USA TODAY US Edition

IRS clamping down on refund fraud, ID theft

In 2016, there was a 46% decline in the number of taxpayers who said they fell victim to ID theft

- Kevin McCoy @kmccoynyc USA TODAY

An Internal Revenue Service tax industry crackdown is making progress in the battle against identity theft and tax refund fraud, officials said Tuesday as they announced plans for additional safeguards in 2018.

Fewer federal tax returns linked to identity theft entered the tax system in 2016, and the number of taxpayers who said they’d been victimized also dropped, along with the number of fraudulent refunds issued, the officials said.

Updating the results from the public-private effort launched in

2015, officials from the IRS, tax preparatio­n firms, tax preparers and other industry leaders also unveiled plans for broader use of a 16-character security code on

W-2 form tax forms and additional safeguards for the 2018 tax-filing season.

Among the highlights: uThe IRS stopped 883,000 tax returns with confirmed links to identity theft in 2016, a 37% drop from the year before. The nation’s tax agency also stopped 443,000 potential tax refunds linked to identity theft, a 30% year-overyear decline.

uFinancial institutio­ns stopped 124,000 suspect tax refunds in 2016, half the number detected in 2015. The companies have stopped 127,000 suspicious refunds so far this year, reflecting a handful of cases involving several thousand accounts.

uThe number of taxpayers who told the IRS they had fallen victim to identity theft dropped to roughly 376,000 in 2016, a 46% decline from the year before.

“We’ve seen the number of identity theft-related tax returns fall by about two-thirds since

2015,” IRS Commission­er John Koskinen said in a statement announcing the update.

“This dramatic decline helped prevent hundreds of thousands of taxpayers from facing the chal- lenges of dealing with theft issues.”

The declines stem in part from the first-of-its-kind partnershi­p between the IRS, state tax agencies, major tax-preparatio­n companies and other tax industry participan­ts.

Spurred by continuing spikes in identity theft and tax refund fraud, the agencies have been sharing informatio­n and implementi­ng new electronic safeguards and other measures aimed at thwarting identity thieves.

For instance, tax industry representa­tives have shared dozens of key data points from electronic­ally-filed tax returns that have helped the IRS to identify tax scams and block fraudulent refunds.

As the crackdown continues in 2018, all official IRS W-2 forms used to file federal tax returns for the first time will include a verificati­on code box. A 16-character code will appear on approximat­ely 66 million W-2 forms, more than half of all forms issued, Koskinen estimated. Taxpayers who prepare their own tax returns and tax preparers will be urged to enter the code in the verificati­on box if their form includes the 16characte­r entry.

Additional­ly, the IRS will ask tax profession­als to gather more informatio­n about clients who file business tax returns. The data could include the name and Social Security number of the business representa­tive authorized to sign the tax return, as well as details of any estimated tax payments made before the return was filed.

Koskinen’s IRS term expires in November, so he won’t head the agency for the 2018 tax filing season.

During a media conference call, he said Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has been focused on “finding a successor.”

“We know that cybercrimi­nals are planning for the 2018 tax season, just as we are,” Koskinen said. “This coming filing season, more than ever, we all need to work diligently and together to combat this common enemy.” identity

“We all need to work diligently and together to combat this common enemy.” IRS Commission­er John Koskinen

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