10.51—Incompetence and disreputable conduct.
        
        (a) 
        
            Incompetence and disreputable
 conduct. Incompetence and disreputable conduct
 for which a practitioner may be sanctioned under  §
 10.50 includes, but is not limited to—
    
    
    
    
        
        (3) 
         Conviction of any felony under Federal or
 State law for which the conduct involved renders
 the practitioner unfit to practice before the
 Internal Revenue Service.
    
    
        
        (4) 
         Giving false or misleading information, or
 participating in any way in the giving of false or
 misleading information to the Department of the
 Treasury or any officer or employee thereof, or to
 any tribunal authorized to pass upon Federal tax
 matters, in connection with any matter pending or
 likely to be pending before them, knowing the
 information to be false or misleading. Facts or
 other matters contained in testimony, Federal tax
 returns, financial statements, applications for
 enrollment, affidavits, declarations, and any
 other document or statement, written or oral, are
 included in the term “information.”
    
    
        
        (5) 
         Solicitation of employment as prohibited
 under  § 10.30, the use of false or misleading
 representations with intent to deceive a client or
 prospective client in order to procure employment,
 or intimating that the practitioner is able
 improperly to obtain special consideration or
 action from the Internal Revenue Service or any
 officer or employee thereof.
    
    
        
        (6) 
         Willfully failing to make a Federal tax
 return in violation of the Federal tax laws, or
 willfully evading, attempting to evade, or
 participating in any way in evading or attempting
 to evade any assessment or payment of any Federal
 tax.
    
    
        
        (7) 
         Willfully assisting, counseling,
 encouraging a client or prospective client in
 violating, or suggesting to a client or
 prospective client to violate, any Federal tax
 law, or knowingly counseling or suggesting to a
 client or prospective client an illegal plan to
 evade Federal taxes or payment thereof.
    
    
        
        (8) 
         Misappropriation of, or failure properly or
 promptly to remit, funds received from a client
 for the purpose of payment of taxes or other
 obligations due the United States.
    
    
        
        (9) 
         Directly or indirectly attempting to
 influence, or offering or agreeing to attempt to
 influence, the official action of any officer or
 employee of the Internal Revenue Service by the
 use of threats, false accusations, duress or
 coercion, by the offer of any special inducement
 or promise of an advantage, or by the bestowing of
 any gift, favor or thing of value.
    
    
        
        (10) 
         Disbarment or suspension from practice as
 an attorney, certified public accountant, public
 accountant or actuary by any duly constituted
 authority of any State, territory, or possession
 of the United States, including a Commonwealth, or
 the District of Columbia, any Federal court of
 record or any Federal agency, body or board.
    
    
        
        (11) 
         Knowingly aiding and abetting another
 person to practice before the Internal Revenue
 Service during a period of suspension, disbarment
 or ineligibility of such other person.
    
    
        
        (12) 
         Contemptuous conduct in connection with
 practice before the Internal Revenue Service,
 including the use of abusive language, making
 false accusations or statements, knowing them to
 be false or circulating or publishing malicious or
 libelous matter.
    
    
        
        (13) 
         Giving a false opinion, knowingly,
 recklessly, or through gross incompetence,
 including an opinion which is intentionally or
 recklessly misleading, or engaging in a pattern of
 providing incompetent opinions on questions
 arising under the Federal tax laws. False opinions
 described in this paragraph (a)(13) include those
 which reflect or result from a knowing
 misstatement of fact or law, from an assertion of
 a position known to be unwarranted under existing
 law, from counseling or assisting in conduct known
 to be illegal or fraudulent, from concealing
 matters required by law to be revealed, or from
 consciously disregarding information indicating
 that material facts expressed in the opinion or
 offering material are false or misleading. For
 purposes of this paragraph (a)(13), reckless
 conduct is a highly unreasonable omission or
 misrepresentation involving an extreme departure
 from the standards of ordinary care that a
 practitioner should observe under the
 circumstances. A pattern of conduct is a factor
 that will be taken into account in determining
 whether a practitioner acted knowingly,
 recklessly, or through gross incompetence. Gross
 incompetence includes conduct that reflects gross
 indifference, preparation which is grossly
 inadequate under the circumstances, and a
 consistent failure to perform obligations to the
 client.
    
    
        
        (14) 
         Willfully failing to sign a tax return
 prepared by the practitioner when the
 practitioner's signature is required by the
 Federal tax laws unless the failure is due to
 reasonable cause and not due to willful
 neglect.
    
    
        
        (15) 
         Willfully disclosing or otherwise using a
 tax return or tax return information in a manner
 not authorized by the Internal Revenue Code,
 contrary to the order of a court of competent
 jurisdiction, or contrary to the order of an
 administrative law judge in a proceeding
 instituted under  § 10.60.
    
    
        
        (b) Effective/applicability date.
         
 This section is applicable to conduct occurring on
 or after September 26, 2007.
    
    Code of Federal Regulations
Code of Federal Regulations
                                
                                    Code of Federal Regulations
                                
                                171