August 31, 2006; 04:01 AM
As the Internal Revenue Service begins its private debt collection initiative, SmartTaxInfo.com and the tax agency remind taxpayers there are several simple steps that can provide protection against scam artists.
Scamsters try a variety of tricks to impersonate the IRS in hopes of
tricking taxpayers into divulging personal or financial information or
even conning people out of cash. Scam artists try to impersonate the
IRS in person, by phone, by e-mail and over the Internet.
Currently,
the IRS is beginning its private debt collection effort, where a small
segment of taxpayers who owe back taxes will be contacted by private
sector debt collectors. There are several key elements of this program
that will alert taxpayers they are part of this program and help other
taxpayers from being scammed by impersonators:
• Taxpayer
notification. All taxpayers who will be part of the private debt
collection effort will know they are in the program before they are
contacted by a private collection agency. If you haven’t previously
heard that you’re in the program, be wary of any bill collectors saying
they are working on behalf of the IRS.
• IRS letter. All
participants selected for the program will get a letter from the IRS,
telling them they’ve been selected for the private debt collection
program. The name of the company will be included in the letter.
•
Collection agency letter. All participants will subsequently receive a
second letter, this one from the collection agency, informing the
taxpayer they will be contacted soon regarding back taxes.
•
Money collected. When paying a collection agency on behalf of the IRS,
remember that the check will be made out to the U.S. Treasury – not to
an individual or firm. The collection agency will provide the
appropriate IRS coupon and mailing address for the payment. The
collection agencies will never ask for cash or checks written to
individuals.
• Contact the IRS. If in doubt, check IRS.gov or call the IRS at 800-829-1040 for more information.
“Don’t
be fooled by scam artists claiming to be from the IRS,” said Kevin M.
Brown, IRS Commissioner of the Small Business / Self-Employed Division.
“People
selected for the private collection program will be notified in advance
from the IRS. There are clear processes in place for this program, so
don’t fall victim to fraudsters who are constantly looking for new ways
to trick people.”
The IRS sees a variety of different scams on
different issues. One recent example involves a bogus e-mail claiming
to be from the IRS. In this “phishing” scheme, the scam artist’s e-mail
claims to be from the IRS, tells recipients that they are due a federal
tax refund, and directs them to a Web site that appears to be a genuine
IRS site. The bogus sites contain forms or interactive Web pages
similar to IRS forms or Web pages but which have been modified to
request detailed personal and financial information from the e-mail
recipients.
In general, all taxpayers should keep in mind the
IRS never asks people for the PIN numbers, passwords or similar secret
access information for their credit card, bank or other financial
accounts. If in doubt about someone claiming to be from the IRS or
working on behalf of the IRS, call the agency’s toll-free help line at
800-829-1040.
The IRS has a variety of information about scams
available at IRS.gov. More information about the private debt
collection initiative is also available at IRS.gov.
| SmartTaxInfo.com, Michael Petrushansky, 718-621-0803, SmartTax@gmail.com www.SmartTaxInfo.com |
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