Showing posts with label IRS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IRS. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Bad Debt Deduction

Source: http://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc453.html

If someone owes you money that you cannot collect, you may have a bad debt. For a discussion of what constitutes a valid debt, refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, and Publication 535, Business Expenses. To deduct a bad debt, you must have previously included the amount in your income or loaned out your cash. If you are a cash basis taxpayer, you may not take a bad debt deduction for money you expected to receive but did not (for example, for money owed to you for services performed, or rent) because that amount was never included in your income. For a bad debt, you must show that there was an intention at the time of the transaction to make a loan and not a gift. If you lend money to a relative or friend with the understanding that it may not be repaid, it is considered a gift and not a loan.

There are two kinds of bad debts – business and nonbusiness.

Generally, a business bad debt is one that comes from operating your trade or business.

The following are examples of business bad debts (if previously included in income):
  • Loans to clients and suppliers
  • Credit sales to customers, or
  • Business loan guarantees
A business deducts its bad debts from gross income when figuring its taxable income. Business bad debts may be deducted in part or in full. You can claim a business bad debt using either the specific charge-off method or the nonaccrual-experience method.

All other bad debts are nonbusiness. Nonbusiness bad debts must be totally worthless to be deductible. You cannot deduct a partially worthless nonbusiness bad debt.

A debt becomes worthless when the surrounding facts and circumstances indicate there is no reasonable expectation of payment. To show that a debt is worthless, you must establish that you have taken reasonable steps to collect the debt. It is not necessary to go to court if you can show that a judgment from the court would be uncollectible. You may take the deduction only in the year the debt becomes worthless. You do not have to wait until a debt is due to determine whether it is worthless.

A nonbusiness bad debt is reported as a short-term capital loss on Form 8949 (PDF), Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets, Part 1, line 1. Enter the name of the debtor and “bad debt statement attached” in column (a). Enter your basis in the bad debt in column (e) and enter zero in column (d). Use a separate line for each bad debt. It is subject to the capital loss limitations. A nonbusiness bad debt deduction requires a separate detailed statement attached to your return.

For more information on nonbusiness bad debts, refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses. For more information on business bad debts, refer to Publication 535, Business Expenses.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Funny Tax Picture Friday!

 
Share if you know anyone like this or leave a comment if you know of any other funny tax-related memes!


Tuesday, August 27, 2013

How Long Can the IRS Collect Back Taxes or Audit My Tax Return?

Source
http://www.onlinetaxpros.com
Many people incorrectly believe that the IRS can collect back taxes until the day you die. Some believe the IRS can collect taxes even after you are dead.

Fortunately, the law isn't that bad. The statute of limitations limits the time during which an action can be brought by the IRS for a tax audit and the time for IRS tax collection activities. Generally, there is a 3-year statute of limitations for the IRS auditing a tax return and a 10-year statute of limitations for the IRS collecting tax.

You should be aware that the states may be very different. California, for example, has NO statute of limitations on the collection of back taxes.

Under section 6501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code (Tax Code) and section 301.6501(a)-1(a) of the Income Tax Regulations (Tax Regulations), the IRS is required to assess tax within 3 years after the tax return was filed with the IRS. Similarly, under 301.6501(a)-1(b) of the Tax Regulations no proceeding in court by the IRS without assessment for the collection of any tax can begin after the expiration of 3 years.

Under section 6501(e) of the Tax Code and section 301.6501(e)-1 of the Tax Regulations the statute of limitations is 6 years if the taxpayer omits additional gross income in excess of 25% of the amount of gross income stated in the tax return filed with the IRS.

If the tax return was prepared by the IRS under the authority of section 6020(b) of the Tax Code the statute of limitations does not apply. See section 6501(b)(3) of the Tax Code and section 301.6501(b)-1(c) of the Tax Regulations.

The statute of limitations does not apply in the case of a false tax return or fraudulent tax return filed with the IRS with intent to evade any tax. See section 6501(c)(1) of the Tax Code and section 301.6501(c)-1 of the Tax Regulations.

For assessments of tax or levy made after November 5, 1990, the IRS cannot either collect or levy any tax 10 years after the date of assessment of tax or levy. See Section 6502(a)(1) of the Tax Code and section 301.6502-1 of the Tax Regulations. Court proceedings must also be started by the IRS within the 10 year statute of limitations. Section 301.6502-1(a)(1) of the Tax Regulations.

For assessments of tax or levy made on or before November 5, 1990, the IRS cannot either collect or levy any tax 6 years after the date of assessment of tax or levy. See section 6501(e) of the Tax Code. However, if the 6 year period ends after November 5, 1990, the statute of limitations is 10 years. In order to come under the 6 year statute of limitations, the 6 year period must end prior to November 5, 1990.

The 10 year statute of limitations can be extended by agreement between the taxpayer and the IRS provided the agreement is made prior to the expiration of the 10 year period. See section 6501(c)(4) of the Tax Code and section 301.6501(c)-1(d) of the Tax Regulations.

Make sure you understand the starting date for the running of the statute of limitations, any exceptions to the tolling of the statute of limitations, the last day that the IRS can audit a tax return, and the last day that the IRS can collect overdue tax on a tax return.

Statute of Limitations on Taxpayer to Claim a Tax Refund

A taxpayer may file a claim for a tax refund of an overpayment of any tax within 3 years from the time the tax return was filed with the IRS or 2 years from the time the tax was paid to the IRS, whichever period is the last. If no tax return was filed with the IRS, the claim may be made within 2 years from the date that the tax was paid to the IRS. See section 6511(a) of the Tax Code.

