
15 hours ago
Jack Fisher — Conservation, Corruption, and a Billion-Dollar Tax Shelter
In this episode of Tax Crime Junkies, Dominique Molina and Tom Gorczynski unravel one of the largest syndicated conservation easement fraud schemes in U.S. history—an operation that generated over $1.3 billion in false tax deductions while hiding behind the language of land preservation.
What began as a seemingly noble effort to conserve rural land in North Carolina evolved into a nationwide tax shelter machine fueled by inflated appraisals, compliant professionals, and promises that sounded too good to be true because they were.
At the center of it all: CPA Jack Fisher, a trusted insider who understood the tax code well enough to exploit it.
And haunting the story to this day: Kate Joy, the investor-relations coordinator who vanished just as the federal indictments landed.
We break down how Fisher and his network:
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Turned conservation easements—a legitimate charitable tax incentive—into a mass-marketed tax shelter
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Used pre-determined appraisal values to guarantee investors a fixed 4:1 deduction ratio
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Structured partnerships to obscure land values and acquisition costs
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Paid CPAs millions in disguised commissions to promote the deals
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Expanded deductions when offerings were oversold instead of disclosing dilution
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Created paperwork that looked perfectly compliant… while hiding fraudulent intent
On paper, everything checked out.
In reality, the deduction was the product.
This isn’t just a story about one bad actor.
It’s about:
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How legitimate tax incentives can be weaponized
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The ethical responsibilities of CPAs, EAs, and advisors
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The danger of “clean” paperwork masking fraudulent substance
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Why the IRS and Congress are now aggressively targeting syndicated conservation easements
And it’s a reminder that when a tax strategy requires secrecy, backdating, or “just trust us”… the ending is rarely a happy one.
Coming Next Episode
In Part Two, we’ll cover:
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The federal indictments and sentences
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The IRS crackdown on syndicated conservation easements
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Congressional attempts to reform the law
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The ongoing battle between conservation, compliance, and abuse
And we’ll zoom out to answer the big question:
Can conservation easements survive after schemes like this?
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