The Internal Revenue Service, state tax agencies and the tax industry issued
an urgent alert today to all employers that the Form W-2 email phishing scam
has evolved beyond the corporate world and is spreading to other sectors,
including school districts, tribal organizations and nonprofits.
In a related development, the W-2 scammers are coupling their efforts to steal
employee W-2 information with an older scheme on wire transfers that is
victimizing some organizations twice.
“This is one of the most dangerous email phishing scams we’ve seen in a long
time. It can result in the large-scale theft of sensitive data that criminals
can use to commit various crimes, including filing fraudulent tax returns. We
need everyone’s help to turn the tide against this scheme,’’ said IRS
Commissioner John Koskinen.
When employers report W-2 thefts immediately to the IRS, the agency can take
steps to help protect employees from tax-related identity theft. The IRS, state
tax agencies and the tax industry, working together as the Security Summit,
have enacted numerous safeguards in 2016 and 2017 to identify fraudulent
returns filed through scams like this. As the Summit partners make progress,
cybercriminals need more data to mimic real tax returns.
Here’s how the scam works: Cybercriminals use various spoofing techniques to
disguise an email to make it appear as if it is from an organization executive.
The email is sent to an employee in the payroll or human resources departments,
requesting a list of all employees and their Forms W-2. This scam is
sometimes referred to as business email compromise (BEC) or business email
spoofing (BES).
The Security Summit partners urge all employers to be vigilant. The W-2
scam, which first appeared last year, is circulating earlier in the tax season
and to a broader cross-section of organizations, including school districts,
tribal casinos, chain restaurants, temporary staffing agencies, healthcare and
shipping and freight. Those businesses that received the scam email last year
also are reportedly receiving it again this year.
Security Summit partners warned
of this scam’s reappearance last week but have seen an upswing in reports
in recent days.
New Twist to W-2 Scam: Companies Also Being Asked to Wire Money
In the latest twist, the cybercriminal follows up with an “executive” email
to the payroll or comptroller and asks that a wire transfer also be made to a
certain account. Although not tax related, the wire transfer scam is being
coupled with the W-2 scam email, and some companies have lost both employees’
W-2s and thousands of dollars due to wire transfers.
The IRS, states and tax industry urge all employers to share information
with their payroll, finance and human resources employees about this W-2 and
wire transfer scam. Employers should consider creating an internal policy, if
one is lacking, on the distribution of employee W-2 information and conducting
wire transfers.
Steps Employers Can Take If They See the W-2 Scam
Organizations receiving a W-2 scam email should forward it to phishing@irs.gov and place “W2 Scam” in the
subject line. Organizations that receive the scams or fall victim to them
should file a complaint with the Internet Crime
Complaint Center (IC3,) operated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Employees whose Forms W-2 have been stolen should review the recommended
actions by the Federal Trade Commission at www.identitytheft.gov
or the IRS at www.irs.gov/identitytheft.
Employees should file a Form 14039, Identity Theft Affidavit, if the employee’s
own tax return gets rejected because of a duplicate Social Security number or
if instructed to do so by the IRS.
The W-2 scam is just one of several new variations that have appeared in the
past year that focus on the large-scale thefts of sensitive tax information
from tax preparers, businesses and payroll companies. Individual taxpayers also
can be targets of phishing scams, but cybercriminals seem to have evolved their
tactics to focus on mass data thefts.
Be Safe Online
In addition to avoiding email scams during the tax season, taxpayers and tax
preparers should be leery of using search engines to find technical help with
taxes or tax software. Selecting the wrong “tech support” link could lead to a
loss of data or an infected computer. Also, software “tech support” will not
call users randomly. This is a scam.
Taxpayers searching for a paid tax professional for tax help can use the IRS
Choosing
a Tax Professional lookup tool or if taxpayers need free help they can
review the Free
Tax Return Preparation Programs. Taxpayers searching for tax software can
use Free File, which offers 12 brand-name products for free, at www.irs.gov/freefile.
Taxpayer or tax preparers looking for tech support for their software products
should go directly to the provider’s web page.
Tax professionals also should beware of ongoing
scams related to IRS e-Services. Thieves are trying to use IRS efforts to make
e-Services more secure to send emails asking e-Services users to update their
accounts. Their objective is to steal e-Services users’ credentials to access
these important services.
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