[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 153 (Friday, August 7, 2020)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 47931-47936]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-16912]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

26 CFR Part 301

[REG-132434-17]
RIN 1545-B012


Certain Non-Government Persons Not Authorized To Participate in 
Examinations of Books and Witnesses as a Section 6103(n) Contractor

AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.

ACTION: Withdrawal of notice of proposed rulemaking; notice of proposed 
rulemaking.

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SUMMARY: This document withdraws a notice of proposed rulemaking (REG-
132434-17) published in the Federal Register on March 28, 2018, which 
contained proposed regulations that addressed the participation of 
persons described under section 6103(n) of the Code in the interview of 
a summoned witness and excluded certain non-government attorneys from 
participating in an IRS examination.
    This document also contains new proposed regulations to implement 
section 7602(f) of the Internal Revenue Code (Code), which was added to 
the Code by the Taxpayer First Act of 2019. The new proposed 
regulations implement new section 7602(f) regarding the persons who may 
be provided books, papers, records, or other data obtained pursuant to 
section 7602 for the sole purpose of providing expert evaluation and 
assistance to the IRS, and continue to propose limitations on the types 
of non-governmental attorneys to whom, under the authority of section 
6103(n), any books, papers, records, or other data obtained pursuant to 
section 7602 may be provided. The new proposed regulations also propose 
to prohibit any IRS contractors from asking a summoned person's 
representative to clarify an objection or assertion of privilege. The 
regulations affect these persons.

DATES: Written or electronic comments and requests for a public hearing 
must be received by October 6, 2020. Requests for a public hearing must 
be submitted as prescribed in the ``Comments and Requests for a Public 
Hearing'' section.

ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly encouraged to submit public comments 
electronically. Submit electronic submissions via the Federal 
eRulemaking Portal at www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and REG-132434-
17) by following the online instructions for submitting comments. Once 
submitted to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments cannot be edited 
or withdrawn. The IRS expects to have limited personnel available to 
process public comments that are submitted on paper through mail. Until 
further notice, any comments submitted on paper will be considered to 
the extent practicable. The Department of the Treasury (Treasury 
Department) and the IRS will publish for public availability any 
comment submitted electronically, and to the extent practicable on 
paper, to its public docket. Send paper submissions to: CC:PA:LPD:PR 
(REG-132434-17), Room 5203, Internal Revenue Service, PO Box 7604, Ben 
Franklin Station, Washington, DC 20044.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations, 
William V. Spatz at (202) 317-5461; concerning submission of comments, 
Regina Johnson, (202) 317-5177; (not toll-free numbers).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background

