Tax

  • The federal government is suing the leader of a national movement that claims most Americans are not required to pay income tax.

    April 4
  • In a decidedly non-scientific survey, Money Management International found that tax time can be very different for consumers born under different sun signs.For example, the MMI survey found that Libras expecting a refund plan to receive an average refund of $2,200, while Aries are expecting a significant $800 less.

    April 4
  • Alleging pervasive fraud, the government has filed civil injunction suits against five corporations that operate Jackson Hewitt tax prep franchises, as well as 24 individuals who manage or work at the franchises, the Justice Department and the Internal Revenue Service announced.According to the four lawsuits -- filed in federal courts in Chicago, Atlanta, Detroit and Raleigh, N.C. -- the corporations operate under franchise agreements with Jackson Hewitt Tax Services Inc. of Parsippany, N.J., the nation’s second-largest tax preparation firm. Collectively, the suits allege that the businesses cost more than $70 million in losses to the U.S. Treasury.

    April 3
  • As part of its audit of the Internal Revenue Service’s 2005-06 financial statements, the Government Accountability Office took a look at what the agency was doing to correct previously reported information security weaknesses.

    April 3
  • The Department of Justice and the Internal Revenue Service put on a bit of a dog and pony show yesterday, holding a special press conference to announce highlights of their work during the past year to enforce federal tax laws.

    April 3
  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board released a new auditing standard along with guidance targeting how tax services are provided to people in financial reporting oversight roles.

    April 3
  • Tax Freedom Day will fall on April 30 this year, two days later than 2006, according to the Tax Foundation's annual calculation using the latest government data on income and taxes.Tax Freedom Day marks the calendar date by which Americans have worked enough days to pay off the federal and state taxes they will pay. The foundation calculates the date by dividing the total tax collections by the nation's income and then converting that percentage into days worked. This year, the percentage fell at 32.7 percent -- meaning that counting from January 1, it would take until April 30 before a worker begins to "take home" their earnings.

    April 2
  • The Internal Revenue Service has alerted taxpayers about Internet scams in which fraudulent e-mails are sent that appear to be from the IRS.The e-mails direct the consumer to a Web link that requests personal and financial information, such as Social Security, bank account or credit card numbers. The practice of tricking victims into revealing private personal and financial information over the Internet is known as “phishing” for information.

    April 2
  • Although there were delays on issuing 1099s, and some problems have surrounded the telephone tax refund, the 2007 filing season has been relatively uneventful, observers said. The traditionally frenetic period had, at press time, passed its midpoint without any real snags."So far, the season has been remarkably quiet and very smooth," said Teresa Mackintosh, CPA, CITP and vice president of strategic marketing at Thomson Tax and Accounting Professional Software and Services.

    April 1
  • The controversial use of private debt collectors by the Internal Revenue Service may be little more than a stopgap to make up for the service's lack of funding to hire its own personnel - while opponents charge that the initiative is expensive and risks exposing taxpayer's privacy.In a recent report to Congress, National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson, a fierce critic of the strategy, said that contrary to the government's rationale, use of private collectors is not cost-effective, the cases assigned are not the promised "easy" cases, and the IRS is substantially different from other federal agencies that use private collectors.

    April 1