Austin American-Statesman

IRS warns summer is high season for scammers

- ByJoyce M.Rosenberg

The summer is high season for thieves claiming to be from the IRS and hoping to scam people out of their money.

That warning comes from the IRS, which notes that scammers use phone calls, emails and even in-person visits to try and scare people into turning over funds.

Scammers go after small businesses as well as individual taxpayers. And they tend to strike in the summer because it’s just a few months after most people have filed their income tax returns, and when people can expect to hear from the IRS if the agency has a question about a return or if tax and/or penalties are owed.

But the government generally doesn’t start communicat­ing with a taxpayer via email or phone calls, and IRS agents don’t show up at your business or home out of the blue. As the agency spells out on its website, www.irs.gov : “The IRS initiates most contacts through reg- ular mail delivered by the United States Postal Service.”

Unless you’ve already been contacted by the IRS, and agreed that phone calls or emails are acceptable, it’s probably not the government you’re hearing from.

More dependence on cellphones has brought an increase in robocalls from scammers, with recorded messages, sometimes delivered in a loud, threatenin­g tone: “You must pay or face the consequenc­es.” The calls may demand that a taxpayer call a phone number and be pre- pared to give a credit card number.

In reality, the IRS sends paper bills if taxpayers owe money. It also doesn’t demand that they use a specific payment method. If you choose to pay with plastic, you have to use a payment processor listed on the IRS website.

The government also doesn’t ask for checks, but does say if a taxpayer wants to pay that way, the check should be made out to the U.S. Treasury and mailed to the address contained in the letter or bill you get.

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