Under section 6511(d)(1) of the Tax Code a taxpayer may file a claim within 7 years if the tax refund pertains to a bad debt under section 166 or 832(c) or in connection with a loss from a worthless security under section 165(g).

This information is brought to you by Online Tax Pros. We help you make filing your online taxes easy.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Have you planned for these 7 tax law changes?




By Robert Klein

About Robert

Robert Klein, CPA, PFS, CFP®, RICP®, CLTC, MBA, MST is the founder and president of Retirement Income Center, a retirement income planning firm located in Newport Beach, Calif.  The firm specializes in innovative, conservative income management strategies in addition to offering traditional investment management services designed to help clients achieve their retirement income planning goals. Bob is also the sole proprietor of Robert Klein, CPA, which he founded in 1989. In addition, he is the writer and publisher of Retirement Income Visions, a weekly blog featuring innovative strategies for creating and optimizing retirement income, and previously wrote and published Financially InKlein’d. Bob has been quoted and featured in various publications, including The Wall Street Journal, Yahoo! Personal Finance, InvestmentNews, Financial Advisor Magazine, Bankrate.com, AnnuityNews, Wells Fargo Small Business Roundup Newsletter, and Wealth Manager Magazine. Bob can be reached via his website, Retirement Income Center, LinkedIn and Twitter: @IncomePlanner.

Seven significant new income tax law changes went into effect at the beginning of the year as a result of two pieces of legislation: The 2010 Health Care Reform Act and the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012. 

Although the new laws are primarily designed to increase taxes for those with higher levels of income, everyone with earned income is affected. With the first seven months of 2013 behind us, have you begun planning for these changes? 

Increased Social Security tax
At a basic level, anyone with earned income has seen a reduction in take-home pay this year as a result of the first tax law change. The employee Social Security tax rate, which was reduced from 6.2% to 4.2% in 2011 and 2012, is back to 6.2%. 

Combined with the increase in the maximum Social Security wage base from $110,100 in 2012 to $113,700 in 2013, maximum Social Security tax withholding has increased from $4,624.20 in 2012 to $7,049.40 in 2013. This has resulted in a total paycheck reduction of $2,425.20 for individuals reaching the maximum wage base.


Six changes for high income levels
There are a total of six changes to be aware of once your income exceeds the $200,000 single or $250,000 married filing joint (MFJ) levels. Two of the changes begin at these levels, two at $250,000 (single) or $300,000 (MFJ), and two at $400,000 (single) or $450,000 (MFJ), with different definitions of income associated with each change. 

A summary of the six changes, which are also included on the 2013 Individual Federal Income-Based Tax Law Changes spreadsheet, including the income types and applicable income threshold amounts, follows: 

1. Medicare earned income tax increase
The Medicare tax on earned income increased from 1.45% in 2012 to 2.35% in 2013 on earned income exceeding $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ) if modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) also exceeds these threshold amounts. While the percentage increase of 0.9% is about half of the Social Security tax rate increase of 2%, unlike the calculation of Social Security tax which is capped at a maximum wage base, there's no limit on the amount of wages that are subject to the Medicare tax.


2. New Medicare investment income tax
The Medicare investment income tax is a brand new tax that penalizes individuals with MAGI exceeding $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ) with taxable interest, dividends, and capital gains, as well as rental, royalty, and nonqualified annuity income, otherwise known as "investment income." A surcharge of 3.8% is assessed on the lesser of net investment income or MAGI in excess of the applicable threshold amounts.
 
3. Itemized deductions limitation  
Repealed in 2010, the itemized deductions limitation was reintroduced this year to the dismay of individuals with adjusted gross income (AGI) exceeding $250,000 (single) or $300,000 (MFJ). It reduces otherwise allowable itemized deductions by 3% of the amount by which AGI exceeds the threshold amounts with some exceptions. 

4. Personal exemption phase out
Also repealed in 2010, the personal exemption phase out reduces the personal exemption amount of $3,900 per individual in 2013. The amount of the reduction is 2% for each $2,500 in excess of AGI threshold amounts of $250,000 (single) or $300,000 (MFJ). 

5. Income tax bracket increase
Individuals with taxable income (TI) of $400,000 (single) or $450,000 (MFJ) will see an increase of 4.6% in their top tax bracket, with the 2012 top bracket of 35% increasing to 39.6% in 2013 on income exceeding these thresholds. 

6. Long-term capital gains and qualified dividends tax rate increase
The federal income-tax rate on long-term (assets held longer than one year) capital gains and qualified dividends increased from 15% to 20% for individuals with TI exceeding $400,000 (single) or $450,000 (MFJ). 

When applicable, any one, let alone a combination, of the foregoing seven income tax law changes can result in a sizable increase in your 2013 federal income tax liability compared with 2012. 

If you haven't had a 2013 income tax projection prepared to determine the potential impact of the various changes on your tax situation, now's the time to get it done. Trust me; you don't want to wait until your 2013 tax returns have been prepared to unveil the damage.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

IRS gets help from DEA and NSA to collect data

<a href="http://www.onlinetaxpros.com">online taxes</a>

The Internal Revenue Service reportedly received incriminating information on US citizens from the Drug Enforcement Agency, with the assistance of the National Security Agency, before concealing the paper trail from defendants.
Details of a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) program that provides tips to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and then advises them to “recreate the investigative trail” were published in a manual used by IRS agents for two years, Reuters revealed.