Overview

    These proposed regulations amend the Procedure and Administration 
Regulations (26 CFR part 301) under section 7602(a) of the Code 
relating to participation by persons described in section 6103(n) and 
26 CFR 301.6103(n)-1(a) in receiving and reviewing summoned books, 
papers, records, or other data and in interviewing a summoned witness 
under oath.
    The U.S. tax system relies upon taxpayers' self-assessment and 
reporting of their tax liability. The expansive information-gathering 
authority that Congress granted to the IRS under the Code includes the 
IRS's broad examination and summons authority, which allows the IRS to 
determine the accuracy of that self-assessment. See United States v. 
Arthur Young & Co., 65 U.S. 805, 816 (1984). Section 7602(a), in 
relevant part, provides that, for the purpose of ascertaining the 
correctness of any return, making a return where none has been made, or 
determining the liability of any person for any internal revenue tax, 
the IRS is authorized to examine books and records, issue summonses 
seeking documents and testimony, and take testimony from witnesses 
under oath. These provisions have been part of the revenue laws since 
1864.
    Use of outside specialists is appropriate to assist the IRS in 
determining the correctness of the taxpayer's self-assessed tax 
liability. The assistance of persons from outside the IRS, such as 
economists, engineers, appraisers, individuals with specialized 
knowledge who are also attorneys, industry specialists, and actuaries, 
promotes fair and efficient administration and enforcement of the laws 
administered by the IRS by providing specialized knowledge, skills, or 
abilities that the IRS officers or employees assigned to the 
examination may not possess. Section 6103(n) and 26 CFR 301.6103(n)-
1(a) authorize the IRS to disclose returns and return information to 
such persons in their capacity as contractors.
    On June 18, 2014, temporary regulations (TD 9669) regarding 
participation in a summons interview of a person described in section 
6103(n) were published in the Federal Register (79 FR 34625). A notice 
of proposed rulemaking (REG-121542-14) cross-referencing the temporary 
regulations was published in the Federal Register (79 FR 34668) the 
same day. No public hearing was requested or held. The IRS received two 
comments on the proposed regulations and, after consideration of these 
comments, the proposed regulations were adopted in final regulations 
(TD 9778) published in the Federal Register (81 FR 45409) on July 14, 
2016 (2016 Summons Interview Regulations).
    The 2016 Summons Interview Regulations under Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3) 
were issued, in part, to clarify that persons described in section 
6103(n) and Sec.  301.6103(n)-1(a) may receive and review books, 
papers, records, or other data summoned by the IRS. The regulations 
under Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3) were also issued to clarify that, in the 
presence and under the guidance of an IRS officer or employee, these 
non-government persons could participate fully in the interview of a 
person whom the IRS had summoned as a witness to provide testimony 
under oath, allowing a contractor to ask a summoned witness substantive 
questions. See 81 FR 45409, at 45410.
    New section 7602(f), enacted by section 1208 of the Taxpayer First 
Act of 2019, Public Law 116-25, and effective on July 1, 2019, now bars 
non-government persons who are hired by

[[Page 47932]]

the IRS from questioning a witness under oath whose testimony was 
obtained pursuant to a summons issued under section 7602.

Executive Order 13789, Notice 2017-38, and the Reports to the President

    Before new section 7602(f) was enacted on July 1, 2019, the 
President issued Executive Order 13789 on April 21, 2017 (E.O. 13789, 
82 FR 19317), instructing the Secretary of the Treasury (Secretary) to 
review all significant tax regulations issued on or after January 1, 
2016, and to identify regulations that (i) impose an undue burden on 
U.S. taxpayers; (ii) add undue complexity to the Federal tax laws; or 
(iii) exceed the statutory authority of the IRS, and take appropriate 
action to alleviate the burdens of these regulations. E.O. 13789 
further instructed the Secretary to submit to the President within 60 
days a report (First Report) that identified regulations that meet the 
criteria and should be modified. Notice 2017-38 (2017-30 I.R.B. 147 
(July 24, 2017)) included the 2016 Summons Interview Regulations in a 
list of regulations identified by the Secretary in the First Report as 
meeting the President's criteria. E.O. 13789 instructed the Secretary 
to submit to the President a second report (Second Report) that 
recommended specific actions to mitigate the burden imposed by 
regulations identified in the First Report.
    In response to Notice 2017-38, the Treasury Department and the IRS 
received seven comments from professional and business associations 
addressing the 2016 Summons Interview Regulations. All but one of these 
comments recommended removal of the regulations based primarily on the 
commenters' perception that the 2016 Summons Interview Regulations 
create longer and less efficient examinations by improperly delegating 
authority to outside law firms to conduct examinations. The one 
commenter that did not recommend removal of the regulations in their 
entirety requested removal of the provisions permitting a contractor to 
question directly a witness during a summons interview.
    On October 16, 2017, the Secretary published the Second Report in 
the Federal Register (82 FR 48013) stating that the Treasury Department 
and the IRS were considering proposing an amendment to the 2016 Summons 
Interview Regulations to narrow their scope to prohibit certain non-
government attorneys from questioning witnesses on behalf of the IRS 
and playing a behind-the-scenes role in an examination, such as by 
reviewing summoned records or consulting on IRS legal strategy.

