All of a sudden because sleazy liars give us wrong information, IRS is coming after US instead of the perpetrators.
I believe the potential for fraud is huge for self-employed people, and a growing number of them are now knowledgeable that not turning in all their expenses can increase their refund.. How are we supposed to know that? How are we supposed to know who is living with them, or whose kids they are?
I don't dispute that we should have an idea of what is reasonable, and if someone owns a million $ house and consistently turns in low earnings, but what is "reasonable" to us and to an auditor are two different things. It is THEIR job to audit -- not ours, and we shouldn't be penalized for what we can't be expected to know.
One rather obvious situation was a 350 lb. woman who cleaned houses for a living and said she made $200 per week cleaning five houses. No bank account. No receipt book. Nothing. She dropped her pencil and was not physically able to pick it up.
One of our members was turned in because an EIC customer was in prison most of the year. How was he supposed to know that?
If I have to audit someone's self-employment income because they get EIC for things that are not obvious two things are going to happen:
a) I will stop doing EIC returns for the self-employed.
b) My self-employed customers will leave - they won't put up with me auditing them anyway.
I believe the potential for fraud is huge for self-employed people, and a growing number of them are now knowledgeable that not turning in all their expenses can increase their refund.. How are we supposed to know that? How are we supposed to know who is living with them, or whose kids they are?
I don't dispute that we should have an idea of what is reasonable, and if someone owns a million $ house and consistently turns in low earnings, but what is "reasonable" to us and to an auditor are two different things. It is THEIR job to audit -- not ours, and we shouldn't be penalized for what we can't be expected to know.
One rather obvious situation was a 350 lb. woman who cleaned houses for a living and said she made $200 per week cleaning five houses. No bank account. No receipt book. Nothing. She dropped her pencil and was not physically able to pick it up.
One of our members was turned in because an EIC customer was in prison most of the year. How was he supposed to know that?
If I have to audit someone's self-employment income because they get EIC for things that are not obvious two things are going to happen:
a) I will stop doing EIC returns for the self-employed.
b) My self-employed customers will leave - they won't put up with me auditing them anyway.
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