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The Internal Revenue Service needs to do a better job of reviewing the non-cash charitable contributions deductions taxpayers are claiming.
March 18 -
The Internal Revenue Service has posted the 2006 Data Book on its Web site.
March 18 -
The Internal Revenue Service issued guidance identifying dozens of frivolous positions that taxpayers should avoid when filing their tax returns.The guidance lists 40 positions which have no basis for validity in existing law or which have been deemed frivolous by the U.S. Tax Court, or another federal court. If these or other frivolous positions are contained in a tax return, taxpayers could face a $5,000 penalty -- 10 times the previous maximum.
March 18 -
At least one in five workers eligible for the Earned Income Tax Credit will leave that money on the table this tax season, and Congress is looking to accountants and other tax professionals to help address the problem.During hearings before the House Ways and Means Oversight Subcommittee, congressional leaders said that while 22 million low-income families and individuals claimed EITC wage subsidies last year, millions more who are eligible for the tax credits don't receive them.
March 18 -
The Internal Revenue Service has rolled out its annual list of the 12 most blatant tax return scams. Topping the "Dirty Dozen" are fraudulent claims for the one-time Telephone Excise Tax refund. Also new to the list this year are abuses pertaining to:* Roth IRAs. Taxpayers should be wary of advisors who encourage them to shift under-valued property to these IRAs. In one variation, a promoter has the taxpayer move under-valued common stock into a Roth IRA, circumventing the annual maximum contribution limit and allowing otherwise taxable income to go untaxed.
March 18 -
The measures to close the tax gap offered by President Bush in his 2008 budget are somewhat modest, according to observers.The president's $2.9 trillion budget contains a number of legislative proposals to close the gap in four areas: by expanding information reporting, improving compliance by businesses, strengthening tax administration and expanding penalties.
March 18 -
Tax prep giant H&R Block Inc. announced that it has opened up shop in the online virtual universe known as Second Life.Second Life is entirely built and owned by its residents, who have created a 3-D world that includes homes, vehicles, nightclubs, stores, landscapes, clothing and games. Last month, the site passed the 4-million-account threshold, though many accounts are not active and some residents have multiple accounts.
March 15 -
A federal judge dismissed five counts of filing false tax returns, to go with four counts of money laundering, which had been levied against the self-proclaimed “Guru of Ganja.”Ed Rosenthal, a medical marijuana activist and columnist for High Times, had originally been arrested on three charges of growing pot. However, during his 2003 trial, he wasn’t allowed to cite in his defense the fact that the pot was for medical marijuana dispensaries -- a point which several jurors later said that the government should have allowed them to hear.
March 15 -
Edward A. Weinstein of New York will receive the New York State Society of CPAs’ Distinguished Service Award.
March 15 -
A ruling from the Internal Revenue Service -- that the workers who collect urine samples for drug testing are employees and not independent contractors -- could cost the NFL millions in benefits.
March 14