The practice of concealing the source of information has attracted the scrutiny of legal experts and is now under review by the US Justice Department.

A brief entry in the Internal Revenue Manual instructed agents of the US tax agency to omit any reference to information provided by the DEA's Special Operations Division, especially with regard to “affidavits, court proceedings or investigative files.”

The entry was published and posted online in 2005 and 2006, and removed in early 2007.  An IRS spokesman had no comment on the entry or on why it was removed from the manual, Reuters reported.

The IRS publication provides some further detail on the parallel construction concept.

"Special Operations Division has the ability to collect, collate, analyze, evaluate, and disseminate information and intelligence derived from worldwide multi-agency sources, including classified projects," the IRS manual says. "SOD converts extremely sensitive information into usable leads and tips which are then passed to the field offices for real-time enforcement activity against major international drug trafficking organizations."

According to the document, IRS agents are directed to use the intelligence as a starting point for unearthing new, "independent" evidence: "Usable information regarding these leads must be developed from such independent sources as investigative files, subscriber and toll requests, physical surveillance, wire intercepts, and confidential source information. Information obtained from SOD in response to a search or query request cannot be used directly in any investigation (i.e. cannot be used in affidavits, court proceedings or maintained in investigative files)." 
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In addition to the IRS, the Special Operations Division cooperates with a number of government agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the National Security Agency and the Central Intelligence Agency.

The way the intelligence-gathering system worked is as follows: The Special Operations Division of the DEA channels secret data from overseas NSA intercepts, domestic wiretaps, informants and a large DEA database of telephone records to authorities nationwide to assist them with criminal investigations of US citizens, according to the Reuters report.

The DEA telephone database is different from the NSA database that was revealed by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, who is now living in Russia under asylum.

The DEA, which works behind the scenes to investigate drug dealers, money launderers and other criminals, argues that the practice does not violate the law and has been in “near-daily use since the 1990s.” The agency said the reason it directs federal agents to recreate the investigation trail is to “protect sources and methods, not to withhold evidence.”

Judicial hurdles ahead

Legal experts, however, say that concealing potential evidence from defendants violates the US Constitution. According to documents and interviews obtained by Reuters, federal agents use a procedure called "parallel construction" to conceal the tracks of the investigative trail. For example, agents could say that an investigation was launched due to a traffic violation as opposed to an SOD tip.

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers expressed concern with the parallel construction program.

"If they're recreating a trail, that's wrong and we're going to have to do something about it," Rogers, a former FBI agent, said on the Mike Huckabee Show radio program. "We're working with the DEA and intelligence organizations to try to find out exactly what that story is."

Spokespeople for the DEA and the Department of Justice declined to comment.

Sen. Rand Paul, a member of the Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, said he was troubled that DEA agents have been "trying to cover up a program that investigates Americans."

"If the Constitution still has any sway, a government that is constantly overreaching on security while completely neglecting liberty is in grave violation of our founding doctrine," Paul added

The NSA database contains data about every telephone call made inside of the United States. This information, according to a NSA official, as quoted by Reuters, “is not used for domestic criminal law enforcement.”

The DEA database, or DICE for short, consists largely of phone log and internet data gathered legally by the DEA through “subpoenas, arrests and search warrants nationwide.” DICE has on file “about 1 billion records,” which are stored for about one year before being destroyed, DEA officials said. 
Robert Bridge, RT
Source:http://rt.com/usa/dea-nsa-irs-snowden-216/

With Online Tax Pros you can electronically file taxes online directly from home using our professional online filing service. When you file through Online Tax Pros you are receiving the industry's highest standards for online taxes security, guaranteed error-free electronic tax filing calculations, and an easy way to prepare your taxes.

Online Tax filing is one of the fastest and most affordable ways to file your income tax return. When you file through Online Tax Pros, there is notification on your account regarding the status of your return within 48 hours. We make it happen for you quickly and easily at an affordable price. You may even qualify to file your taxes online for free.

These posts are for informational use only to educate people about their online income taxes and the financial world around them. If you found this helpful, share the original article or this one, and help spread the word! Give us a comment if you want to share your opinion on this story.

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Friday, August 2, 2013

IRS Employee Charged with Laundering Drug Money



Memphis (July 30, 2013)
By Michael Cohn

A longtime Internal Revenue Service employee was indicted on charges of laundering the proceeds of marijuana sales.

Maggie Cooper, 62, of Memphis, Tenn., a 27-year veteran IRS tax analyst, was indicted last Thursday in a 38-count indictment charging her with money laundering and money laundering conspiracy. The indictment alleges that beginning in or about 2011 and continuing through September 2012, Cooper conspired with others to conduct financial transactions with proceeds obtained from marijuana trafficking.

According to prosecutors, she would make purchases in her name with money derived from her co-conspirators’ unlawful activity, with the understanding that the purchased items would be paid for and owned by the co-conspirator, including the purchase of a 2007 Jaguar XKR.

Prosecutors also allege that Cooper allowed bank accounts to be opened in her name for her co-conspirator to facilitate marijuana purchases and sales.

If convicted, she faces up to 20 years in prison, in addition to fines of up to $500,000 and criminal forfeiture as alleged in the indictment.

This investigation was conducted by IRS-Criminal Investigation, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, and the Memphis Police Department Organized Crime Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney Deb Ireland represents the government.

