The Palm Beach Post

IRS strikes back as agents make dent in identity theft

Number of victims fell by 46 percent to 376,000 last year.

- Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The IRS strikes back: The tax agency reports that the number of identity theft victims plummeted last year after agents struggled for years to combat what has become a multibilli­on-dollar industry.

The number of victims dropped by 46 percent, to 376,000, the IRS said. These taxpayers had their identities stolen by criminals who used their Social Security numbers and birthdates to obtain fraudulent tax refunds.

The IRS stopped nearly 1 million fraudulent refunds from being issued last year. They totaled almost $6.6 billion, the agency said.

“It’s a much more challengin­g time for the cybercrook­s,” said Mark Ciaramitar­o, vice president for retail tax products and services at H&R Block. “All of the easy paths have been closed.”

Identity theft exploded from 2010 to 2012, and “for a time overwhelme­d law enforcemen­t and the IRS,” said John Dalrymple, deputy IRS commission­er for services and enforcemen­t.

At the IRS, it peaked in 2014, when the agency identified more than 766,000 victims. That same year, the IRS blocked 1.8 million in fraudulent refunds from being issued. They totaled $10.8 billion.

“We’ve driven a lot of the fraud out of the system,” Dalrymple said.

The IRS is a popular target for sophistica­ted identit y thieves because the agency issues more than $300 billion in tax refunds each year.

Several years ago, it was as simple as using another person’s Social Security number and birthdate to fill out a fake tax return claiming a big refund. If thieves filed the return early in the tax filing season — before the legitimate taxpayer — they could get refunds before the IRS received verifying financial informatio­n from employers, banks and brokers.

To make it easier, thieves can get fraudulent refunds on prepaid debit cards that are not linked to bank accounts.

“I think everybody got caught by surprise by how inventive the criminals were here,” Dalrymple said. “I don’t think it was just the IRS. I think in general, the whole idea of identity theft caught everybody by surprise.”

Criminals can steal victims’ personal informatio­n from hospitals, doctor’s offices, universiti­es, prisons — any entity that collects Social Security numbers and birthdates.

In 2015, federal authoritie­s broke up a massive identity theft ring in Alabama and Georgia that netted $10 million in fraudulent refunds. Among the victims: Soldiers injured in Afghanista­n who were being treated at Fort Benning’s hospital.

Last year, authoritie­s broke up a ring in the District of Columbia that tried to obt ain more than $20 million in fraudulent tax refunds. Among the victims: people in assisted living facilities, drug addicts and prison inmates.

In recent years, the IRS has beefed up its computer filters to identity potential fake tax returns. If there are dramatic difference­s in a taxpayer’s return from year to year, it might get flagged for additional review.

Two years ago, the IRS also teamed up with major tax preparers and state tax agencies to share informatio­n and improve security.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Internal Revenue Service agents struggled for years to combat what has become a multibilli­on-dollar industry.
SUSAN WALSH / ASSOCIATED PRESS Internal Revenue Service agents struggled for years to combat what has become a multibilli­on-dollar industry.

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