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Tax pros under the microscope
By Kay
Bell Bankrate.com
Uncle Sam is tired of tax cheaters and he's vowed
to go after them all, including professionals.
In addition to the renewed random
audits of individual taxpayers, the Internal Revenue Service
is increasing its focus on paid tax preparers it suspects are misleading
clients.
Last year, the IRS more than doubled criminal investigations
into the actions of paid preparers. While numerically small (254
cases were initiated in fiscal 2002), the agency says this is just
the beginning of its efforts to stop professional scofflaws.
"We are seeing more and more activity involving
unscrupulous tax preparers," says David Palmer, chief of the
IRS Criminal Investigation division. Fraudulent tax preparation
includes inflated personal or business expenses, false deductions,
unallowable credits or excessive exemptions.
Abusive preparers may also manipulate a client's income
figures to obtain tax credits for which the filer is not eligible,
according to the IRS. One of the most misused tax breaks is the
earned
income tax credit. Because it is complex, many individuals seek
professional tax help to file this claim.
The questionable activity isn't
limited to entries on tax forms. The IRS says unscrupulous preparers
frequently make money off of clients by:
- Diverting a portion of the refund for their own
benefit,
- Charging inflated fees and
- Attracting more customers by guaranteeing larger
refunds than the competition.
"The vast majority of return
preparers are honest and reputable," says Palmer. "Those
who aren't can create considerable financial problems for their
clients. Taxpayers need to keep in mind that they are ultimately
responsible for their tax return."
Professional guidance excuse
axed
Since the taxpayer must bear the brunt of any filing mistakes, innocent
or otherwise, it's crucial that individuals fully understand any
tax-reduction moves a preparer may suggest.
Such caution is even more important now, as the U.S.
Treasury Department (of which the IRS is a part) has decreed that
the old "my tax adviser said it was OK" argument will
no longer work.
"Too many tax advisers have counseled clients
against disclosing their transactions with the expectation that
the advisers' opinions will allow the clients to avoid penalties,"
said Treasury Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy Pam Olson in announcing
the rule change.
"We are raising the stakes for taxpayers who
fail to disclose potentially abusive transactions," continued
Olson. By removing the tax-adviser argument, tax officials now believe
taxpayers' risk-to-reward calculations will be more judicious, eliminating
what Olson describes as "inappropriate tax avoidance transactions."
To make sure your return follows tax law, review all
paperwork before signing, ask questions on entries that are unclear
and get a copy for your files. And never sign a blank tax form or
one filled out in pencil.
If you suspect your tax professional is giving you
illegal advice, call the IRS toll-free tax fraud hotline at (800)
829-0433. Preparers who are convicted of felony tax evasion can
face up to five years in prison and a fine of $250,000.
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