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IRS audit finds 42,000 feds cheating on taxes
Mar 10, 2023 11:49:15   #
WNYShooter Loc: WNY
 
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/mar/10/irs-audit-finds-42000-feds-cheating-on-taxes

More than 42,000 federal employees “repeatedly” failed to file their taxes with the IRS, according to a new audit that said the government is limited in its ability to punish the cheats.

Known as “federal employee nonfilers,” the cases are considered particularly egregious since they involve those paid by taxpayer money but shirking taxpayer obligations.

But the IRS devotes little effort to targeting federal nonfilers, according to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. And the law restricts how much information the IRS can share with other federal agencies, so they’re limited in their ability to prod or punish the employees, the audit found.

As of 2021, delinquent federal employees owed $1.5 billion in unpaid taxes.

“Repeatedly not filing a tax return when a taxpayer is required to do so is a brazen form of noncompliance. Federal civilian employees with tax delinquencies have a legal and ethical requirement to be current with their tax obligations,” the inspector general said in the report Thursday.

TIGTA found that tax compliance among federal employees has been trending down in recent years. As recently as 2017, just 108,000 employees were delinquent in filing or paying. But in 2021, that rose to 149,000 cases, out of a federal workforce of 3 million.

That works out to a delinquency rate of about 5%.

More striking were the persistent cheats. The audit found 42,047 employees who missed multiple years of filing or payment over the review period. That works out to about 1.5% of federal employees.

More than 100 employees were delinquent in at least eight years, TIGTA said.

The IRS, in its official response to the report, said the delinquency rates are lower for federal employees than for the public at large, and said its own employees do the best of any agency.

The postal service had the most offenders, with more than 9,000 employees who missed at least two years. The Veterans Affairs Department was runner-up with nearly 6,600 employees.

The Defense Department and the service branches combined for roughly 13,000 cases.

Most of the nonfilers were at the low end of the income scale, with earnings under $100,000. Some 738 of them had incomes of $200,000 or more.

The delinquents generally avoid punishment, the inspector general said, though the exact number of cases referred for criminal investigation was redacted in the new report.

And just 28 of the federal nonfilers were slapped with civil penalties.

Lia Colbert, the commissioner of the IRS’ small business and self-employed division, said nearly 80% of the delinquencies the audit found were “resolved” by last September.

She said the division does try to prioritize enforcement against federal employees.

“However, in recent years, severe staffing shortages, the pandemic and challenges in IRS submission processing centers caused a strain on resources,” Ms. Colbert said in the IRS’s response to the audit.

She agreed with most of the inspector general’s recommendations for improvements, but rejected the idea of making referrals to the Justice Department for federal employees who meet certain criteria for delinquency.

Ms. Colbert said the Justice Department won’t accept systematic referrals based only on criteria, so that idea is “not feasible.” And besides, she said willful failure to file is only a misdemeanor and since the average federal delinquent owes less than $10,000, it’s unlikely they’d end up serving a sentence.

“Pursuing a criminal prosecution that ends in minimal or no imprisonment could ultimately have a negative impact on voluntary compliance,” she said.

The inspector general said that meant lots of people were getting away without consequences.

“We identified over 17,000 repeat Federal civilian employee nonfilers who had not filed an income tax return for three or more years. Yet, these employees continued in their Federal jobs, with pay and benefits, without adequate IRS enforcement scrutiny,” the audit concluded.

The inspector general also suggested the IRS urge its overseers at the Treasury Department to ask Congress to amend the law to upgrade willful failure to file to a felony, and to let the IRS share more information with other agencies about their scofflaw employees.

The IRS agreed to prod the Treasury Department on both matters.

Reply
Mar 10, 2023 11:51:48   #
bcheary Loc: Jacksonville, FL
 
WNYShooter wrote:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/mar/10/irs-audit-finds-42000-feds-cheating-on-taxes

More than 42,000 federal employees “repeatedly” failed to file their taxes with the IRS, according to a new audit that said the government is limited in its ability to punish the cheats.

Known as “federal employee nonfilers,” the cases are considered particularly egregious since they involve those paid by taxpayer money but shirking taxpayer obligations.

