trigger PFIC, CFC, foreign grantor trust, FBAR, SDIRA, and ERISA exposure.
What Will You Gain
Attorneys will gain a framework for evaluating client exposure across multiple overlapping tax regimes and understanding remediation pathways including retroactive QEF elections under Rev. Proc. 2026-10.
Key topics to be discussed:
This course is co-sponsored with myLawCLE.
Date / Time: April 29, 2026
Closed-captioning available
Amy Short, Founder | PFIC Help by Golden Visa Direct
Amy Short is the Principal of PFIC Help by Golden Visa Direct, a forensic tax exposure diagnostic practice that serves U.S. investors in Portuguese Golden Visa funds and comparable offshore structures. She holds a Series 7 registration with FINRA, is an MS in Taxation candidate, and is a dual U.S. and Portuguese citizen. Her practice investigates across tax, securities, custody, and cross-border operations to map failure points at the boundaries between systems, uncovering structural deficiencies in how foreign funds sell and report to U.S. investors. She does not prepare tax returns or provide legal advice; she provides the forensic analysis that sits upstream of both. As a FINRA-regulated placement agent, she spent years offering Portuguese funds a compliant path into the U.S. market before concluding that the industry’s resistance to U.S. regulatory constraints made the market structurally dangerous for American investors. That resistance was a bellwether for the tax failures plaguing the market today. She now provides independent forensic diagnostics, CPA and counsel briefings, and expert analysis for U.S. investors and their advisors.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
SESSION 1 — The Victim Becomes Violator Paradox | 1:00pm – 1:10pm
Securities law may treat Golden Visa fund investors as victims while tax law could simultaneously treat them as reckless. Learn how both positions can coexist and what that means for your clients.
SESSION 2 — PFIC Statement Deficiencies and Invalid QEF Elections | 1:10pm – 1:20pm
Identify why IFRS-based Annual Information Statements fail U.S. tax standards, how invalid QEF elections expose clients to punitive Excess Distribution taxation, and what practitioners must do to correct course.
SESSION 3 — CFC Exposure and Form 5471 Penalties in Golden Visa Funds | 1:20pm – 1:30pm
Examine how transient U.S. Shareholder status and untested cap tables create hidden CFC exposure, triggering compounding Form 5471 penalties at both the fund and portfolio levels.
SESSION 4 — Foreign Grantor Trust Risk and Form 3520 Triggers | 1:30pm – 1:40pm
Learn how omnibus custody arrangements could trigger foreign grantor trust classification, creating overlooked Form 3520 and 3520-A reporting obligations with significant penalty exposure for your clients.
SESSION 5 — The Objective Recklessness Standard and FBAR Willfulness | 1:40pm – 1:55pm
Trace the Safeco-Horowitz-Reyes doctrinal chain and understand how the objective recklessness standard developed in FBAR cases could extend into broader Title 26 civil penalty arguments.
BREAK | 1:55pm – 2:05pm
SESSION 6 — Penalty Assessment After Farhy, Mukhi, and Jarkesy | 2:05pm – 2:25pm
Analyze how divergent decisions across circuits in three landmark cases are simultaneously rejecting and confirming IRS authority to assess and collect international information return penalties and identify which procedural defenses remain viable for your clients today.
SESSION 7 — The SEC Cross-Border Task Force and IRS Audit Triggers | 2:25pm – 2:35pm
Understand how SEC enforcement actions against non-compliant foreign fund offerings destabilize investor positions and generate direct IRS audit triggers that practitioners must anticipate and proactively address.
SESSION 8 — SDIRA Prohibited Transactions and FATCA Misrepresentations | 2:35pm – 2:50pm
Examine how self-directed IRA investments in Golden Visa funds create prohibited transaction risk and FATCA reporting misrepresentations, compounded by structural titling problems unique to civil law jurisdictions.
SESSION 9 — The Koopman Appointment and the IRS Civil-Criminal Enforcement Wall | 2:50pm – 3:00pm
Learn how the Koopman appointment is expected to collapse the traditional separation between civil audits and criminal referrals at the Service, accelerating escalation risk for clients with unresolved reporting compliance issues for offshore holdings.
SESSION 10 — Remediation Pathways and Willfulness Defense Strategies | 3:00pm – 3:10pm
Master the remediation toolkit, including retroactive QEF elections under Rev. Proc. 2026-10, the Section 6511 refund window, and documenting independent diligence as a defense against willfulness findings.