State turns up heat on tax cheats 182,000 N.Y. filers notified their returns under review BY MICHAEL HILL The Associated Press
ALBANY — New York tax auditors this year more than doubled the number of letters asking residential filers to justify state tax refund claims, saying they are cracking down on hundreds of millions of dollars in tax fraud. The state tax department sent about 182,000 letters to personal income tax filers — almost 2 percent of all residential filers — informing them that their tax returns are under review. The letters do not represent full-blown audits, though recipients are being told they must provide documentation backing up their refund claims before they receive their money. The state is targeting filers who itemized deductions and claimed a refund under state tax credits, such as the earned income tax credit, a withholding credit or a real property tax credit, said agency spokesman Tom Bergin. “We’re finding an increase in suspicious and fraudulent refund claims in these particular credits,” Bergin said. “In fact, we have some active investigations that are going to result in criminal charges.” State tax officials routinely send out such letters, though the number this year more than doubles the roughly 75,000 sent out last year and is far more than the 105,000 sent out in 2006. Bergin said the department is beefing up its audit and review operations and expects to recoup $234 million in refunds that are either inflated or illegal. The letters annually bring in extra tax revenue for the cashstrapped state, amounting to $101 million last year. One type of fraud agency computers are trying to uncover is criminal operations that send in returns under stolen identities, Bergin said. He added that some tax preparers regularly inflate refund claims, sometimes without their clients’ knowledge. Bergin said the Paterson administration is not going after average filers who deserve refunds. “The people who can provide the information will not have a problem,” he said. Recipients of the letter are given 45 days to provide receipts, canceled checks or other documentation to back up refund claims. The agency’s letter says that taxpayers who are not able to support their itemized deduction have another chance to take the standard deduction, “and we will make the appropriate adjustment.” In 2006, there were 9.3 million state personal income tax returns, and almost two-thirds received refunds that totaled about $5.6 billion.
I hardly ever hear of anyone getting a refund from the state. Most everyone I know has to pay 'something' to the state when they file their income tax. And the state has our tax laws fixed that they 'know' most will 'not' be receiving a tax refund but instead will be paying. Gee, these 182,000 people who did receive a tax refund, must really have them baffled.
When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche
“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.” Adolph Hitler
It's really funny,,,,one year we get a refund for $300.00 and the next year we owe $300.00----or whatever the amount is.....they 'give' to me one year and then I 'give' to them the next year----it's a love hate relationship.......
...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......
The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.
STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS