
This webinar is available for Virtual (Online) or LIVE In-Person attendance.
The LIVE class will be held at:
Bergen Community College in the Ciarco Learning Center
355 Mian Street, Room 102/103Hackensack, NJ
Tax Professionals that attend are encouraged to accept a pro bono tax controversy case assignment from NYCLA, an ABA-sponsored Tax Court Pro program or a NY or NJ low-income Tax Clinic.
IRS Program # 7Q3WU-T-00876-26

Frank Agostino is one of the most accomplished tax controversy attorneys in the country, with more than four decades of litigation experience and a string of landmark victories that have reshaped IRS enforcement and Tax Court procedure — including Commissioner v. Zuch before the U.S. Supreme Court (2025) and Chai v. Commissioner in the Second Circuit (2017).
Because of Frank’s stellar reputation in the tax bar, he has been ranked in Chambers in Band 1 for Tax: Fraud Nationwide (USA) and in Band 1 for High Net Worth Private Client: Tax.
A former IRS District Counsel attorney and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney, Frank has also taught tax controversy at Seton Hall and Rutgers Law, and currently serves on the Advisory Board of the Journal of Tax Practice and Procedure.
3 Free NY & NJ CLE, CPE and IRS CE/NASBA CPE Credits
This webinar is available online only. 3 Free Ethics Credits
2 IRS CE/CTEC/NASBA CPE*
Every experienced practitioner has been there. You're reviewing a client's prior return—maybe one you prepared, maybe one you inherited—and something is wrong. A missed item. A number that doesn't hold up. An omission the client may not even know about. What happens next is governed by §10.21 of Circular 230, and the rule is both cleaner and more complicated than most practitioners realize.
3 Free NY & NJ CLE, CPE and IRS CE/NASBA CPE Credits
This webinar is available for Virtual (Online) or LIVE In-Person attendance. The LIVE class will be held at: Bergen Community College in the Ciarco Learning Center 355 Mian Street, Room 102/103 Hackensack, NJ Tax Professionals that attend are encouraged to accept a pro bono tax controversy case assignment from NYCLA, an ABA-sponsored Tax Court Pro program or a NY or NJ low-income Tax Clinic.