But the IRS devotes little effort to targeting federal nonfilers, according to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. And the law restricts how much information the IRS can share with other federal agencies, so they’re limited in their ability to prod or punish the employees, the audit found.

As of 2021, delinquent federal employees owed $1.5 billion in unpaid taxes.

“Repeatedly not filing a tax return when a taxpayer is required to do so is a brazen form of noncompliance. Federal civilian employees with tax delinquencies have a legal and ethical requirement to be current with their tax obligations,” the inspector general said in the report Thursday.

TIGTA found that tax compliance among federal employees has been trending down in recent years. As recently as 2017, just 108,000 employees were delinquent in filing or paying. But in 2021, that rose to 149,000 cases, out of a federal workforce of 3 million.

That works out to a delinquency rate of about 5%.

More striking were the persistent cheats. The audit found 42,047 employees who missed multiple years of filing or payment over the review period. That works out to about 1.5% of federal employees.

More than 100 employees were delinquent in at least eight years, TIGTA said.

The IRS, in its official response to the report, said the delinquency rates are lower for federal employees than for the public at large, and said its own employees do the best of any agency.

The postal service had the most offenders, with more than 9,000 employees who missed at least two years. The Veterans Affairs Department was runner-up with nearly 6,600 employees.

The Defense Department and the service branches combined for roughly 13,000 cases.

Most of the nonfilers were at the low end of the income scale, with earnings under $100,000. Some 738 of them had incomes of $200,000 or more.

The delinquents generally avoid punishment, the inspector general said, though the exact number of cases referred for criminal investigation was redacted in the new report.

And just 28 of the federal nonfilers were slapped with civil penalties.

Lia Colbert, the commissioner of the IRS’ small business and self-employed division, said nearly 80% of the delinquencies the audit found were “resolved” by last September.

She said the division does try to prioritize enforcement against federal employees.

“However, in recent years, severe staffing shortages, the pandemic and challenges in IRS submission processing centers caused a strain on resources,” Ms. Colbert said in the IRS’s response to the audit.

She agreed with most of the inspector general’s recommendations for improvements, but rejected the idea of making referrals to the Justice Department for federal employees who meet certain criteria for delinquency.

Ms. Colbert said the Justice Department won’t accept systematic referrals based only on criteria, so that idea is “not feasible.” And besides, she said willful failure to file is only a misdemeanor and since the average federal delinquent owes less than $10,000, it’s unlikely they’d end up serving a sentence.

“Pursuing a criminal prosecution that ends in minimal or no imprisonment could ultimately have a negative impact on voluntary compliance,” she said.

The inspector general said that meant lots of people were getting away without consequences.

“We identified over 17,000 repeat Federal civilian employee nonfilers who had not filed an income tax return for three or more years. Yet, these employees continued in their Federal jobs, with pay and benefits, without adequate IRS enforcement scrutiny,” the audit concluded.

The inspector general also suggested the IRS urge its overseers at the Treasury Department to ask Congress to amend the law to upgrade willful failure to file to a felony, and to let the IRS share more information with other agencies about their scofflaw employees.

The IRS agreed to prod the Treasury Department on both matters.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/mar/10/i... (show quote)


The federal bureaucracy needs to be thinned out dramatically. It is growing like a cancer at the taxpayer's expense!

Reply
Mar 10, 2023 12:11:16   #
Architect1776 Loc: In my mind
 
WNYShooter wrote:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/mar/10/irs-audit-finds-42000-feds-cheating-on-taxes

More than 42,000 federal employees “repeatedly” failed to file their taxes with the IRS, according to a new audit that said the government is limited in its ability to punish the cheats.

Known as “federal employee nonfilers,” the cases are considered particularly egregious since they involve those paid by taxpayer money but shirking taxpayer obligations.

But the IRS devotes little effort to targeting federal nonfilers, according to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. And the law restricts how much information the IRS can share with other federal agencies, so they’re limited in their ability to prod or punish the employees, the audit found.

As of 2021, delinquent federal employees owed $1.5 billion in unpaid taxes.

“Repeatedly not filing a tax return when a taxpayer is required to do so is a brazen form of noncompliance. Federal civilian employees with tax delinquencies have a legal and ethical requirement to be current with their tax obligations,” the inspector general said in the report Thursday.

