Helio goin down?

Posted by Peat 
Helio goin down?
Date: October 04, 2008 03:52AM
Posted by: Peat
[www.autosport.com]

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what hast thou dunst helio?



Re: Helio goin down?
Date: October 04, 2008 12:01PM
Posted by: Covfan
From Driving with the stars to dancing with the stars to picking up the soap in the showers. Talk about a fall from grace.
Re: Helio goin down?
Date: October 06, 2008 03:34PM
Posted by: Rodrigo007
just read the whole history in it's tiny details in a Brazilian site regarding all the Emerson - Helio fight; Seven, Fintage,Penske etc... don't know how much the journalist is biased (if any).

Sadly, i have to say that prolly Helio gonna get arrested for some long years (between 20-35 i think)
Re: Helio goin down?
Date: October 11, 2008 03:20AM
Posted by: Bruninho
He'll be at Surfers. he got an authorization to race there....



Re: Helio goin down?
Date: October 11, 2008 10:25AM
Posted by: red 5
...I am deleting all my posts. This forum does not deserve my presence here. I am disgusted at some members behaviour and all protection they get. just because they came here before me. BS.







Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/17/2008 06:20PM by red 5.
Re: Helio goin down?
Date: November 14, 2008 11:25PM
Posted by: Bruninho


His career is definately over.



Re: Helio goin down?
Date: November 15, 2008 12:52AM
Posted by: turkey_machine
He could take a sabbatical like Mika did...



Everyone knows that million-to-one chances happen 9 times out of 10; indeed, it's a common requirement in fairy tales. If the human didn't have to overcome huge odds, what would be the point? Terry Pratchett - The Science Of Discworld

GPGSL S5 Race driver for IED.

Re: Helio goin down?
Date: March 10, 2009 12:31AM
Posted by: Guimengo
MIAMI (AP) — To this day, race car driver and ``Dancing with The Stars'' winner Helio Castroneves hasn't seen a single dime of $5 million in licensing money he was promised under a 1999 contract with Penske Racing. It's either been parked at Penske or is still idling in a Dutch investment account.

But the Internal Revenue Service says Castroneves owes U.S. income taxes on the money anyway, contending the 33-year-old driver can't avoid tax by simply refusing cash to which he's entitled. A complex concept known as ``constructive receipt'' is at the heart of the prosecution's case against the two-time Indianapolis 500 winner.

Testimony resumes Tuesday in the tax trial of Castroneves, his business-manager sister Katiucia Castroneves - both originally from Sao Paulo, Brazil - and his lawyer Alan Miller of Birmingham, Mich. All are charged in a seven-count federal indictment with conspiracy and tax evasion from 1999 to 2004.

The three defendants are facing more than six years behind bars if convicted. Trial is expected to last about a month.

Experts say jurors will have to decide if the Castroneves deal was real or contrived to make it appear he didn't have control of his Penske money.

``What the government is saying is, if you are entitled to some cash, and you leave it in your mother's bank account, it's still your cash,'' said Chas Roy-Chowdrey, a tax expert with the global industry group Association of Chartered Certified Accountants.

Castroneves is a top Indy Racing League driver, winning the Indy 500 in 2001 and 2002 and finishing second in 2003. In 2007, he gained even greater fame by winning TV's ``Dancing With The Stars'' competition.

Issues at trial have their origins in the final event of1999 of the Championship Auto Racing Teams, or CART - at the time a rival of the Indy Racing League. On Oct. 31 of that year in Fontana, Calif., Castroneves was driving in the final race for his soon-to-be-disbanded Hogan team and Greg Moore was about to sign a lucrative new contract with Penske Racing.

Moore crashed and was killed. In less than a week, Penske signed Castroneves, using Moore's contract by simply crossing out the old names and amounts and replacing them in handwritten notations. Miller negotiated that deal for $6 million - $1 million paid directly to Castroneves and $5 million to license Castroneves' name and image.

At first, the $5 million was supposed to flow to a Panamanian corporation called Seven Promotions.

In mid-December 1999, Miller sent a letter to Penske asking that the transaction be halted, according to trial testimony. Penske's general counsel, Lawrence Bluth, said the company held onto the Castroneves cash until January 2003, when it was invested with Netherlands firm Fintage Licensing B.V., where it remains today.

``We were ready to make payments to Seven Promotions. We were told not to,'' Bluth testified.

The IRS and federal prosecutors charge that arrangement was a tax dodge.

They contend Castroneves secretly controlled Seven Promotions - disputed vigorously by the defense - and should have paid U.S. taxes under the ``constructive receipt'' doctrine as soon as Penske was ready to start cutting checks.

``The individual's wishes do not control,'' said Assistant U.S. Attorney Matt Axelrod. ``A taxpayer may not deliberately turn his back upon income and thereby select the year for which he will report it.''

Miller, a former professional football player and architect of the Castroneves contract, contends the IRS is wrong. In court papers, Miller attorney Robert Bennett said Castroneves never had control of the $5 million and therefore owes no tax.

Castroneves planned to pay the IRS when the ``deferred royalty agreement'' - a way of delaying income described as similar to a 401(k) - at Fintage comes due to him in May of this year, defense lawyers say. It's not unusual for athletes to receive some compensation at later dates, they say.

``Athletes ordinarily have a short period of economic productivity in their youth, and they may not be responsible enough to manage the money for a lifetime if they receive it all at once,'' Bennett said.

Axelrod, however, said the whole arrangement is fictional, with Castroneves' ultimate goal to move out of the U.S. to a tax haven such as Monaco where he would eventually get the Penske money tax-free.

Castroneves attorney Roy Black said the driver, who lives in a $2.2 million home in Coral Gables, never schemed to hide money from the IRS. He said in opening statements that the driver knows nothing about U.S. tax laws and relied on experts to handle his finances.

``They've come up with a fiction,'' Black said.






That is taken from a news page @ Comcast.net
Re: Helio goin down?
Date: April 17, 2009 08:23PM
Posted by: Rodrigo007
acquited from two already.
Re: Helio goin down?
Date: April 17, 2009 11:02PM
Posted by: NeoLiot
acquited from six... and racing in Long Beach this weekend...

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Re: Helio goin down?
Date: April 18, 2009 09:33AM
Posted by: Joe_Satriani
Last accusation cancelled. He walks free. Now there's something I did not see coming...good for him I guess :)
Re: Helio goin down?
Date: April 19, 2009 02:06AM
Posted by: gin
wow, how did he get out of that?! Did he just magically explain everything away? cool :)

Re: Helio goin down?
Date: April 20, 2009 05:11PM
Posted by: kubica2
well done Helio! if he was trully innocent imagine the stress he must have put up with. well he is trully innocent now according the the law, so we must accept he is. (if you believe in law and order and democracy)
Re: Helio goin down?
Date: May 25, 2009 12:01AM
Posted by: Peat
What a fairytale!

Not a great 500 i thought. The current cars are making for dull racing. Vitor and Tony lucky to get away with thier respective shunts....



Re: Helio goin down?
Date: May 25, 2009 07:03PM
Posted by: Joe_Satriani
Well, I was not a fan before, but he certainly impressed me...congrats to him :)
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