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Tax Return Preparer Fraud | | | This Excerpt Taken From Internal Revenue Service Website (www.irs.gov) FS-2007-12, January 2007 Return preparer fraud generally involves the preparation and filing of false income
tax returns by preparers who claim inflated personal or business expenses, false deductions, unallowable credits or excessive
exemptions on returns prepared for their clients. This includes inflated requests for the special one-time refund of the long-distance
telephone tax. Preparers may also manipulate income figures to obtain tax credits, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, fraudulently. In
some situations, the client (taxpayer) may not have knowledge of the false expenses, deductions, exemptions and/or credits
shown on their tax returns. However, when the IRS detects the false return, the taxpayer — not the return preparer —
must pay the additional taxes and interest and may be subject to penalties. The IRS Return Preparer Program focuses
on enhancing compliance in the return-preparer community by investigating and referring criminal activity by return preparers
to the Department of Justice for prosecution and/or asserting appropriate civil penalties against unscrupulous return preparers. While
most preparers provide excellent service to their clients, the IRS urges taxpayers to be very careful when choosing a tax
preparer. Taxpayers should be as careful as they would be in choosing a doctor or a lawyer. It is important to know that even
if someone else prepares a tax return, the taxpayer is ultimately responsible for all the information on the tax return. Helpful
Hints When Choosing a Return Preparer - Be careful with tax preparers who claim they can obtain larger refunds
than other preparers.
- Avoid preparers who base their fee on a percentage of the amount of the refund.
- Stay away from preparers who claim that many, if not most, phone customers can get hundreds of dollars or
more back under the telephone tax refund program.
- Use a reputable tax professional who signs your tax
return and provides you with a copy for your records.
- Consider whether the individual or firm will be
around to answer questions about the preparation of your tax return months, or even years, after the return has been filed.
- Review your return before you sign it and ask questions on entries you don't understand.
- No
matter who prepares your tax return, you (the taxpayer) are ultimately responsible for all of the information on your tax
return. Therefore, never sign a blank tax form.
- Find out the person’s credentials. Only attorneys,
CPAs and enrolled agents can represent taxpayers before the IRS in all matters including audits, collection and appeals. Other
return preparers may only represent taxpayers for audits of returns they actually prepared.
- Find out if
the preparer is affiliated with a professional organization that provides its members with continuing education and resources
and holds them to a code of ethics.
- Ask questions. Do you know anyone who has used the tax professional?
Were they satisfied with the service they received?
Reputable preparers will ask to see your receipts and will
ask you multiple questions to determine your qualifications for expenses, deductions and other items. By doing so, they are
trying to help you avoid penalties, interest or additional taxes that could result from an IRS examination. Further,
tax evasion is a risky crime, a felony, punishable by five years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine. Criminal
Investigation Statistical Information on Return Preparer Fraud | FY 2006 | FY
2005 | FY 2004 | Investigations
Initiated | 197 | 248 | 206 | Prosecution
Recommendations | 153 | 140 | 167 | Indictments/Informations | 135 | 119 | 121 | Sentenced | 109 | 118 | 90 | Incarceration
Rate* | 89.0% | 85.6% | 84.4% | Avg.
Months to Serve | 18 | 18 | 19 |
*Incarceration
may include prison time, home confinement, electronic monitoring or a combination. |
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Criminal and Civil Legal Actions
Some return preparers have been convicted of, or have pleaded guilty to, felony charges. Additionally,
the courts have issued 175 permanent injunctions against abusive tax scheme promoters and abusive return preparers since 2003.
The following case summaries are excerpts from public record documents on file in the court records in the judicial district
in which the legal actions were filed. California Tax Preparers Sentenced to Prison Terms for Operating Tax
Fraud Schemes On Oct. 6, 2006, in San Diego, Calif., Susan E. O’Brien, a professional tax preparer who
operated “The O'Brien Group,” was sentenced to ten years and five months in prison and ordered to pay $113,179
in restitution. She was convicted on May 2, 2006, for tax evasion, defrauding the United States and aiding and assisting
in the filing of fraudulent tax returns. Co-defendants Robert Richard Evans and William Dean Cook were also sentenced to prison
terms of 78 and 24 months, respectively. In July 2003, O'Brien, Evans, Cook and five others were charged in a 78 count indictment
with various tax crimes related to tax years 1996-2002. According to the indictment and trial evidence, O'Brien prepared
numerous income tax returns that claimed false business deductions and Evans promoted, sold and managed domestic trusts used
by clients to hide their income and assets from the IRS. O'Brien also was convicted of evading the payment of tax on her own
income. The tax evasion scheme resulted in a tax loss to the United States of more than $1 million. Two
Sentenced for Preparing False Tax Returns On Sept. 20, 2006, in Monroe, La., Eddie Ferrand and William
Kennedy were sentenced for aiding and assisting in the preparation of false income tax returns and conspiracy. Ferrand
was sentenced to 60 months in prison to be followed by three years supervised release. Ferrand was also ordered to pay
$255,890 in restitution to the IRS and a $900 assessment. Kennedy was sentenced to 27 months in prison to
be followed by three years supervised release. Kennedy was also ordered to pay $39,020 in restitution to the IRS and
an $800 assessment. According to the indictment, Ferrand, as the owner and operator of Mr. Ed’s Tax Service,
hired, trained and supervised tax preparers employed at Mr. Ed’s, including co-defendant Kennedy. Ferrand, Kennedy
and other co-defendants prepared income tax returns and amended prior year returns by inflating Schedule A deductions and
creating false Schedule C businesses in order to increase taxpayer’s refund. The defendants prepared more than
three thousand returns expanding over 26 states and generating refunds in excess of $6 million. Minnesota
Tax Preparer Sentenced for Filing False Tax Returns On March 23, 2006, in Minneapolis, Minn., Richard
Reiss was sentenced to 41 months in prison for aiding and assisting in the preparation of 84 false tax returns. Reiss
was also ordered to pay a $7,500 criminal fine and $198,958 in back taxes. Reiss prepared tax returns for more
than 30 clients and claimed fraudulent and false deductions such as unreimbursed employee business expenses, mileage expenses,
meals and entertainment, charitable contributions, medical expenses and tax preparation fees, and business losses resulting
from business expenses that were fabricated or inflated. In total, he overstated expenses and deductions for numerous
clients by more than $1 million, which resulted in tax losses of about $198,000. Tax Preparer Who
Used Bogus Business Losses to Wipe Out Clients’ Income Taxes Sentenced to 11 Years in Prison On Feb.
21, 2006, in Los Angeles, Calif., James Earl Wynn was sentenced to 11 years in federal prison following his April
22, 2005 conviction of 24 counts of aiding and advising in the preparation of false income tax returns. Evidence presented
in court showed that Wynn solicited his clients by telling them that he operated a number of businesses in which they could
invest. Wynn told his clients that if the businesses turned a loss, the clients could claim the loss on their tax return. As
part of this arrangement, Wynn offered to prepare the clients’ tax returns charging his clients a percentage of their
tax refunds in addition to a return preparation fee. Wynn did not tell his clients that many of the businesses listed
on their tax returns did not exist at all. None of the businesses listed on their tax returns as part of the tax fraud
scheme ever existed as a partnership, ever filed a partnership tax return or ever sustained the losses claimed on the taxpayers’
returns. Wynn caused more than 2,000 tax returns to be filed with the IRS claiming more than $75 million in
false partnership losses. The tax loss to the government exceeded $10 million. On July 18, 2005, Linda M. Hall,
who once worked for Wynn, was sentenced to 70 months imprisonment and was ordered to pay restitution of $6,339,023.
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