Law360, Washington (October 20, 2017, 8:25 PM EDT) -- Although an IRS expert lied on the stand about his work on cases like that of Michael Jackson’s estate, with hundreds of millions of dollars at stake, that isn’t enough to exclude his testimony outright and gut a crucial part of the agency’s case, a U.S. Tax Court judge has ruled. Judge Mark V. Holmes preferred instead to account for the lie when he considers the testimony from intellectual property expert Weston Anson, chairman of Consor Intellectual Asset Management, who admitted under cross-examination that it wasn’t true when he testified that he had “not begun any work” on the Whitney Houston...

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