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Criminals masquerading as Internal Revenue Service agents have bilked
more than $1 million from thousands of taxpayers in the largest such phone scam
the IRS has seen, the agency's watchdog said Thursday. J. Russell George,
Treasury inspector general for tax administration, said more than 20,000
taxpayers have been targeted by bogus tax agents who claim victims owe taxes
and demand they pay with a prepaid debit card or by wire transfer. The thieves
tell victims they could be arrested, deported or lose their business or
driver's license if they refuse, George said in a news release,
the latest in the agency's year-long awareness campaign. Taxpayers who owe are
generally contacted first by mail, and bona fide IRS agents never insist on
payment by debit card or wire transfer, and they do not ask for credit card
numbers over the phone.
The agency began warning last March of a "dirty
dozen" tax scams, including the one involving fake agents
calling taxpayers. Complaints, mostly from immigrants, began coming into the
inspector general's hotline in August and has expanded since then. Residents of
nearly every state were targeted, George said. IRS releases
'Dirty Dozen' tax scams for 2014. On Halloween, acting IRS
Commissioner Danny Werfel warned of a "pervasive
telephone scam." "If someone unexpectedly calls claiming
to be from the IRS and threatens police arrest, deportation or license
revocation if you do not pay immediately, that is a sign that it really is not
the IRS calling," Werfel said in the news release.
Another warning came a week later.
The thieves spoof caller ID to appear to be calling from the IRS, and often
know the last four digits of a target's Social Security number, he said. They
also use common names, fake badge numbers and follow up with official-looking
e-mails. "This is the largest scam of its kind that we have ever
seen," George said. "The increasing number of people receiving these
unsolicited calls from individuals who fraudulently claim to represent the IRS
is alarming." The IG's office is working with major phone carriers to try
to track the origins of the calls, which investigators believe are connected.
Contributing: The Associated Press
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Contributing: The Associated Press
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1 comment:
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