TIGTA found that tax compliance among federal employees has been trending down in recent years. As recently as 2017, just 108,000 employees were delinquent in filing or paying. But in 2021, that rose to 149,000 cases, out of a federal workforce of 3 million.

That works out to a delinquency rate of about 5%.

More striking were the persistent cheats. The audit found 42,047 employees who missed multiple years of filing or payment over the review period. That works out to about 1.5% of federal employees.

More than 100 employees were delinquent in at least eight years, TIGTA said.

The IRS, in its official response to the report, said the delinquency rates are lower for federal employees than for the public at large, and said its own employees do the best of any agency.

The postal service had the most offenders, with more than 9,000 employees who missed at least two years. The Veterans Affairs Department was runner-up with nearly 6,600 employees.

The Defense Department and the service branches combined for roughly 13,000 cases.

Most of the nonfilers were at the low end of the income scale, with earnings under $100,000. Some 738 of them had incomes of $200,000 or more.

The delinquents generally avoid punishment, the inspector general said, though the exact number of cases referred for criminal investigation was redacted in the new report.

And just 28 of the federal nonfilers were slapped with civil penalties.

Lia Colbert, the commissioner of the IRS’ small business and self-employed division, said nearly 80% of the delinquencies the audit found were “resolved” by last September.

She said the division does try to prioritize enforcement against federal employees.

“However, in recent years, severe staffing shortages, the pandemic and challenges in IRS submission processing centers caused a strain on resources,” Ms. Colbert said in the IRS’s response to the audit.

She agreed with most of the inspector general’s recommendations for improvements, but rejected the idea of making referrals to the Justice Department for federal employees who meet certain criteria for delinquency.

Ms. Colbert said the Justice Department won’t accept systematic referrals based only on criteria, so that idea is “not feasible.” And besides, she said willful failure to file is only a misdemeanor and since the average federal delinquent owes less than $10,000, it’s unlikely they’d end up serving a sentence.

“Pursuing a criminal prosecution that ends in minimal or no imprisonment could ultimately have a negative impact on voluntary compliance,” she said.

The inspector general said that meant lots of people were getting away without consequences.

“We identified over 17,000 repeat Federal civilian employee nonfilers who had not filed an income tax return for three or more years. Yet, these employees continued in their Federal jobs, with pay and benefits, without adequate IRS enforcement scrutiny,” the audit concluded.

The inspector general also suggested the IRS urge its overseers at the Treasury Department to ask Congress to amend the law to upgrade willful failure to file to a felony, and to let the IRS share more information with other agencies about their scofflaw employees.

The IRS agreed to prod the Treasury Department on both matters.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/mar/10/i... (show quote)


What else is new?
Ban 90% of all non military employees and do away with their departments and the USA will run 100% better.

Reply
Check out Travel Photography - Tips and More section of our forum.
Mar 10, 2023 12:12:57   #
DennyT Loc: Central Missouri woods
 
bcheary wrote:
The federal bureaucracy needs to be thinned out dramatically. It is growing like a cancer at the taxpayer's expense!


Compared to the 400,000 non filers overall .

Reply
Mar 10, 2023 12:14:24   #
DennyT Loc: Central Missouri woods
 
Architect1776 wrote:
What else is new?
Ban 90% of all non military employees and do away with their departments and the USA will run 100% better.


Real smart idea and quick way to shut federal government down - put 2.5 million people out if work.

Reply
Mar 10, 2023 12:18:52   #
Architect1776 Loc: In my mind
 
DennyT wrote:
Real smart idea and quick way to shut federal government down - put 2.5 million people out if work.


Yep, we do not need 2.5 million people who do no work but harass working Americans, produce nothing but paperwork and ruin lives daily. They do nothing so why pay the slugs?

Reply
Mar 10, 2023 13:02:15   #
DennyT Loc: Central Missouri woods
 
Architect1776 wrote:
Yep, we do not need 2.5 million people who do no work but harass working Americans, produce nothing but paperwork and ruin lives daily. They do nothing so why pay the slugs?


There goes the entire airline industry/ congratulations!

