San Antonio Express-News

IRS says it has gone after rich tax cheats

- By Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON — The IRS says it has collected an additional $360 million in overdue taxes from delinquent millionair­es as the agency’s leadership tries to promote the latest work it has done to modernize the agency with Inflation Reduction Act funding that Republican­s are threatenin­g to chip away.

Leadership from the federal tax collector held a call with reporters Thursday to give updates on how the agency has used a portion of the tens of billions of dollars allocated to the agency through Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, signed into law in August 2022.

Along with the $122 million collected from delinquent millionair­es last October, now nearly half a billion dollars in back taxes from rich tax cheats has been recouped, IRS leaders say.

The announceme­nt comes as the IRS braces for a more severe round of funding cuts.

The agency cuts previously agreed upon by the

White House and congressio­nal Republican­s in the debt ceiling and budget cuts package passed by Congress last year — which included $20 billion rescinded from the IRS over two years — would be frontloade­d as part of the overall spending package for the current fiscal year that could help avoid a partial government shutdown.

IRS Commission­er Daniel Werfel said that “the impact of the rescission that’s being discussed as part of the current budget will not impact our efforts until the later years.”

He said the agency would still spend its now$60 billion allocation over the next 10 years and spread the need for more funding into later years.

“Our intent is to spend the money to have maximum impact in helping taxpayers,” he said, “to have maximum impact now and in the immediate future.”

As of December, the IRS says it opened 76 examinatio­ns into the largest partnershi­ps in the U.S. that include hedge funds, real estate investment partnershi­ps and large law firms.

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