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IRS "dirty dozen" tax scams
by Tony Novak, CPA, MBA, MT revised
11/16/2014
The IRS updated its "Dirty Dozen"
Tax Cheating Schemes and urges people to avoid these
common schemes:
- Trust Misuse.
Unscrupulous promoters for years have urged
taxpayers to transfer assets into trusts. They
promise reduction of income subject to tax,
deductions for personal expenses and reduced estate
or gift taxes. However, some trusts do not deliver
the promised tax benefits, and the IRS is actively
examining these arrangements. More than two dozen
injunctions have been obtained against promoters
since 2001, and numerous promoters and their clients
have been prosecuted. As with other arrangements,
taxpayers should seek the advice of a trusted
professional before entering into a trust.
- Frivolous Arguments.
Promoters have been known to make the following
outlandish claims: that the Sixteenth Amendment
concerning congressional power to lay and collect
income taxes was never ratified; that wages are not
income; that filing a return and paying taxes are
merely voluntary; and that being required to file
Form 1040 violates the Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination or the Fourth Amendment right to
privacy. Don’t believe these or other similar
claims. Such arguments are false and have been
thrown out of court. While taxpayers have the right
to contest their tax liabilities in court, no one
has the right to disobey the law.
- Return Preparer Fraud.
Dishonest return preparers can cause many headaches
for taxpayers who fall victim to their ploys. Such
preparers derive financial gain by skimming a
portion of their clients’ refunds and charging
inflated fees for return preparation services. They
attract new clients by promising large refunds.
Taxpayers should choose carefully when hiring a tax
preparer. As the saying goes, if it sounds too good
to be true, it probably is. No matter who prepares
the return, the taxpayer is ultimately responsible
for its accuracy. Since 2002, the courts have issued
injunctions ordering dozens of individuals to cease
preparing returns, and the Department of Justice has
filed complaints against dozens of others, which are
pending in court.
- Credit Counseling Agencies.
Taxpayers should be careful with credit counseling
organizations that claim they can fix credit
ratings, push debt payment agreements or charge high
fees, monthly service charges or mandatory
“contributions” that may add to debt. The IRS Tax
Exempt and Government Entities Division has made
auditing credit counseling organizations a priority
because some of these tax-exempt organizations,
which are intended to provide education to
low-income customers with debt problems, are
charging debtors large fees, while providing little
or no counseling.
- "Claim of Right" Doctrine.
In this scheme, a taxpayer files a return and
attempts to take a deduction equal to the entire
amount of his or her wages. The promoter advises the
taxpayer to label the deduction as “a necessary
expense for the production of income” or
“compensation for personal services actually
rendered.” This so-called deduction is based on a
misinterpretation of the Internal Revenue Code and
has no basis in law.
- “No Gain” Deduction.
Similar to “Claim of Right,” filers attempt to
eliminate their entire adjusted gross income (AGI)
by deducting it on Schedule A. The filer lists his
or her AGI under the Schedule A section labeled
“Other Miscellaneous Deductions” and attaches a
statement to the return, referring to court
documents and including the words “No Gain
Realized.”
- "Corporation Sole".
Since September 2004, the Department of Justice has
obtained six injunctions against promoters of this
scheme and filed complaints against 11 others.
Participants apply for incorporation under the
pretext of being a “bishop” or “overseer” of a
one-person, phony religious organization or society
with the idea that this entitles the individual to
exemption from federal income taxes as a nonprofit,
religious organization. When used as intended,
Corporation Sole statutes enable religious leaders
to separate themselves legally from the control and
ownership of church assets. But the rules have been
twisted at seminars where taxpayers are charged fees
of $1,000 or more and incorrectly told that
Corporation Sole laws provide a “legal” way to
escape paying federal income taxes, child support
and other personal debts.
- Identity Theft. It
pays to be choosy when it comes to disclosing
personal information. Identity thieves have used
stolen personal data to access financial accounts,
run up charges on credit cards and apply for new
loans. The IRS is aware of several identity theft
scams involving taxes. In one case, fraudsters sent
bank customers fictitious correspondence and IRS
forms in an attempt to trick them into disclosing
their personal financial data. In another, abusive
tax preparers used clients’ Social Security numbers
and other information to file false tax returns
without the clients’ knowledge. Sometimes scammers
pose as the IRS itself. Last year the IRS shut down
a scheme in which perpetrators used e-mail to
announce to unsuspecting taxpayers that they were
“under audit” and could set matters right by
divulging sensitive financial information on an
official-looking Web site. Taxpayers should note the
IRS does not use e-mail to contact them about issues
related to their accounts. If taxpayers have any
doubt whether a contact from the IRS is authentic,
they can call 1-800-829-1040 to confirm it.
- Abuse of Charitable
Organizations and Deductions. The IRS has observed
an increase in the use of tax-exempt organizations
to improperly shield income or assets from taxation.
This can occur, for example, when a taxpayer moves
assets or income to a tax-exempt supporting
organization or donor-advised fund but maintains
control over the assets or income, thereby obtaining
a tax deduction without transferring a commensurate
benefit to charity. A “contribution” of a historic
facade easement to a tax-exempt conservation
organization is another example. In many cases,
local historic preservation laws already prohibit
alteration of the home’s facade, making the
contributed easement superfluous. Even if the facade
could be altered, the deduction claimed for the
easement contribution may far exceed the easement’s
impact on the value of the property.
- Offshore Transactions.
Despite a crackdown on the practice by the IRS and
state tax agencies, individuals continue to try to
avoid U.S. taxes by illegally hiding income in
offshore bank and brokerage accounts or using
offshore credit cards, wire transfers, foreign
trusts, employee leasing schemes, private annuities
or life insurance to do so. The IRS, along with the
tax agencies of U.S. states and possessions,
continues to aggressively pursue taxpayers and
promoters involved in such abusive transactions.
- Zero Return. Promoters
instruct taxpayers to enter all zeros on their
federal income tax filings. In a twist on this
scheme, filers enter zero income, report their
withholding and then write “nunc pro tunc”–– Latin
for “now for then”––on the return.
- Employment Tax Evasion.
The IRS has seen a number of illegal schemes that
instruct employers not to withhold federal income
tax or other employment taxes from wages paid to
their employees. Such advice is based on an
incorrect interpretation of Section 861 and other
parts of the tax law and has been refuted in court.
Recent cases have resulted in criminal convictions,
and the courts have issued injunctions against more
than a dozen persons ordering them to stop promoting
the scheme. Employer participants can also be held
responsible for back payments of employment taxes,
plus penalties and interest. It is worth noting that
employees who have nothing withheld from their wages
are still responsible for payment of their personal
taxes.
Status: partly outdated
This article has not been updated since its original date of
issue in 2005 and should be considered to be partly out-of-date.
See the
2011
dirty dozen list on the IRS web site.
Opinions expressed are the solely those of the author and do not represent the
position of any other person, company or entity mentioned in the article. Information is from sources believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed. Any accounting, business or tax advice contained in this communication, including attachments and enclosures, is not intended as a thorough, in-depth analysis of specific issues or a substitute for a formal opinion, nor is it sufficient to avoid tax-related penalties. Tony Novak
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