With Online Tax Pros you can electronically file taxes online directly from home using our professional online filing service. When you file through Online Tax Pros you are receiving the industry's highest standards for online taxes security, guaranteed error-free electronic tax filing calculations, and an easy way to prepare your taxes.

Online Tax filing is one of the fastest and most affordable ways to file your income tax return. When you file through Online Tax Pros, there is notification on your account regarding the status of your return within 48 hours. We make it happen for you quickly and easily at an affordable price. You may even qualify to file your taxes online for free.

These posts are for informational use only to educate people about their online income taxes and the financial world around them. If you found this helpful, share the original article or this one, and help spread the word! Give us a comment if you want to share your opinion on this story.

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Monday, July 29, 2013

News Links for 7-29-13

Lots of tax-related events happened over the weekend. Facebook strikes again, as a woman brags on the popular social media network about her tax fraud. Check out these stories!
Bolt Strikes At Diamond League Games, Says UK Races Hinge On Tax Laws
He only agreed to race in the event because the British government extended the exception, initially extended to Olympic athletes, to allow international athletes to compete tax-free. Otherwise, under the current law, Bolt, like other athletes are ...
 
U.S. Seeks PNC, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Records To Find Tax Cheats--From ...
In the latest example of how the world's wealthy nations have ramped up cooperation against offshore tax evasion, the U.S. Department of Justice is for the first time using ?John Doe? summonses to ferret out suspected tax cheats from another ...
 
Kuroda Sees Japan Economy Weathering Planned Sales-Tax Rise
Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda indicated little concern that a planned sales-tax rise would derail an economic rebound as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe considers whether to proceed with the move. ?A two-step sales tax increase won't give major ...
 
A New, Dangerous Job in Mogadishu: Tax Collector
The Somali traders in Mogadishu's markets have long faced down Islamist rebels and warlords demanding money. Now they say there is a new predator: the government tax man. Militias extorted cash from civilians during much of the last two decades of ...
 
IRS Employees Union Is 'Very Concerned' About Being Required To Enroll In ...
Former acting Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Commissioner Steve Miller (R) and Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, J. Russell George are sworn in before testifying before a full House Ways and Means committee hearing on 'Internal ...
 
Why Should the Internal Revenue Service Be Beyond Reproach?
But under a little-noticed provision of the Internal Revenue Code, citizens who claim that the IRS has made a mistake risk paying a large fine if it turns out that they are wrong. That provision, too, betrays a lack of concern for First Amendment ...
 
Senate Dems propose increasing IRS budget
Senate Democrats on Tuesday proposed increasing the budget of the Internal Revenue Service and other financial agencies next year. The IRS would get $12.07 billion in funding under the Financial Services subcommittee bill reported to the full Senate ...
 
Internal Revenue Service scandal ties to Obama appointee
Internal Revenue Service scandal ties to Obama appointee. Posted: July 23, 2013 - 4:15pm. Advertisement. Does anyone recall when the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) scandal broke? Fingers were pointed at some rebel agents in the Cincinnati office.
 
IRS says woman bragged about tax fraud on Facebook
They provide a glimpse of how criminals have used identity theft and gaps in IRS security measures to file bogus tax returns and collect billions of dollars in fraudulent refunds. The national scandal centered in Tampa has been the focus of ...
 
5 from Passaic charged in $2.5M tax refund scam
Perpetrators of such refund scams typically use Social Security numbers and other personal identifying information obtained from unwitting residents of Puerto Rico because they are not required to pay income tax unless they work for U.S.-based ...
 
7 more Mississippians indicted for stolen identity tax refund fraud
Seven more Mississippians have been indicted on stolen identity tax refund fraud for allegedly filing tax returns with someone else's identity in order to get fraudulent refunds. Stolen identity refund fraud occurs when a person, without permission ...
 
IRS, States Call on IBM, LexisNexis, SAS to Fight Tax Fraud
A Miami law-office employee admitted in February he had accessed his firm's LexisNexis account and stolen thousands of Social Security numbers of prison inmates?prime targets for tax-fraud identity theft because they are unlikely to file returns?and ...
 
Changes to Portland arts tax call for a public vote
The Department of Revenue estimates that the pension exemption will reduce arts tax collections by up to $600,000 for tax year 2012, which equates to more than 17,000 tax filers. On Wednesday, commissioners discussed a range of additional changes...
 
Taiwan Considers Luxury Tax Rule Change to Curb Property Prices
Taiwan (TWGDCONY) is considering changes in luxury tax rules to narrow the gap between property prices and incomes amid slower pace of economic expansion. ?Current rules have flaws, for example, we are unable to tax those deep-pocket investors, who ...
 
Will you save from NC's tax changes?
The tax reform measure state legislators approved last week will change the game for the first time since the 1930s. Beyond affecting your personal income taxes, other tweaks will cap the gas tax, eliminate the North Carolina death tax, and reduce the ...
 
Tax-law changes to squeeze seniors
The changes the budget made in property taxes undo a break implemented by Democrats. For years, the state gave a property-tax break ? the homestead exemption ? to Ohioans at least 65 years old who earned less than $26,200 a year. In 2007, Gov.
 
FratPAC Lobbies Congress For Tax Breaks, To Stop Anti-Hazing Law
Fraternities and sororities have their own lobbying group on Capitol Hill, fighting for tax breaks for frat houses and opposing an anti-hazing measure, Bloomberg News reports. The Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee, or FratPAC, spent ...
 