Reply
 
 
Mar 10, 2023 16:57:03   #
gorgehiker Loc: Lexington, Ky
 
WNYShooter wrote:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/mar/10/irs-audit-finds-42000-feds-cheating-on-taxes

More than 42,000 federal employees “repeatedly” failed to file their taxes with the IRS, according to a new audit that said the government is limited in its ability to punish the cheats.

Known as “federal employee nonfilers,” the cases are considered particularly egregious since they involve those paid by taxpayer money but shirking taxpayer obligations.

But the IRS devotes little effort to targeting federal nonfilers, according to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. And the law restricts how much information the IRS can share with other federal agencies, so they’re limited in their ability to prod or punish the employees, the audit found.

As of 2021, delinquent federal employees owed $1.5 billion in unpaid taxes.

“Repeatedly not filing a tax return when a taxpayer is required to do so is a brazen form of noncompliance. Federal civilian employees with tax delinquencies have a legal and ethical requirement to be current with their tax obligations,” the inspector general said in the report Thursday.

TIGTA found that tax compliance among federal employees has been trending down in recent years. As recently as 2017, just 108,000 employees were delinquent in filing or paying. But in 2021, that rose to 149,000 cases, out of a federal workforce of 3 million.

That works out to a delinquency rate of about 5%.

More striking were the persistent cheats. The audit found 42,047 employees who missed multiple years of filing or payment over the review period. That works out to about 1.5% of federal employees.

More than 100 employees were delinquent in at least eight years, TIGTA said.

The IRS, in its official response to the report, said the delinquency rates are lower for federal employees than for the public at large, and said its own employees do the best of any agency.

The postal service had the most offenders, with more than 9,000 employees who missed at least two years. The Veterans Affairs Department was runner-up with nearly 6,600 employees.

The Defense Department and the service branches combined for roughly 13,000 cases.

Most of the nonfilers were at the low end of the income scale, with earnings under $100,000. Some 738 of them had incomes of $200,000 or more.

The delinquents generally avoid punishment, the inspector general said, though the exact number of cases referred for criminal investigation was redacted in the new report.

And just 28 of the federal nonfilers were slapped with civil penalties.

Lia Colbert, the commissioner of the IRS’ small business and self-employed division, said nearly 80% of the delinquencies the audit found were “resolved” by last September.

She said the division does try to prioritize enforcement against federal employees.

“However, in recent years, severe staffing shortages, the pandemic and challenges in IRS submission processing centers caused a strain on resources,” Ms. Colbert said in the IRS’s response to the audit.

She agreed with most of the inspector general’s recommendations for improvements, but rejected the idea of making referrals to the Justice Department for federal employees who meet certain criteria for delinquency.

Ms. Colbert said the Justice Department won’t accept systematic referrals based only on criteria, so that idea is “not feasible.” And besides, she said willful failure to file is only a misdemeanor and since the average federal delinquent owes less than $10,000, it’s unlikely they’d end up serving a sentence.

“Pursuing a criminal prosecution that ends in minimal or no imprisonment could ultimately have a negative impact on voluntary compliance,” she said.

The inspector general said that meant lots of people were getting away without consequences.

“We identified over 17,000 repeat Federal civilian employee nonfilers who had not filed an income tax return for three or more years. Yet, these employees continued in their Federal jobs, with pay and benefits, without adequate IRS enforcement scrutiny,” the audit concluded.

The inspector general also suggested the IRS urge its overseers at the Treasury Department to ask Congress to amend the law to upgrade willful failure to file to a felony, and to let the IRS share more information with other agencies about their scofflaw employees.

The IRS agreed to prod the Treasury Department on both matters.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/mar/10/i... (show quote)


Republicans love tax cheats. Their leading 2024 presidential candidate is a big tax cheater.

A 12-person jury in December found the Trump Corp. and Trump Payroll Corp., units of the Trump Organization, guilty on 17 counts including criminal tax fraud, conspiracy and falsifying business records. - Politico

Reply
Mar 11, 2023 11:42:52   #
FrumCA
 
DennyT wrote:
Real smart idea and quick way to shut federal government down - put 2.5 million people out if work.

Doing so might make the govt. run smoother. Who knows? It wouldn’t shut down. Too many embedded bureaucrats.

Reply
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