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Tax Scams/Consumer Alerts

 

Tax Scams

Don't fall victim to tax scams. Remember that if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. If you think you're being scammed, you can report suspected tax fraud activity by calling 1-800-829-0433.

Some of the common scams the IRS sees include:

Related Items:


Phony Arguments

No matter how some things are sliced, they're still baloney. If someone tells you that you don't have to pay taxes, check out The Truth About Frivolous Tax Arguments (PDF 405K) . This IRS.gov exclusive addresses some of the more common false "legal" arguments made by those opposed to compliance with the federal tax laws. Each contention is briefly explained, followed by a discussion of the legal authority that rejects the contention. The second section deals with frivolous arguments encountered in collection due process cases. The final section illustrates penalties imposed on those pursuing frivolous cases.  

IR-2004-41 describes the increasingly strong penalties the courts have imposed from March 2003 to March 2004 on taxpayers who pursued frivolous cases to delay IRS collection actions.

IR-2003-28 details penalties the Tax Court imposed from April 2001 until early March 2003 for making frivolous Collection Due Process arguments.


Credit Counseling Organizations

The IRS is concerned that some organizations are using their tax-exempt status to skirt consumer protection laws. Get the details through this IRS consumer alert.


Identity and Financial Theft Scams

Non-resident Aliens with U.S. Income — Using fictitious correspondence and an altered IRS Form W-8BEN, this scheme tries to get personal and financial data from foreign nationals. IR-2004-104 [Aug. 3, 2004] and IR-2004-75 [June 1, 2004] have details.

Bogus E-mail, Web site — In IR-2004-60, the Treasury Department and the IRS warned of an e-mail-based scheme that attempts to trick recipients into revealing personal information such as social security numbers, driver’s license information and bank and credit card numbers. [April 30, 2004]

Phony Bank Scam — A 2002 scam used phony bank correspondence and IRS forms to trick unwary customers into disclosing their personal and financial information to the scam promoters. The information was used to steal the customer's identity and bank account deposits, run up charges on credit cards, apply for loans, services or benefits in the customer's name, file fraudulent tax returns and more. The phony IRS forms used in this scam were labeled W-9095, W-8BEN or W-8888. IR-2002-55 has more details.

Report instances of this fraud to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration at 1-800-366-4484.

The Comptroller of the Currency issued Alerts 2002-3 and 2002-6, warning of this identity theft scam and including copies of phony bank correspondence and the phony W-9095. These are on the 2002 Alerts page of the Comptroller's Web site.

Learn more about identity theft.