2018 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

    On March 28, 2018, the Treasury Department and the IRS published 
proposed regulations (REG-132434-17) in the Federal Register (83 FR 
13206), which split the 2016 Summons Interview Regulations in Sec.  
301.7602-1(b)(3) into two new subparagraphs set forth as Sec.  
301.7602-1(b)(3)(i) and (ii). The first new subparagraph--Sec.  
301.7602-1(b)(3)(i)--described the general rule for IRS contractor 
participation in an examination of books, records, and witnesses under 
section 7602 in the same terms as the 2016 Summons Interview 
Regulations, except it did not include the last clause which addressed 
IRS contractors asking a summoned person's representative to clarify an 
objection or assertion of privilege. The second new subparagraph--Sec.  
301.7602-1(b)(3)(ii)--provided that non-governmental attorneys were not 
eligible to be hired by the IRS to participate in an examination, 
unless the non-governmental attorney fit into one of three exceptions: 
(1) A specialist in foreign, state, or local law, including tax law; 
(2) a specialist in non-tax substantive law that is relevant to an 
issue in the examination, such as patent law, property law, or 
environmental law; or (3) a person who happens to be an attorney, but 
is hired by the IRS for knowledge, skills, or abilities other than 
providing legal services as an attorney. These exceptions were designed 
to ensure that the IRS remained able to continue to hire and receive 
critical support from outside experts and ancillary contractors with 
the special skills, knowledge, and abilities the IRS needs to be 
successful in its most high profile cases, while prohibiting the IRS 
from hiring non-governmental attorneys as specialists in federal tax 
law or in U.S. civil litigation to participate in an examination under 
section 7602.
    A public hearing on the 2018 proposed regulations was held on July 
31, 2018. There were six speakers at the hearing, four of whom had 
previously provided the IRS with written public comments in response to 
the notice of proposed rulemaking. Those comments are available at 
www.regulations.gov.
    Three speakers at the public hearing generally supported the 
direction of the 2018 proposed amendments to the 2016 Summons Interview 
Regulations. They supported both paring back the types of non-
government attorney contractors whom the IRS may hire to assist it in 
the activities described in section 7602(a) and removing prior approval 
for any contractor to ask a summoned person's representative to clarify 
an objection or assertion of privilege. Two of these speakers stated in 
their public comments a new argument that allowing any non-government 
attorney to ask questions of a witness under oath was ``the most 
intrusive of governmental actions, because it carries immediate perjury 
implications.'' Overall, however, these three speakers urged that the 
2016 Summons Interview Regulations be eliminated entirely, contending 
that allowing any contractor to participate fully in a summons 
interview may cause the IRS officer or employee in charge of the 
interview to lose control of the interview, that permitting any IRS 
contractors to receive and review information and documents obtained 
pursuant to section 7602 was an unlawful delegation of inherently 
governmental functions to private contractors, and that allowing any 
IRS contractors access to such information and documents posed an 
unacceptably high risk of unlawful disclosure of private tax 
information by these contractors. The Treasury Department and the IRS 
previously addressed and declined to adopt these arguments in the 
preamble to the 2016 Summons Interview Regulations (TD 9778) published 
in the Federal Register (81 FR 45409) on July 14, 2016.
    A fourth speaker, who also submitted a public comment to the notice 
of proposed rulemaking, spoke for himself and six federal tax law 
professors. This speaker commented that under the 2018 proposed 
regulations the IRS was disarming itself in examinations of 
multinational companies in complex cases. This speaker opposed the 2018 
proposed regulations, saying the IRS would be foreclosing its access to 
external expert litigation skills, while large U.S. taxpayers can hire 
all the legal talent they want. A fifth speaker observed that transfer 
pricing issues are complex, and the IRS needs non-tax law expertise to 
understand the technological, logistical, economic, and financial 
interactions that are at stake in transfer pricing cases.
    A sixth speaker argued that the legislative history to section 
6103(n) provided that the ``other services'' allowed thereunder through 
a 1990 amendment to the statute were limited to those provided to the 
IRS by ``expert witnesses.'' This was another argument that was 
previously discussed and addressed in the preamble to the 2016 Summons 
Interview Regulations. This speaker further contended that it would be 
improper for the IRS to use as an expert witness any specialist in 
domestic, non-tax laws. This second