Seminar on tax law Tuesday in Farmington
Seven hours of continual professional education on tax law are being offered by a variety of New Mexico groups for attending a one-day seminar on Tuesday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., at San Juan College, Henderson Fine Arts Building, rooms 9008-9010, ...

With Online Tax Pros you can electronically file taxes online directly from home using our professional online filing service. When you file through Online Tax Pros you are receiving the industry's highest standards for online taxes security, guaranteed error-free electronic tax filing calculations, and an easy way to prepare your taxes.

Online Tax filing is one of the fastest and most affordable ways to file your income tax return. When you file through Online Tax Pros, there is notification on your account regarding the status of your return within 48 hours. We make it happen for you quickly and easily at an affordable price. You may even qualify to file your taxes online for free.

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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Online Taxes News Links for 7-24-13

Sorry it's been a while since I've posted anything, but I'm back and will be here to give you helpful tax news and advice once again! Thank you for checking up on me.
 
The OECD's International Tax Plan: The First Step On A Very Long Road
Last week, the OECD proposed a major new initiative aimed at cracking down on tax avoidance by multinational corporations. The 40-page report follows widespread international criticism of aggressive tax planning by high-profile U.S.-based firms such as ...
 
CPS officials: Closing budget deficit to include tapping reserves, property ...
Chicago Public Schools officials today said they will be tapping into nearly $700 million in reserves and raising CPS' share of the Cook County property tax to the greatest extent allowed by law to close a $1 billion budget deficit. The district, which ...
 
A Carbon Tax by Any Other Name
SAN FRANCISCO ? The headlines last week were dramatic: Australia abandons its carbon tax. The move seemed to confirm suspicions that putting a price on carbon dioxide emissions is politically toxic. The reality, experts say, is more nuanced. Australia ...
 
NY to refund gay couples forced to pay estate tax
In declaring the section unconstitutional, the court granted gay couples the same rights to assets and lower tax costs under estate tax laws that are provided to couples in traditional marriages. Same-sex spouses may have been required to pay thousands ...
Internal Revenue Service scandal ties to Obama appointee
Internal Revenue Service scandal ties to Obama appointee. Posted: July 23, 2013 - 4:15pm. Advertisement. Does anyone recall when the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) scandal broke? Fingers were pointed at some rebel agents in the Cincinnati office.
 
US court blocks Internal Revenue Service's bid to help Indian IT
MUMBAI: The US Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) efforts to help Indian tax authorities uncover financial information of a US resident, alleged to have evaded tax in India, have hit a road block. A US district court has recently quashed summons issued ...
 
RICO: The real way to hold the IRS accountable
... beginning with the Internal Revenue Service's abuse and targeting of conservatives, Tea Party groups, and Christians, you are looking in the wrong place. What the IRS did tilted President Barack Obama's re-election in his favor. The IRS targeting ...
 
 Courtney Love In the Hole With the IRS, Owes $260K in Back Taxes
The Hole singer reportedly owes the Internal Revenue Service more than $260,000 in unpaid back taxes. According to TMZ, the IRS filed a tax lien against Love on July 11, claiming that America's Sweetheart needs to settle outstanding debts from 2009 and ...
5 from Passaic charged in $2.5M tax refund scam
Perpetrators of such refund scams typically use Social Security numbers and other personal identifying information obtained from unwitting residents of Puerto Rico because they are not required to pay income tax unless they work for U.S.-based ...
 
IRS, States Call on IBM, LexisNexis, SAS to Fight Tax Fraud
A Miami law-office employee admitted in February he had accessed his firm's LexisNexis account and stolen thousands of Social Security numbers of prison inmates?prime targets for tax-fraud identity theft because they are unlikely to file returns?and ...
 
Florida's 'First Lady' of tax refund fraud gets 21 years in prison after ...
Those involved in the tax fraud operation used stolen Social Security numbers to file returns, according to the Global Dispatch. The scam meant that ordinary taxpayers had to wait for up to a year to receive their refunds. Rashia Wilson. Sentenced ...
 
IRS to Biz Owners: Beware of Payroll Tax Scammers
IRS to Biz Owners: Beware of Payroll Tax Scammers The Internal Revenue Service wants owners of small businesses ? and just about any sized business ? to watch out for unscrupulous third-party providers who are entrusted with collecting and timely ...

With Online Tax Pros you can electronically file your online income taxes directly from home using our professional online filing service. When you file through Online Tax Pros you are receiving the industry's highest standards for online taxes security, guaranteed error-free electronic tax filing calculations, and an easy way to prepare your taxes.

Electronic filing is one of the fastest and most affordable ways to file your income tax return. When you file through Online Tax Pros, there is notification on your account regarding the status of your return within 48 hours. We make it happen for you quickly and easily at an affordable price. You may even qualify to file your online taxes for free.

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

IRS regrets making costly ‘Star Trek’ video parody

The Internal Revenue Service now admits it made a mistake when it spent $60,000 in taxpayer money to produce a video parodying the 1960s Star Trek television series. (AP Photo/IRS)
The Internal Revenue Service now admits it made a mistake when it spent $60,000 in taxpayer money to produce a video parodying the 1960s Star Trek television series. (AP Photo/IRS)

Source: http://tv.msnbc.com/2013/03/25/irs-regrets-making-costly-star-trek-video-parody/

By , @JohnYuro

The Internal Revenue Service now admits it made a mistake when it spent $60,000 in taxpayer money to produce a video parodying the 1960s Star Trek television series, along with a second Gilligan’s Island parody. The Star Trek segment was used to open a 2010 training and leadership conference, while the latter clip was used to avoid the cost of training employees in person.

