This is how we are to rely on client information:
(d) Relying on information furnished by
clients. A practitioner advising a client to take
a position on a tax return, document, affidavit or
other paper submitted to the Internal Revenue
Service, or preparing or signing a tax return as a
preparer, generally may rely in good faith without
verification upon information furnished by the
client. The practitioner may not, however, ignore the
implications of information furnished to, or actually
known by, the practitioner, and must make reasonable
inquiries if the information as furnished appears to
be incorrect, inconsistent with an important fact or
another factual assumption, or incomplete.
(d) Relying on information furnished by
clients. A practitioner advising a client to take
a position on a tax return, document, affidavit or
other paper submitted to the Internal Revenue
Service, or preparing or signing a tax return as a
preparer, generally may rely in good faith without
verification upon information furnished by the
client. The practitioner may not, however, ignore the
implications of information furnished to, or actually
known by, the practitioner, and must make reasonable
inquiries if the information as furnished appears to
be incorrect, inconsistent with an important fact or
another factual assumption, or incomplete.
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