[[Page 47933]]

argument, in combination with the speaker's first argument, argue for 
rejection of the portion of the 2018 proposed regulations (and of the 
present proposed regulations) that allows the IRS to use in an 
examination any attorney hired as a specialist ``in non-tax substantive 
law that is relevant to an issue in the examination, such as patent 
law, property law, or environmental law.''
    Most of the speakers and written comments recommended that the 
Treasury Department and the IRS postpone action on the 2018 proposed 
regulations, because the House of Representatives and Senate Finance 
Committee had each previously approved proposed legislation that would 
alter the 2016 Summons Interview Regulations. Congress enacted new 
section 7602(f) on July 1, 2019, before the 2018 proposed regulations 
were finalized.

Legislative History of Section 7602(f)

    Prior to 2018, bills were introduced in the House and Senate that 
included proposed legislative provisions to alter the IRS contractor 
conduct allowed pursuant to the 2016 Summons Interview Regulations. On 
April 18, 2018, H.R. 5444 passed the House with a section 11308 that 
would have added new section 7602(f) to the Internal Revenue Code. 
Section 11308 of H.R. 5444 was explained in H. Rep. 115-637, Part 1, at 
34-36 (April 13, 2018). This bill was not passed by the Senate in 2018, 
but S. 3728 was introduced in the Senate on July 26, 2018 with a 
corresponding proposal in section 704 of the bill to add new section 
7602(f) to the Internal Revenue Code.
    In 2019, different versions of the Taxpayer First Act were 
introduced in the House and Senate, and these bills again contained 
provisions for adding new section 7602(f) to the Internal Revenue Code. 
H.R. 1957 was introduced in the House on March 28, 2019 and passed the 
House on April 9, 2019, but did not pass the Senate. Section 1208 of 
H.R. 1957 contained proposed statutory language for new Internal 
Revenue Code section 7602(f) that was identical to the statutory 
language that was enacted a short time later on July 1, 2019 in section 
1208 of H.R. 3151. Due to the procedural way in which H.R. 3151 became 
a vehicle for enacting the Taxpayer First Act, there are no separate 
House, Senate, or Conference Reports regarding H.R. 3151. Therefore, it 
is appropriate for the Treasury Department and the IRS to look to the 
House Ways and Means Committee and Joint Committee Reports for H.R. 
1957, the immediate predecessor to H.R. 3151, to identify what Congress 
meant by the words ``expert evaluation and assistance'' used in new 
section 7602(f).
    The House Ways and Means Committee and Joint Committee Reports for 
H.R. 1957 clarify the meaning of ``expert evaluation and assistance.'' 
The House Ways and Means Committee Report explained that pursuant to 
new section 7602(f), the IRS could not under the authority of section 
6103(n) ``provide to a tax administration contractor any books, papers, 
records or other data obtained by summons, except when such person 
requires such information for the sole purpose of providing expert 
evaluation and assistance to the IRS (including, for example, access to 
such information by translators) . . . [and, that new section 7602(f)] 
is not intended to restrict the Office of Chief Counsel's ability to 
use court reporters, translators or interpreters, photocopy services, 
and other similar ancillary contractors.'' H.R. Rep. No. 116-39, at 50 
(2019) (emphasis added). The Joint Committee staff report for the House 
Committee markup of H.R. 1957 used the same explanatory language as the 
House Committee Report to describe the types of IRS contractor 
participation that new section 7602(f) was intended to allow under the 
terms ``expert evaluation and assistance.'' JCX-15-19, at 22 (2019). 
These reports confirm that Congress intended these terms to have a 
broad interpretation in the examination context of section 7602.
    The restrictions in the second sentence of new section 7602(f) on 
an IRS contractor questioning a witness are expressly limited to 
witnesses whose testimony was obtained pursuant to section 7602 and to 
a witness questioned ``under oath.'' The IRS will continue to interview 
summoned witnesses ``under oath,'' even though doing so limits the 
opportunity of an IRS contractor to ask a summoned witness any 
questions directly. Contractors may continue to ask questions 
informally (not under oath) of a taxpayer, a taxpayer's employee, or 
third parties in appropriate circumstances.