Ways and Means Oversight Subcommittee Chairman Charles Boustany Jr., R-La., first asked the IRS to hand over copies of the videos in a Feb. 11 letter to Acting Commissioner Steven T. Miller.

“It is important to determine whether and to what extent taxpayer resources were devoted to activities unrelated to your agency’s core functions,” Boustany wrote, claiming the Star Trek video “did not contain meaningful training content.”

Miller acknowledged the existence of both videos in his March 4 response along with the $60,000 price tag. A copy of the Star Trek parody surfaced on Friday.

The IRS said the video “was a well-intentioned, light-hearted introduction to an important conference” in a statement to the Associated Press.

The segment opens with lines similar to actor William Shatner’s original narration: “These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise Y. Its never-ending mission: to seek out new tax forms, to explore strange new regulations, to boldly go where no government employee has gone before.”

The six-minute plot that follows is simple: The Enterprise must help the planet “No-tax” that is plagued with money laundering, tax evasion using off-planet accounts and alien identity theft–all due to a “lack of tax leaders.”

Famous Star Trek character Spock is on board along with Scotty in engineering, and another crew member doing his best impersonation of the Pavel Chekov character.

“Back in Russia, I dreamed one day I’d be rich and famous” he says in a rough attempt at a Russian accent.
“Me too,” says his fellow crew member. “That’s why I became a public servant.” The two conclude their exchange with a fist bump.

“The IRS recognizes and takes seriously our obligation to be good stewards of government resources and taxpayer dollars,” the agency told AP. “There is no mistaking that this video did not reflect the best stewardship of resources.”

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

12 tax audit red flags

Source: http://money.cnn.com/gallery/pf/taxes/2013/03/21/tax-audit/index.html

To avoid catching the attention of the IRS, beware of these tax audit red flags. 

 

You have foreign assets

You have foreign assets

Stashing money overseas? Then you're probably well aware that the IRS has been ramping up its efforts to rein in offshore accounts.

Launched in 2009, the agency's voluntary disclosure program has already raked in more than $5 billion in back taxes, interest and penalties from tax cheats for illegally hiding assets in offshore accounts.

Taxpayers are asked to check a box on Schedule B if they have an ownership interest in foreign accounts. If they then fail to provide information about those assets, it will undoubtedly trigger an audit, said Mark Luscombe, principal analyst at tax research firm CCH.

Indicating on your return that you do business in foreign countries or take many trips abroad for work could also raise eyebrows if no foreign assets are reported.

And the penalties for hiding offshore accounts are huge, including a fine of $100,000 or 50% of the balance -- whichever amount is greater -- for accounts that are willfully undisclosed. 


Your ex wants revenge 

Following messy divorces, many ex-spouses will go to great lengths to get revenge -- some will have even try to wreak havoc on your reputation by contacting the IRS.

John Lieberman, a CPA at Perelson Weiner LLP, said he has heard of people telling the IRS that their ex-spouse laundered money, committed serious financial crimes, underreported income, even owned a brothel.

"[Ex]-spouses love writing letters to the IRS," said Lieberman.

It's not just the ex-wife or husband you have to watch out for. Lieberman said he worked on one case where the mother-in-law told the IRS that her ex-son-in-law was a money launderer.

Sometimes the claims are completely made up, while others are legitimate. And while some people write in anonymously, others divulge their names -- which is required in order to claim a whistleblower reward of 15% to 30% of any extra money collected as a result of their tip.


Your return has too many zeroes

While rounding numbers on your tax return to the nearest dollar is okay, rounding to the nearest thousand is not -- especially when itemizing deductions like business expenses, unreimbursed employee expenses and job hunting costs.

If you submit figures like $5,000 in auto costs, $2,000 in gas mileage and $4,000 in lodging, it may look like you pulled those numbers out of thin air or inflated them by rounding -- since it's unlikely that every single expense was a perfect multiple of $1,000.

"Having a return with a lot of zeroes on it may be a cause for a return to be pulled," said Lieberman. 


You have a home office

Just because you do some work on your couch while watching TV doesn't mean it counts as a home office.
After years of watching people abuse the home-office deduction, the IRS is on the look-out. In order to avoid being scrutinized, make sure you only claim reasonable expenses -- and only those that directly apply to the part of the home used as an office.

Remember: The credit can only be claimed if the home office is your primary place of business and is used exclusively for work. People get into trouble when the IRS suspects they are mixing personal costs with their business costs.

But if you have a legitimate home office, don't be afraid to claim it.

"Taxpayers entitled to these deductions should still claim them -- just be sure to have documentation to support the claimed expenses, avoid understating income and understand and comply with the home office requirements," said Luscombe.


You forgot some income

For people who earn money from various places, remembering to report every single cent can be difficult. But 'I forgot' isn't a good enough excuse for the IRS.

For any miscellaneous income over $600 you received throughout the year, the company you worked for should send you a Form 1099. If you don't receive it for some reason -- it was mistakenly sent to a previous address, for instance -- you can be sure that the IRS will still get it.

You can either request the missing form from the employer or simply report the income without the form. This is why it helps to track your income throughout the year.

Of course, some people earn money that may not get reported on 1099s -- like side money made giving people haircuts. Even if the IRS doesn't know about it, you must report this income as well or you risk the agency finding out and nailing you for tax evasion.

