Tax Defense

San Diego Tax Defense Attorneys for IRS, California & Federal Disputes

  • Received an IRS audit notice, CP2000, or revenue agent contact?
  • Under criminal investigation or facing a grand jury subpoena?
  • California state agency (EDD, FTB, CDTFA) audit or assessment?
  • Tax debt you can't pay — liens, levies, or wage garnishment?

We file power of attorney the day you retain us. From that point forward, the IRS and state agencies communicate with our team — not you.

Book Your Free 15-Minute Call (619) 378-3138
$1B+
Saved in taxes across all client matters
$100M+
Penalties & interest eliminated
400+
Audit clients represented
100+
Appeal victories across practice areas

When a Tax Problem Becomes a Tax Defense

Tax defense is the legal representation of businesses and individuals facing enforcement action by the IRS or a state tax agency. That enforcement can take the form of an audit, a collections action, a criminal investigation, or a combination of all three — and the strategy required to resolve each is fundamentally different. The distinction between tax compliance and tax defense matters because the tools are different. A CPA files returns. A tax defense attorney intervenes when the government has already decided you owe more than you reported, you failed to file, or your conduct warrants criminal prosecution. The stakes are not just financial — they include personal liability, asset seizure, and in criminal cases, imprisonment. Brotman Law is a San Diego tax law firm that represents clients exclusively in tax controversy and tax strategy matters. We do not prepare returns, sell financial products, or refer cases to other firms. Every attorney in our office works on tax disputes — IRS audits, criminal tax investigations, California state agency enforcement, and tax debt resolution.

California Tax Defense

California operates three independent tax agencies — the Employment Development Department (EDD), Franchise Tax Board (FTB), and California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) — each with its own audit procedures, penalty structures, and appeal paths. A business operating in California can face enforcement from all three simultaneously, plus the IRS, creating compounding exposure that requires coordinated defense across every agency.

California Sub-Pillar

California Tax Defense Hub

Coordinated defense across all three California tax agencies. Worker classification, sales tax, income tax, and state debt resolution.

IRS Tax Debt Resolution

When the IRS assessment is final and the amount owed exceeds what you can pay in full, the question shifts from "how much do I owe" to "what's the best resolution path." The IRS offers several formal programs — but the right program depends on your financial situation, compliance history, and the type of tax debt. Choosing the wrong resolution path wastes time, triggers additional penalties, and can eliminate options that would have been available earlier.

From Our Practice

$1B+

In tax savings across all client matters since 2013. That number includes IRS audit reductions, penalty abatements, offer in compromise settlements, CUIAB hearing victories, criminal case resolutions, and proactive tax strategy implementations.

What makes the difference: Every case starts with a complete analysis of the client's exposure across all agencies — federal, state, and local. A client facing an IRS audit who also has California EDD exposure needs a coordinated strategy, not two separate attorneys working in isolation.

Representative Results

What Our Clients Achieve

$4.5M → $0
IRS proposed assessment eliminated in full through audit defense and Appeals conference
IRS Audit Defense
$1.2M → $47K
Offer in compromise accepted — 96% reduction in assessed tax, penalties, and interest
Tax Debt Resolution
No Charges
Criminal investigation closed without prosecution after pre-indictment intervention
Criminal Tax Defense

View All Case Studies →

Sam Brotman

Sam Brotman

Owner & Managing Attorney · J.D., LL.M. Taxation, MBA

Sam founded Brotman Law in 2013 with a singular focus on tax controversy and tax strategy. He leads the firm's IRS audit defense and criminal tax practice, and personally oversees every client engagement from initial consultation through resolution.

Full Bio →

Frequently Asked Questions

Tax Defense Questions

What is the difference between a tax attorney and a CPA?

A CPA prepares tax returns and provides accounting services. A tax attorney represents you when the IRS or a state agency challenges what was filed — or when you face penalties, collections, or criminal investigation. Tax attorneys have attorney-client privilege (CPAs do not in most contexts), can represent you in Tax Court, and are trained to handle adversarial proceedings where the government is actively pursuing enforcement action.

How much does tax defense cost?

Fees depend on the type and complexity of the matter. IRS audit defense typically starts at a flat fee for correspondence audits, with field audits and Appeals cases priced based on scope. Criminal tax defense and litigation are quoted after an initial case evaluation. We publish our fee structure on our pricing page and discuss fees during the initial 15-minute consultation.

Do I need a tax attorney if I already have a CPA?

If you're facing an audit, collections action, or investigation, yes. Your CPA prepared the return that's being questioned — which means they may be a witness, not your advocate. A tax attorney provides independent representation with full attorney-client privilege.

Can you represent me if I'm in another state?

Yes. IRS matters are federal and do not require the attorney to be located in the same state as the client. We represent clients nationwide in IRS audits, Appeals, Tax Court, criminal investigations, and tax debt resolution.

What should I do if I receive an IRS notice or audit letter?

Do not ignore it — IRS notices have response deadlines that, once missed, eliminate administrative remedies. Do not call the IRS without representation. Contact a tax attorney immediately. We review the notice, determine the type of action, and file power of attorney so the IRS communicates with our office from that point forward.

How long does tax defense typically take?

Timelines vary significantly. A correspondence audit may resolve in 60–90 days. A field audit typically takes 6–18 months. IRS Appeals cases average 6–12 months. Tax Court litigation can take 1–3 years. Criminal investigations may last 1–5 years.

As Featured In & Recognized By
Super Lawyers The Wall Street Journal The New York Times Reuters Inc. 5000 Forbes Business Council

Get Started Today

Ready to Talk About Your Tax Situation?

Every case starts with a 15-minute call. We'll identify the type of action you're facing, outline the defense strategy, and give you a clear sense of timeline and cost — before any engagement.

We respond within one business day. Most calls returned same day. Everything you share is completely confidential, protected by attorney-client privilege.