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IRS Warns of Tax Scams |
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March 7, 2006
The agency says those who fall for the scam will likely become victims of identity theft, or have their bank accounts looted. "Fraudsters may use the IRS name because most consumers recognize it, have had prior communication with or from the IRS, such as receiving annual tax form and instruction packages, and have previously provided the IRS some financial data, such as that contained on tax returns," the agency said in a consumer alert. As a general rule, the IRS does not send out unsolicited e-mails or ask for detailed personal information. Additionally, the IRS said it does not ask people for the PIN numbers, passwords or similar secret access information for their credit card, bank or other financial accounts. Tricking consumers into disclosing their personal and financial data, such as secret access data or credit card or bank account numbers, is identity theft. Such schemes perpetrated through the Internet are called "phishing" for information. The information fraudulently obtained is then used to steal the taxpayer's identity and financial assets. Typically, identity thieves use someone's personal data to steal his or her financial accounts, run up charges on the victim's existing credit cards, apply for new loans, credit cards, services or benefits in the victim's name and even file fraudulent tax returns. Identity theft usually causes immediate financial losses for the victims, who may also encounter lingering credit and other problems. Identity theft schemes take numerous forms. Identity theft may be conducted by e-mail (phishing), standard mail, telephone or fax. Thieves may also go through trash looking for discarded tax returns, bank records, credit card receipts or other records that contain personal and financial information. When the IRS learns about schemes involving use of the IRS name, it tries to alert consumers as well as authorities that can shut down the scheme, if possible. The following are examples of recent schemes: Phony e-mails e-Mails claiming to come from tax-refunds@irs.gov, admin@irs.gov or other variations on the irs.gov theme told the recipients that they were eligible to receive a tax refund for a given amount. It directed recipients to claim the refund by using a link contained in the e-mail which sent the recipient to a Web site. The site, a clone of the IRS Web site, displayed an interactive page similar to a genuine IRS one; however, it had been modified to ask for personal and financial information that the genuine IRS interactive page does not require. The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration has reported that it found 12 separate Web sites in 11 different countries hosting variations on this scheme. Bogus letters A bogus IRS letter and Form W-8BEN (Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding) asked non-residents to provide personal information such as account numbers, PINs, mother's maiden name and passport number. The legitimate IRS Form W-8BEN, which is used by financial institutions to establish appropriate tax withholding for foreign individuals, does not ask for any of this information. To protect against potential identity thieves, take the following steps:
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