"Some people have a tendency to forget when they got a few checks here and there, but for some people it's willful," said Lieberman.

You claim fishy deductions

Sometimes claiming a tax deduction you know is a stretch just isn't worth the risk of an audit.
One of the most common gambles: Writing off a swimming pool for medical reasons, said John Lieberman, CPA at Perelson Weiner LLP.

"Just because your back hurts doesn't make your pool deductible," he said.

To qualify, you must be able to prove that you purchased the pool solely to help with the treatment of a verifiable medical condition and this remains its primary purpose. If you don't have a doctor's prescription requiring the use of a pool or if you have easy access to a public pool, the deduction likely won't be allowed and it may lead the IRS to take another look at the rest of your return as well.

A Playboy magazine subscription for a doctor's office, a hip replacement for a dog and pole dancing classes are some other bizarre tax write-offs people have unsuccessfully tried to claim. That said, crazy attempts can occasionally pay off. One taxpayer successfully deducted the cost of caring for the carrier pigeon that he used to communicate with his business partner. 


You're rich

Not only do high-income taxpayers have more complicated returns, but they bring in much more revenue for the IRS with each mistake they make.

While only 1% of the overall population gets audited, the odds jump to 21% for taxpayers with income over $5 million and to 30% for those earning $10 million or more, according to the most recent statistics from the IRS.

"It's not that higher income taxpayers cheat more, it's just that you have a lot more going on on a high-income return," said Betsey Buckingham, an enrolled agent at accounting firm David C. Murray & Company. "Most of the high-income people I've [assisted] are involved in charities or very active in their own business."

Even if you're not rich but live in a wealthy neighborhood, your return could raise questions about how you can afford to live there -- especially if you report surprisingly low income or a big business loss.

"They notice if you don't have an income that closely matches the kind of lifestyle you live," said Buckingham.

You say the wrong things

Watch what you say and who you say it to. Even if you're joking, you never know when a friend or neighbor will decide to rat on you. Talking with the press about personal or business information or making a public statement that doesn't match the information you provide to the IRS can also get you in trouble.

If a newspaper publishes a profile of your business in which you gloat about surging profits but you then post big losses on your tax returns, the IRS may start digging into your file.

Celebrities have to be extra cautious. The New York State Department of Taxation went after baseball player Derek Jeter for state income tax, citing public statements he made "professing his love for New York" as part of its argument, according to legal documents from the state agency. That gave the agency enough of a reason to allege the baseball star was a resident of New York (not Florida, as he claimed), said Lieberman.

"Be careful what you say, if even an athlete who says his heart is in New York can all of a sudden get a New York State tax audit," said Lieberman.

You do a lot of 'work-related' driving

With gas prices so high, who wouldn't want to write off all of their driving costs? But unfortunately, you can only deduct gas costs if the driving you did was for business purposes.

Buckingham had a client who owned a catering company and claimed every single trip to the grocery store as a business expense, even when some of those trips were to pick up her own groceries. Those driving costs really added up -- to the point where they created a loss for the business (on paper) since it was making so little income.

So Buckingham and the client had to go through the grocery receipts and separate the personal shopping from the business shopping and claim the gas costs accordingly.

You exaggerate donations

Even good deeds can spark suspicion at the IRS.

If you report extremely high charitable contributions -- especially relative to your income -- make sure you have the proof to back it up.

Receipts for cash donations of more than $250 are required in the event the IRS comes knocking.
Cash donations are a little trickier, because it's common for people to think the items they donate are worth a lot more than someone will actually pay for it. So it's important to be reasonable with your valuations.

"Unless it's something brand new and still has tags, there's some reduction in price," said Buckingham.
Goodwill and Salvation Army even have lists that help you assign values to certain items when donating them. If you donate something bigger, like a car or a boat, the charity will give you a receipt stating the ultimate auction or sale price, she said.

You own a money-losing business

If you own a business that is reporting losses year after year, the IRS may grow suspicious that it's actually a hobby.

"There's a rule-of-thumb saying you must have a profit in two [out] of five years -- if you don't have a profit they're going to look at it as a hobby," said Buckingham. "You can rebut that presumption by showing that maybe what you're doing is increasing the value of assets but not necessarily the profit."

One example is a business like a garden nursery, where you have to spend a lot of money growing trees and plants but won't get a real return on that investment until they are grown, she said.

To fend off the IRS, make sure to keep diligent financial records and do little things like have business cards and company letterhead.

Sometimes, though, it's beyond your control. One of Buckingham's clients, an ice cream store owner, was audited two years in a row after reporting losses for both years. The IRS agent said the agency couldn't figure out how the client was living day-to-day if her primary business was losing so much money.

What they didn't realize was that she had refinanced her mortgage and was living off of that. Both audits resulted in no changes to her refunds, and the audits then stopped.

You have a shady tax preparer

If your tax preparer tries to convince you to claim deductions that sound too good to be true or to report income that doesn't line up with what you would have reported, watch out.

You want a preparer that will get you the best refund possible -- but not if it means breaking the law.
You should also be suspicious if the preparer doesn't ask for documentation like receipts or for expenses or deductions you're claiming.

For example, if they write down their own value for the bag of clothes you told them you gave to Goodwill or estimate that you spent $2,000 on home office furniture without going through everything with you, that's a bad sign.

"A preparer's job is not to suggest a deduction," said Buckingham. "Certainly if [the taxpayer] had a deduction last year, a preparer should ask whether they are still doing this activity, but if a taxpayer says they are, the preparer needs to ask for something that would substantiate it."

