Report says laxity at IRS a risk factor
Investigators: Easier to target groups
WASHINGTON — Lax oversight at the IRS increases the risk that political and religious groups could be unfairly targeted for audits, government investigators said in a report Thursday.
The report raised new concerns about an IRS division that was scrutinized for singling out conservative organizations.
The Government Accountability Office found no evidence that agents improperly audited any groups. But according to a report released Thursday, poor oversight increases the risk that agents could select tax- exempt groups for audits based on their religious, educational or political views.
There are 1.6 million tax- exempt groups in the U. S., according to the report. Fewer than 1 percent are audited each year, a process that can be costly and time- consuming for both the IRS and the group being audited.
“We first learned the IRS was unfairly singling out conservative groups applying for tax- exempt status,” said Rep. Peter Roskam, R- Ill., chairman of the Ways and Means oversight subcommittee.
“This report exposes a new and more egregious frontier of potential targeting in the agency’s audit selection process,” Roskam said.
Roskam’s subcommittee held a hearing on the report Thursday. At the hearing, IRS Commissioner John Koskinen noted that the Government Accountability Office found no evidence that any group had been improperly selected for audit.
Koskinen said the IRS hired someone from outside the agency in 2013 who reviewed the audit selection criteria for the entire IRS.
“He spent several months looking at the criteria used by more than 350 IRS compliance programs, and found no evidence of bias in any of them,” Koskinen said.
The IRS acknowledged in 2013 that agents had improperly singled out Tea Party and other conservative groups for extra scrutiny when they applied for tax- exempt status. The revelation led to ongoing investigations by Congress, the Department of Justice and the agency’s inspector general.
“We are continuing the work begun in 2013 to ensure that the management mistakes made in regard to the determination process for tax- exempt status do not happen again,” Koskinen told the subcommittee.
In 2014, the IRS completed more than 8,000 audits of tax- exempt groups.
About half were chosen because IRS computers detected potential problems on their annual filings. Tax- exempt groups don’t file tax returns, but those with receipts of more than $ 50,000 must file a form that details their revenue, liabilities and program activities. Smaller groups have to file a postcard.
Others groups were selected as part of compliance projects in which the IRS studied types of groups or activities that might be at risk for tax evasion.
More than 1,600 were selected based on referrals or complaints from the public, IRS employees and other government agencies.
The referrals go to specialists, who either recommend an audit or dismiss them. Referrals that deal with political activities, churches or high- profile organizations that have attracted media attention are also reviewed by three- person panels.
IRS procedures are designed to prevent individual employees from unfairly selecting groups for an audit, based on inappropriate criteria. However, the Government Accountability Office report found: “Staff are not required to obtain executive management approval to deviate from these procedures.”
Also, supervisors don’t always document whether they have approved audits, or decisions to cancel audits, according to the report.