“Thousands of people have lost millions of dollars and their
personal information to tax scams,” according to the IRS. Criminals can contact
victims through regular mail, telephone calls and email messages. Here are just
two of the scams the tax agency has seen in recent months.
- Fake property liens. A tax bill is sent from a fictional government agency
in the mail. The fake agency may have a legitimate sounding name such as
the Bureau of Tax Enforcement. The bill is accompanied by a letter
threatening an IRS lien or levy based on bogus overdue taxes. (A levy is a
legal seizure of property to satisfy a tax debt. A lien is a legal claim against
your property to secure payment of your tax debt.)
- Phony calls from the IRS. In this scam, criminals impersonating IRS employees
call people and tell them that, if they don’t pay back taxes they owe,
they will face arrest. The thieves then demand that the taxpayers pay
their tax debts with a gift card, other prepaid cards or a wire transfer.
Important reminders
If you receive a text, letter, email or phone call purporting to
be from the IRS, keep in mind that the IRS never calls taxpayers demanding immediate
payment using a specific method of payment (such as a wire transfer or prepaid
debit card). In general, the IRS sends bills or notices to taxpayers and gives
them time to respond with questions or appeals. The tax agency also doesn’t
threaten taxpayers with arrest.
In addition, the IRS doesn’t initiate contact by email, text
message or social media channels to request information. Most contacts are
initiated though regular mail delivered by the U.S. Postal Service. The IRS
does use authorized private collection agencies to collect some overdue tax
bills but these agencies also follow the same rules.
In some special circumstances, the IRS does call taxpayers or
come to their homes or businesses. For example, the IRS may tour a business as
part of an audit or during a criminal investigation. But even in those cases,
taxpayers will generally receive several mailed IRS notices before the visit.
And the IRS never demands that payment be made to any source other than the
“United States Treasury.”
What to do if you’re contacted
You can contact us if the IRS gets in touch with you. If the
contact involves a phone call, hang up immediately. You can forward an email or
other tax-related scam to the IRS at phishing@irs.gov. To
report an IRS impersonation scam, visit the Treasury Inspector General for Tax
Administration at https://bit.ly/1ClYZbP.
Be aware that criminals keep evolving their scams in an effort to steal
people’s money and personal information. Remain on alert.
© 2019
No comments:
Post a Comment