Explanation of Provisions

Overview

    This document withdraws, effective as of August 7, 2020, the 
previously proposed 2018 regulations because Public Law 116-25 (enacted 
on July 1, 2019) bars persons other than officers or employees of the 
Internal Revenue Service or the Office of Chief Counsel from 
substantively questioning summoned persons who are providing testimony 
to the IRS under oath, effective as of July 1, 2019.
    These new proposed regulations continue to narrow the scope of the 
2016 Summons Interview Regulations by providing that non-government 
attorneys may not be hired by the IRS to assist in an examination under 
section 7602 unless the attorney is hired by the IRS as a specialist in 
foreign, state, or local law (including foreign, state, or local tax 
law), or in non-tax substantive law that is relevant to an issue in the 
examination, or is hired for knowledge, skills, or abilities other than 
providing legal services as an attorney. These proposed regulations 
also prohibit any IRS contractors from asking a summoned person's 
representative to clarify an objection or assertion of privilege.
    These proposed regulations include some aspects of the 2018 
proposed regulations and provide new rules. Consistent with the 2018 
proposed regulations, these proposed regulations prohibit the hiring of 
certain non-government attorneys to assist in section 7602 examinations 
even though this prohibition on hiring is not required by section 
7602(f). The 2018 proposed regulations described the extent of a 
contractor's participation in IRS examinations and summons interviews 
in broad terms. In contrast, these proposed regulations interpret and 
implement the statutory restrictions under section 7602(f) on sharing 
information obtained in an examination with contractors and questioning 
a witness under oath in a summons interview. These proposed regulations 
also prohibit IRS contractors from asking a summoned person's 
representative to clarify an objection or assertion of privilege in a 
summons interview even though this prohibition is not required by 
section 7602(f).

Contractor Access to Books and Records

    Proposed Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3)(i)(A) tracks the first sentence of 
new section 7602(f). Proposed Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3)(i)(B) then 
describes three non-exclusive types of potential IRS contractors who 
may appropriately provide the IRS with ``expert evaluation and 
assistance,'' so as to receive from and review for the IRS any books, 
papers, records, or other data the IRS obtained pursuant to section 
7602 in an examination. The first of these non-exclusive types 
described in the proposed regulations is a person with specialized 
expertise in certain substantive areas, including but not limited to an 
economist, an engineer, an attorney specializing in an area relevant

[[Page 47934]]

