A long-term client has, for at least the last six years, been unable to electronically file because someone is claiming his dependent child.
The couple is happily married, first marriage for both, the child is their own, and the child lives with parents exclusively.
Client has contacted the IRS numerous times (basically each year!), Congressman/Senator, and last summer even the IRS fraud unit (CA?) which BTW never in any way responded to his correspondence.
The IRS does know who the offending person is, but each year the client's efiled return bounces. In recent years we went the try to file, reject, remove the dependent, efile, then return the dependent and file an amended return route, but that can be tedious. For every year the client eventually has received the refunds due by claiming the child on his tax return. (It should also be noted this problem did not appear until client starting efiling.) And, of course, don't forget the child tax credit is in play also.
The client has a reasonably complicated tax return (why I don't like some IRS clerk to have to reenter everything from a paper return!) and is also getting a substantial refund which will, of course, be delayed way past the "normal" refund dates of an efiled return.
What exactly is going on here? Why cannot (or is it will not?) the IRS resolve this problem? The client is beside himself and I totally understand his complete frustration which is now beginning to include a significant amount of anger.
(Yes, all Social Security records have been completely verified as correct. And "filing early" is not a viable option due to having to wait for investment tax documents to arrive, now generally in mid-March.)
FE
The couple is happily married, first marriage for both, the child is their own, and the child lives with parents exclusively.
Client has contacted the IRS numerous times (basically each year!), Congressman/Senator, and last summer even the IRS fraud unit (CA?) which BTW never in any way responded to his correspondence.
The IRS does know who the offending person is, but each year the client's efiled return bounces. In recent years we went the try to file, reject, remove the dependent, efile, then return the dependent and file an amended return route, but that can be tedious. For every year the client eventually has received the refunds due by claiming the child on his tax return. (It should also be noted this problem did not appear until client starting efiling.) And, of course, don't forget the child tax credit is in play also.
The client has a reasonably complicated tax return (why I don't like some IRS clerk to have to reenter everything from a paper return!) and is also getting a substantial refund which will, of course, be delayed way past the "normal" refund dates of an efiled return.
What exactly is going on here? Why cannot (or is it will not?) the IRS resolve this problem? The client is beside himself and I totally understand his complete frustration which is now beginning to include a significant amount of anger.
(Yes, all Social Security records have been completely verified as correct. And "filing early" is not a viable option due to having to wait for investment tax documents to arrive, now generally in mid-March.)
FE
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