The IRS also recommends avoiding tax preparers who calculate their fees as a portion of a taxpayer's refund or promise taxpayers unattainable refunds.

For more about audits, check out this article:

What Triggers an IRS Audit?


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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

The IRS's Worker-Classification Rules Aren't Working

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

IRS faces class action lawsuit over theft of 60 million medical records


Source: http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/irs-face-lawsuit-over-theft-60-million-patient-health-records

The Internal Revenue Service is now facing a class action lawsuit over allegations that it improperly accessed and stole the health records of some 10 million Americans, including medical records of all California state judges.

According to a report by Courthousenews.com, an unnamed HIPAA-covered entity in California is suing the IRS, alleging that some 60 million medical records from 10 million patients were stolen by 15 IRS agents.
The personal health information seized on March 11, 2011, included psychological counseling, gynecological counseling, sexual/drug treatment and other medical treatment data.

"This is an action involving the corruption and abuse of power by several Internal Revenue Service agents," the complaint reads. "No search warrant authorized the seizure of these records; no subpoena authorized the seizure of these records; none of the 10,000,000 Americans were under any kind of known criminal or civil investigation and their medical records had no relevance whatsoever to the IRS search. IT personnel at the scene, a HIPPA facility warning on the building and the IT portion of the searched premises, and the company executives each warned the IRS agents of these privileged records," it continued.

According to the case, the IRS agents had a search warrant for financial data pertaining to a former employee of the John Doe company, however, "it did not authorize any seizure of any healthcare or medical record of any persons, least of all third parties completely unrelated to the matter," the complaint read.

The class action lawsuit against the IRS seeks $25,000 in compensatory damages "per violation per individual" in addition to punitive damages for constitutional violations.  Thus, compensatory damages could start at a minimum of $250 billion.     

This story will be updated.

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Software glitch to delay 600,000 U.S. tax refunds: IRS

Source:http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/03/14/us-usa-tax-refund-delays-idUSBRE92C13F20130314


WASHINGTON | Thu Mar 14, 2013 6:57am EDT
 
(Reuters) - Tax refunds for about 600,000 taxpayers claiming an education credit will be delayed, the Internal Revenue Service said on Wednesday, citing a software glitch at some tax-preparation companies, including industry leader H&R Block Inc.

Refunds may be delayed four to six weeks from mid-February, likely not showing up until late March, the IRS said.

The agency is working with tax-preparation businesses to deliver the refunds, said IRS spokeswoman Michelle Eldridge.

An H&R Block spokesman said the software problem had been fixed and the company was working with the IRS.

Two companies that provide online tax preparation software, Intuit Inc and Jackson Hewitt Tax Service Inc, said their programs were not affected and their education credit customers are not experiencing delays.
Various delays have hampered the tax season this year, slowing the arrival of refunds.

In February, some taxpayers who claimed earned income tax credits were hit by refund delays, the IRS said.
On Tuesday, a Wal-Mart Stores Inc executive said shoppers had cashed about $2.7 billion in tax refund checks at its U.S. stores so far this year. At this point last year, that amount was about $4 billion.

The IRS delayed the start of the tax filing season by eight days, to January 30, due to the enactment of tax law changes made to resolve the "fiscal cliff.

(Reporting by Patrick Temple-West; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and John Wallace)


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Monday, March 11, 2013

8 States Making Tax Changes: Some Painful, Some Pleasant

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

2013 Tax Tip: Beware of Bogus IRS Emails

Beware of Bogus IRS Emails for online tax scam prevention
Source: http://southwindsor.patch.com/articles/2013-tax-tip-beware-of-bogus-irs-emails-49640791


A press release from the Internal Revenue Service:

The IRS receives thousands of reports every year from taxpayers who receive emails out-of-the-blue claiming to be from the IRS. Scammers use the IRS name or logo to make the message appear authentic so you will respond to it. In reality, it’s a scam known as “phishing,” attempting to trick you into revealing your personal and financial information. The criminals then use this information to commit identity theft or steal your money.

The IRS has this advice for anyone who receives an email claiming to be from the IRS or directing you to an IRS website:
  • Do not reply to the message;
  • Do not open any attachments. Attachments may contain malicious code that will infect your computer; and
  • Do not click on any links in a suspicious email or phishing website and do not enter confidential information. Visit the IRS website and click on 'Identity Theft' at the bottom of the page for more information.
Here are five other key point the IRS wants you to know about phishing scams:
1. The IRS does not initiate contact with taxpayers by email or social media channels to request personal or financial information;

2. The IRS never asks for detailed personal and financial information like PIN numbers, passwords or similar secret access information for credit card, bank or other financial accounts;

3. The address of the official IRS website is www.irs.gov. Do not be misled by sites claiming to be the IRS but ending in .com, .net, .org or anything other than .gov. If you discover a website that claims to be the IRS but you suspect it is bogus, do not provide any personal information on their site and report it to the IRS;

4. If you receive a phone call, fax or letter in the mail from an individual claiming to be from the IRS but you suspect they are not an IRS employee, contact the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 to determine if the IRS has a legitimate need to contact you. Report any bogus correspondence. Forward a suspicious email to phishing@irs.gov;

5. You can help the IRS and other law enforcement agencies shut down these schemes. Visit the IRS.gov website to get details on how to report scams and helpful resources if you are the victim of a scam. Click on "Reporting Phishing" at the bottom of the page.

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