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Tax scams

In this time of great upheaval in our nation’s history, find peace in the things that remain constant—one of them being that someone will always try to use taxes to steal money. The IRS again this year offers its annual list of Dirty Dozen tax scams, a variety of common schemes that peak during filing season. Here they are, in reverse order.
Offshore tax haven
Offshore banking and tax havens concept with golden coins on sand island and palm trees. Copy space
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12. Shorely you can’t be serious?

Avoiding taxes by hiding cash in unreported offshore accounts again makes the filthy 12. Since the first Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program opened in 2009, there have been more than 55,800 disclosures and the IRS has reaped more than $9.9 billion from this initiative. Stick to vacations only in faraway lands.
Priest
Young priest isolated on white
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11. “Thank goodness I don’t have to pay taxes!”

Ever have a client refuse to pay taxes on religious or moral grounds, or one who thought that only government employees were subject to federal income tax? Crooks continue to encourage taxpayers to make outlandish legal claims to avoid paying taxes. The tab for filing a frivolous return is $5,000—plus the risk of having your excuse show up as an example on a future IRS Dirty Dozen list.
Insurance concept image
Concept of insurance with hands over a house, a car and a family
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10. Not in good hands at all

For the third consecutive year, the IRS places abusive micro-captive insurance tax shelters on its list. Yes, tax law generally allows businesses to create “captive” insurance companies to protect against certain risks. In abusive “micro-captive” structures, scammers persuade owners of closely held entities to participate in schemes that lack many of the attributes of genuine insurance.
Income boosting ideas
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9. Living proof

“Taxpayers should ensure all the information they provide on their tax return is accurate,” said IRS Commissioner John Koskinen in a statement. Maybe nowhere on a return should a taxpayer tow the bottom line more than when reporting income. Fudging here to qualify for credits again makes the Dirty Dozen; the IRS also warns against schemes disguised as a debt payment option for credit cards or mortgage debt.
Cat psychiatrist
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8. “I can deduct my cat’s psychotherapy, right?”

The Dirty Dozen again this year wags a finger at overstating deductions such as charitable contributions, padding business expenses or including undeserved credits. The penalties are big and scary: 20 percent of the disallowed amount for filing an erroneous claim for a refund or credit, $5,000 if the IRS determines a taxpayer has filed a “frivolous tax return,” and a possible penalty of 75 percent of the amount owed. Better a taxpayer’s cat just stays depressed.
Man holding gasoline pump to his head
Concept of the increase of the fuel price
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7. Gassing on

What biz doesn’t like tax goodies such as the fuel use or research credits? Thing is, the former is generally limited to off-highway business use or use in farming, so unless your client drives a John Deere to work, he or she is probably out of luck. And the IRS continues to see “significant misuse” of the research credit, often when a company claims yes, it did change the world but failed to keep the right documentation to back up that claim.
Accountant holding a large tax return refund bag
Business man holding income tax return with a happy expression of surprise. Big refund concept
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6. Refund madness

Some preparers claim they’ll get a client five figures back from the government. One reason this hogwash won’t disappear is the number of tools at a scammer’s disposal: tax credits, smooth talk and clients’ greed. “Individuals have made refund claims,” said the IRS, “based on the bogus theory that the federal government maintains secret accounts for U.S. citizens and that taxpayers can gain access to the accounts by issuing 1099-OID forms.” Maybe we can add to the list of tools “plain old stupidity.”
Strip of raffle tickets
A strand of bright red rafflle tickets.
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5. Give until it hurts

“Fake charities set up by scam artists to steal money or personal information are a recurring problem,” said Koskinen. Be wary of charities with names similar to familiar or nationally known organizations. Last year we ourselves wondered about “Shave the Children.” This year’s whole Dirty Dozen makes us wonder if the second “A” in ASPCA stands for “accountants.”
Unscrupulous preparer
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4. Bad Apples Dept.

Unscrupulous preparers do more than swipe clients’ money: They also pollute a good profession. Most tax professionals provide honest, high-quality service, according to the IRS, “but there are some dishonest preparers who set up shop each filing season to perpetrate refund fraud.” Tell us about it. Tell clients too before they come into a preparer’s office with a jaundiced outlook on tax prep.
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3. Who knows?

We once heard of a 10-year-old dunned for college debt, and a young woman pestered for credit card accounts she allegedly ran up 40 years earlier. ID theft makes the Dirty Dozen again this year despite all the Security Summits and keyboard cunning we cultivate. Computers and the scammers that use them constantly grow smarter at connecting us not only with folks we know, but those we don’t.
Phone fraudster
Liar customer service representative. Middle aged man with long nose talking on mobile phone lying isolated gray wall background. Liar concept. Human face expression emotion feeling character traits
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2. Closing the ring

It’s a special kind of threat when your own phone becomes your enemy. That’s why aggressive calls by criminals impersonating IRS agents again make this year’s list. Arrest, deportation, license revocation, the rack: The list of scammers’ threats continues to grow—most preying on the wrong, seemingly undying notion that the IRS routinely starts contact with taxpayers via a dial tone.
Computer identity theft
Computer identity id theft through online computer activity represented by a man getting his pocket picked by someone in his computer. Identity theft happens 19 times a minute.
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1. Taking the bait

Fake emails or websites trying to steal personal information continue to be the bottom feeders of our internet experience—and the IRS puts phishing at the top of its Dirty Dozen after reports of a big spike in phishing and malware incidents during the 2016 tax season. Evolving schemes now ensnare not only grandma, but also tax and payroll professionals, HR personnel and schools for money, passwords, SSNs and other info that can ignite ID theft.
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