Scammers set increasingly treacherous traps for swindling taxpayers’ assets, identities, or both. Favorite targets are those most likely to fall for the trickery and least able to afford it: older adults, immigrants, and widows or widowers.
Even if you’re not in any of these categories, don’t let down your guard. Tax scams can happen to anyone. In February, scammers even called the home of the commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Revenue Services, the state’s head taxation official. As Forbes blogger Kelly Phillip Erb wrote while recommending that all taxpayers be on high alert: “It’s tax season. That, unfortunately, also means that it’s fraud season.”
The current popular scam goes something like this: Someone claiming to represent the IRS or the U.S. Treasury Department calls or emails claiming that you owe money, are in general tax-related trouble, or must take some immediate action (usually send them money) – or else.
Callers may also know a lot about you: your name and those of family members, a portion of your Social Security number or additional contact information. Often, scammers stole such information via Internet phishing.
Differentiating a fake IRS representative from the real deal may at first seem hard. One of your key defenses: Know how the U.S. tax agency actually engages in legitimate queries and, just as important, how it does not.
If you defraud the U.S. government, you may indeed incur fines, penalties and, in extreme cases, even jail time. None of these happens in an out-of-the-blue instant, though. Here are five actions the IRS will never take at the initial stages of a tax problem:
- Call to demand immediate payment or call about taxes you owe without first mailing you a bill.
- Demand that you pay taxes without giving you the opportunity to question or appeal the amount owed.
- Require you to use a specific payment method for your taxes, such as a prepaid debit card.
- Ask for your credit or debit card numbers over the phone.
- Threaten to bring in local police or other law enforcement to arrest you.
- Hang up. Just as you never politely converse with a burglar in your home or a thug on the street, there’s absolutely no need to stand on formalities here.
- Report the call. Notify the IRS to help prevent others from succumbing to the scam. If possible, note the caller’s number.
We all benefit when we stand together against tax scams.
Culled from adviceiq
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