to an issue in the examination (such as patent law, property law, 
environmental law, or foreign, state, or local law (including foreign, 
state, or local tax law)), an industry expert, or other subject-matter 
expert. The second type of specialists who are described in the 
proposed regulations as persons with whom the IRS may appropriately 
provide books, papers, records, or other data the IRS obtained pursuant 
to section 7602 in an examination for their assistance are persons 
providing support to an IRS examination as ancillary service providers, 
including but not limited to court reporters, translators or 
interpreters, photocopy services, providers of data processing programs 
or equipment, litigation support services, or other similar 
contractors. The third type of eligible potential contractors under 
section 7602(f) are whistleblower-related contractors, who are 
described in Sec.  301.6103(n)-2 and who may possess special factual 
knowledge that may assist the IRS in a section 7602 examination. 
Neither section 7602(f) nor its legislative history suggest that 
Congress intended to curtail the IRS's ability to work with 
whistleblower-related contractors.
    Proposed Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3)(i)(C) describes the circumstances 
in which the IRS may hire certain attorneys as contractors to assist 
the IRS in a section 7602 examination. The IRS will not hire an 
attorney as a contractor for this purpose unless the attorney is hired 
as a specialist in foreign, state, or local law (including foreign, 
state, or local tax law), or in non-tax substantive law that is 
relevant to an issue in the examination, such as patent law, property 
law, or environmental law, or is hired for knowledge, skills, or 
abilities other than providing legal services as an attorney. Proposed 
Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3)(i)(C) largely repeats the restriction on non-
government attorney hiring in the 2018 proposed regulations and is 
intended to exclude two types of potential IRS contractors--Federal tax 
lawyers and U.S. civil litigators--from being hired for their expertise 
in Federal tax law or civil litigation to assist in an examination 
under section 7602. Though not required by new section 7602(f), the 
Treasury Department and the IRS choose to impose this hiring 
restriction in the interests of sound tax administration. The IRS 
workforce (including the Office of Chief Counsel), already possesses 
the knowledge, skills, and abilities the IRS needs with respect to the 
interpretation and application of Federal tax law and the practice of 
U.S. civil litigation involving Federal taxes in the U.S. Tax Court.

IRS Contractor Participation in an IRS Summons Interview

    The first sentence of proposed Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3)(ii)(A) tracks 
the second sentence of new section 7602(f). The 2016 Summons Interview 
Regulations and the 2018 proposed regulations both clarified that 
eligible IRS contractors could attend a summons interview and provide 
assistance to the IRS or Office of Chief Counsel employees in 
attendance. New section 7602(f) does not prevent these eligible IRS 
contractors from attending and providing assistance to the IRS at a 
summons interview under oath. New section 7602(f) only prohibits IRS 
contractors from asking substantive questions of the summoned witness 
under oath. The second sentence of proposed Sec.  301.7602-
1(b)(3)(ii)(A) makes this distinction between allowable contractor 
attendance and assistance to the IRS, on the one hand, and unallowable 
direct questioning of a summoned witness under oath, on the other hand. 
In this second sentence, the Treasury Department and the IRS also make 
explicit the treatment of a potential issue that section 7602(f) did 
not address--whether the same IRS contractors who are now barred from 
questioning a summoned witness under oath could nevertheless ask a 
summoned person's representative to clarify an objection or assertion 
of privilege. The Treasury Department and the IRS propose in the 
interests of sound tax administration, and in light of the purposes 
behind new section 7602(f), to forego explicitly any potential 
opportunity for an IRS contractor attending an IRS summons interview to 
ask the summoned person's representative to clarify an objection or 
assertion of a privilege. However, a Department of Justice attorney in 
the Tax Division or U.S. Attorney office may attend a summons interview 
conducted under oath. The Department of Justice attorney may ask the 
summoned person's representative to clarify an objection or assertion 
of privilege.
    Proposed Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3)(ii)(B) provides, in part, that IRS 
contractors who are court reporters are not barred from asking a 
summoned witness the types of typical housekeeping questions which are 
an essential part of their jobs. Some examples of typical housekeeping 
questions asked by court reporters of a summoned witness include: Does 
the witness swear to tell the truth, will the witness speak up or speak 
(rather than gesture) an answer, and will the witness spell a name or 
address provided in an answer. The IRS has for some time hired 
contractor court reporters to make a record of IRS summons interviews 
in both large- and medium-size civil tax cases, where creating an exact 
and undisputed record of the matters discussed is considered important 
by the IRS to the case. The House Ways and Means Committee Report and 
the Joint Committee Report both specifically state that Congress did 
not intend section 7602(f) to prohibit the IRS from continuing to use 
court reporters in section 7602 circumstances. Congress could not have 
intended that the IRS continue to hire court reporters to prepare 
transcripts of summoned witnesses under oath, but yet prevent these 
court reporters from asking the witness the types of ordinary 
housekeeping questions that go along with the job of acting as a court 
reporter.
    Proposed Sec.  301.7602-1(b)(3)(ii)(B) also provides, in part, that 
IRS contractors who are translators or interpreters are permitted to 
translate questions asked by an IRS or Office of Chief Counsel employee 
to a summoned witness. In these circumstances, the Treasury Department 
and the IRS interpret new section 7602(f)'s restriction on a contractor 
asking questions as applying only to the originator of a question, and 
not to contractors who translate the original question from an IRS or 
Office of Chief Counsel employee for the witness. Translators or 
interpreters in these circumstances may also need to ask questions to 
clarify the translation. The IRS has again for some time hired 
contractor translators and interpreters in summons cases of all sizes 
where the IRS was alerted in advance of a summons interview of the 
need. The House Ways and Means Committee Report and the Joint Committee 
report both again specifically state that Congress did not intend by 
section 7602(f) to prohibit the IRS from continuing to hire translators 
and interpreters in section 7602 circumstances. Congress could not have 
intended for the IRS to continue hiring translators and interpreters to 
assist the IRS with conducting summons interviews under oath, yet 
prevent these translators or interpreters from translating an IRS or 
Office of Chief Counsel employee's questions.
    These regulations are proposed to be effective for examinations 
begun and summonses served by the IRS on or after the date that these 
proposed regulations are published in the Federal Register. This 
applicability date is appropriate because these proposed regulations 
would, as of August 7, 2020, prohibit

