The Internal Revenue Service and its Security Summit partners are warning
taxpayers and tax professionals of fake IRS tax bills related to the Affordable
Care Act.
The IRS has received numerous reports of scammers sending a fraudulent
version of a notice- labeled CP2000 - for tax year 2015. The issue has been
reported to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration for
investigation.
This scam may arrive by email, as an attachment, or by mail. It has many
signs of being a fake:
- The CP2000 notices appear to be issued from an Austin, Texas, address;
- The letter says the issue is related to the Affordable Care Act and requests information regarding 2014 coverage;
- The payment voucher lists the letter number as 105C;
- Requests checks made out to I.R.S. and sent to the “Austin Processing Center” at a post office box.
IRS impersonation scams take many forms: threatening phone calls, phishing
emails and demanding letters. Learn more at Reporting
Phishing and Online Scams. The IRS does not initiate unsolicited email
contact or contact by social media.
An authentic CP2000 notice is used when income reported from third-party
sources such as an employer does not match the income reported on the tax
return. Unlike the fake, it provides extensive instructions to taxpayers about
what to do if they agree or disagree that additional tax is owed. A real notice
requests that checks be made out to “United States Treasury.”
The IRS and its Security Summit partners – the state tax agencies and the
private-sector tax industry – are conducting a campaign to raise awareness
among taxpayer and tax professionals about increasing their security and
becoming familiar with various tax-related scams. Learn more at Taxes.
Security. Together. or Protect
Your Clients; Protect Yourself.
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