A politically weaponized IRS needs to focus more on preventing identity thieves from stealing billions: GAO


(BigGovernment.news) Tens of millions of Americans have witnessed the political weaponization of the Internal Revenue Service under the Obama administration, first as health care enforcer under Obamacare provisions and then as a political weapon wielded against conservative and Tea Party groups in the run-up to the 2012 election. Maybe if the agency would focus more on actually doing its job – collecting taxes – it might be more effective.

One of the ways the IRS plays the role of steward over the nation’s tax collections is by not sending refunds to people who don’t deserve them. And yet, the agency sends billions a year in fraudulent claims, thanks to identity theft. Now granted, identity theft is a problem for everyone. But again, an agency less focused on political opponents of Left-wing regressivism and whether or not Mr. and Mrs. Smith have purchased health insurance might have more resources to pour into protecting the taxpayer’s contributions.

As reported by AMI Newswire, a new Government Accountability Office study found that, while the Internal Revenue Service was able to prevent identity thieves from pocketing $22.5 billion in fraudulent tax refunds in fiscal year 2014, more than $3.1 billion was paid out to criminals using other taxpayers’ identities. But according to the GAO, the losses could grow much higher, as criminals use increasingly sophisticated methods to combat IRS security measures.

The IRS has multiple layers of protections in place to detect identity thieves attempting to file bogus tax returns, both automated and in person.

But as the GAO notes, the “sources of stolen identities are limitless,” as are the opportunities for thieves to sell and trade stolen information on the black market to commit an array of other crimes.

The extent of the threat has grown worse as both governments and private industry collect more and more personal information from citizens and customers.

“Identity thieves can hack into government or commercial systems, recruit insiders (such as employees in the healthcare or education industries) to steal PII [personally identifiable information], or purchase or put pieces of PII together to create an identity,” the report said.

The IRS itself was the target of a massive security breach in 2015, when hackers stole information on more than 720,000 taxpayers from the agency’s Get Transcript program, which gave them a wealth of information from taxpayers’ previous returns.

The IRS shut down the Get Transcript program while it worked to strengthen its security protections. The program went back online earlier this month.

The IRS has taken other steps to combat identity thieves, including moving up the deadline to Jan. 31 for companies to file W-2 forms with the agency each year. This will allow the IRS to more quickly assess whether a refund is going to the actual taxpayer, or to an identity thief.

But as the GAO notes, even moves such as this may not be enough.

In March 2016, the IRS alerted payroll and human resource professionals of a new phishing e-mail scheme where “fraudsters pose as company executives requesting personal information on employees, including W-2s.”

According to the report, “[f]raudsters then have the potential to use this information to imitate the legitimate taxpayer and file fraudulent tax returns seeking refunds.”

The GAO report notes that, while the IRS’s efforts to strengthen the safeguards and security measures built into its Taxpayer Protection Program, which is designed to combat refund fraud, are critical, “evidence suggests that the agency’s efforts to authenticate taxpayers in filing season 2015 may not have kept pace with the evolving threat of [identity] refund fraud.”

The IRS last conducted a risk assessment of its TPP in 2012. The GAO recommends the agency conduct a new assessment “to identify new or ongoing risks for TPP’s online and phone authentication” program, and take actions “to mitigate risks identified in the assessment.”

Less time spent punishing political opponents and being the enforcer for Obamacare would likely free up IRS resources needed to mitigate illicit theft from taxpayers.

Norman Leahy of AMI Newswire contributed to this report.

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