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Discussion about current events, culture, independent candidates, business, education, travel, death and taxes, global mobility, citizenship and residence by investment options, Americans abroad, FATCA, CRS, U.S. citizenship renunciation, Green Card abandonment, citizenship taxation, PFIC, GILTI, foreign trusts, I-407 and more ...
Episodes

6 days ago
6 days ago
May 30, 2025 - Participants include:
Ronald Aries - @Ronald77171496
John Richardson - @ExpatriationLaw
Introduction:
Someday FATCA historians will seek to understand the impact of FATCA and U.S. citizenship taxation on individuals born in the USA, with no memory of having lived in the USA, who moved from the USA at a very early age and grew up as residents and citizens of other countries. They did NOT think of themselves as Americans. Their lives were fine until the day arrived where they had a rude awakening. They were accused of being a United Citizen. The accusation came from their financial institution in their country of residence. Under FATCA IGA mandated threats to cut off access to their financial accounts these individuals were faced with few options. The message was clear: they were U.S. tax evaders. It was time to "come clean" and provide the banks with U.S. Social Security Numbers they never had. Either that or produce a U.S. Certificate of Loss of Nationality ("CLN") which they never knew existed. But, absent compliance, they were threatened with the possibility of losing access to their bank accounts. Under these threats various people had various responses. Some officially renounced U.S. citizenship (a citizenship they didn't even know they had). Others acquired U.S. Social Security Numbers and provided them to the banks who graciously allowed them continue their banking access. Some simply hid under a rock and ignored the increasingly loud and angry threats from the banks and from their Americans overlords. But, a select few decided that they:
- would not comply
- would not renounce
- would not run
- would not hide!
Instead they decided to fight!!
Ronald Aries was a retired KLM Captain and a proud Dutch citizen. He decided to fight. His adventures with FATCA covered many of the issues raised by FATCA.
This is the fourth of my podcasts with Ronald Aries. In this podcast we review his background and discuss his latest challenge to the FATCA IGAs. This particular challenged, framed by his courageous lawyer Ellen Timmer was based on the novel theory that:
Even a U.S. citizen (if he really is one) has the general rights to privacy afforded by the general European GDPR ("General Data Privacy Regulation"). The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is a comprehensive data privacy law enacted by the European Union (EU) that came into effect on May 25, 2018.
The hearing took place on May 19, 2025. The decision is expected within six weeks. Ronald and I will do a follow up podcast to discuss the actual decision when it comes down.
Here is how AI summarized our podcast:
"Join John Richardson as he engages in an enlightening conversation with Captain Ronald Aries, the renowned KLM pilot known for his fight against FATCA's impact on accidental Americans. In this episode, discover Ronald's unique journey as an accidental American born in the United States but raised in Holland, and how it led him to challenge the controversial tax regulations imposed by the U.S.
Explore the complexities and legal battles surrounding FATCA, as Ronald shares personal anecdotes and insights from his recent court case, shedding light on the profound implications of this legislation for individuals unaware of their American citizenship status. Learn about the ongoing tensions between privacy rights, data protection, and international laws, as countries in Europe grapple with the challenge of FATCA compliance.
Experience the human side of this legal saga, as Ronald passionately discusses the personal toll and emotional weight of being entangled in a global financial net, fighting for recognition and fairness. This episode offers a poignant look into the world of accidental Americans, their struggles, and the broader implications of U.S. citizenship-based taxation policies on global individuals."
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