[[Page 47935]]

the IRS from engaging in certain activities in the context of an 
examination under section 7602 that the Treasury Department and the IRS 
have determined are not in the interests of sound tax administration.

Special Analyses

    Certain IRS regulations, including these, are exempt from the 
requirements of Executive Order 12866, as supplemented and affirmed by 
Executive Order 13563. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not 
required. Because the proposed regulations mainly affect the IRS and 
would not impose requirements on small entities, it is certified, under 
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) that the proposed 
regulations do not impose a significant economic impact on a 
substantial number of small entities. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of 
the Code, the IRS will submit the proposed regulations to the Chief 
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comments 
about the regulations' impact on small businesses.

Comments and Request for a Public Hearing

    Before these proposed regulations are adopted as final, 
consideration will be given to comments that are submitted timely to 
the IRS as prescribed in the preamble under the ADDRESSES section. The 
Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on all aspects of the 
proposed regulations. Any electronic comments submitted, and to the 
extent practicable any paper comments submitted, will be made available 
at www.regulations.gov or upon request.
    A public hearing will be scheduled if requested in writing by any 
person who timely submits electronic or written comments. Requests for 
a public hearing are also encouraged to be made electronically. If a 
public hearing is scheduled, notice of the date and time for the public 
hearing will be published in the Federal Register. Announcement 2020-4, 
I.R.B. 2020-17, provides that until further notice, public hearings 
conducted by the IRS will be held telephonically. Any telephonic 
hearing will be made accessible to people with disabilities.

Drafting Information

    The principal author of these regulations is William V. Spatz of 
the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration).

List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 301

    Employment taxes, Estate taxes, Excise taxes, Gift taxes, Income 
taxes, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

Withdrawal of a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

    Accordingly, under the authority of 26 U.S.C. 7805, the notice of 
proposed rulemaking (REG-132434-17) that was published in the Federal 
Register on March 28, 2018 (83 FR 13206) is withdrawn.

Proposed Amendments to the Regulations

    Accordingly, 26 CFR part 301 is proposed to be amended as follows:

PART 301--PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION

0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 301 continues to read in 
part as follows:

    Authority:  26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *

0
Par. 2. Section 301.7602-1 is amended by:
0
1. In paragraph (b)(2), adding ``(Secretary)'' at the end of the first 
sentence.
0
2. Revising paragraphs (b)(3) and (d).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  301.7602-1  Examination of books and witnesses.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (3) Participation of a person described in section 6103(n)--(i) IRS 
contractor access to books and records obtained by the IRS 
administratively--(A) In general. The Secretary may not, under the 
authority of section 6103(n), provide any books, papers, records, or 
other data obtained pursuant to section 7602 to any person authorized 
under section 6103(n), except when such person requires such 
information for the sole purpose of providing expert evaluation and 
assistance to the IRS.
    (B) Persons providing expert evaluation and assistance. For the 
purposes of paragraph (b)(3)(i)(A) of this section, persons providing 
expert evaluation and assistance may include, but are not limited to, 
the following:
    (1) Persons with specialized expertise in certain substantive 
areas, including, but not limited to, economists, engineers, attorneys 
specializing in an area relevant to an issue in the examination (such 
as patent law, property law, environmental law, or foreign, state, or 
local law (including foreign, state, or local tax law)), industry 
experts, or other subject-matter experts;
    (2) Persons providing support as ancillary service contractors 
including, but not limited to, court reporters, translators or 
interpreters, photocopy services, providers of data processing programs 
or equipment, litigation support services, or other similar 
contractors; and
    (3) Whistleblower-related contractors described in Sec.  
301.6103(n)-2.
    (C) Hiring of certain non-government attorneys. The IRS may not 
hire an attorney as a contractor to assist in an examination under 
section 7602 unless the attorney is hired by the IRS as a specialist in 
foreign, state, or local law (including foreign, state, or local tax 
law), or in non-tax substantive law that is relevant to an issue in the 
examination, such as patent law, property law, or environmental law, or 
is hired for knowledge, skills, or abilities other than providing legal 
services as an attorney.
    (ii) IRS contractor participation in an IRS summons interview--(A) 
In general. No person other than an officer or employee of the IRS or 
its Office of Chief Counsel may, on behalf of the Secretary, question a 
witness under oath whose testimony was obtained pursuant to section 
7602. Persons authorized by section 6103(n) and with whom the Secretary 
may provide books, papers, records, or other data obtained pursuant to 
section 7602 may also attend a summons interview and provide assistance 
to the IRS or Office of Chief Counsel employees in attendance, but may 
not question the summoned witness under oath or ask a summoned person's 
representative to clarify an objection or assertion of privilege.
    (B) Court reporters, translators, and interpreters are not barred 
from asking questions. Court reporters who are hired as contractors by 
the IRS to make a record of an IRS summons interview are permitted to 
ask typical housekeeping questions of a summoned witness. Examples of 
such questions include, but are not limited to, asking whether the 
witness swears to tell the truth, asking the witness to spell a word or 
phrase, and asking whether the witness can speak up or speak rather 
than gesture an answer. Translators and interpreters who are hired as 
contractors by the IRS to assist in the interview of a summoned witness 
are permitted to translate any of the questions that are asked of the 
witness by an IRS or Office of Chief Counsel officer or employee and to 
ask questions which may be necessary to clarify the translation.
* * * * *
    (d) Applicability date. This section is applicable after September 
3, 1982, except for paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section which are 
applicable on and after April 1, 2005 and paragraph (b)(3) of this 
section which applies to

[[Page 47936]]

examinations begun or administrative summonses served by the IRS on or 
after August 6, 2020. For rules under paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this 
section that are applicable to summonses issued on or after September 
10, 2002 or under paragraph (b)(3) of this section that are applicable 
to summons interviews conducted on or after June 18, 2014 and before 
July 14, 2016, see 26 CFR 301.7602-1T (revised as of April 1, 2016). 
For rules under paragraph (b)(3) of this section that are applicable to 
administrative summonses served by the IRS before August 6, 2020, see 
26 CFR 301.7602-1 (revised as of April 1, 2020).

Sunita Lough,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2020-16912 Filed 8-6-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P