Just curious if any practitioners have experienced an increase in possible identity theft on returns e filed. I have had over a dozen clients whose returns were rejected this year due to the "TIN used on a previously accepted return". I usually see one or two per year in my practice.
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Rejected returns due to SS number previously used
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I have seen an increase. Sad for the taxpayers because they are now frantic as to how are they going to fix. I have a book that I ordered from the Federal Trade Commission called "Taking Charge: What to do if your Identity is Stolen". I give to the Taxpayer. It is really good by explaining exactly what to do.
FTC.gov/IDtheft
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I have had two cases. One was the primary, one was a dependent. And another who has not yet filed, but got a letter from the IRS which said they had received his 2014 return and were questioning it. It's an increase for me, because I have never had ANY.
I checked out the FTC website and the minimum order for one of the booklets was 80, and the other was 100. Even though they are free, I surely hope I won't need THAT many! There was no way to order less.Last edited by Burke; 04-15-2015, 04:19 PM.
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I have been using Pro-Series for many years with very few issues. Every year we get the typical scenario where parent claims the kid but the kid claimed himself or custody battles as to whose year it is etc, but I am referring to the primary taxpayer (long term clients) no EIC issues. I always thought that the IRS matches birth year, last name & SS and yet I'm seeing it more & more. Not easy to explain to the client. A dozen is a low percentage of my client base but I'm just wondering if others are seeing this uptick.
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It's not the software. I know the IRS matches SSN/Name but not sure about birth year. Can anyone confirm? We had a big breach with Anthem policyholders here in Oct. All 3 of mine had Anthem health insurance. None are EIC clients. We got a transcript on the first one, and it was not EIC. Just large wage income reported and tax withholding to generate refund. Standard deduction, no dependents. Nothing else on the return.Last edited by Burke; 04-15-2015, 08:54 PM.
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Question about provider
Originally posted by Y2KEA View PostI had a 1% rejection rate for 2013. This year I had 0%. Not to say IRS is doing anything worth squat to prevent ID theft. mrtax might want to question his software provider. Tell us mrtax who the provider is & what percentage the "over a dozen" represents.
Doesn't the provider receive the reject code from the IRS?
Is so, should you want to find out from the IRS for an answer of the reject?Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion
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Originally posted by Burke View PostIt's not the software. I know the IRS matches SSN/Name but not sure about birth year. Can anyone confirm? We had a big breach with Anthem policyholders here in Oct. All 3 of mine had Anthem health insurance. None are EIC clients. We got a transcript on the first one, and it was not EIC.
The IRS also verifies the taxpayer/spouse birth dates when the PIN type is Self-Select On-Line. That's basically DIY returns - TurboTax and the like. (Rejects F1040-524-01, F1040-525-02, F1040-525-03.) The IRS doesn't have a rejects for the birth date when using practitioner PIN method.
So if someone is using an EFIN (probably stolen) and can thus use the practitioner PIN method of signing a return they don't need to match the birth dates to commit identity theft.
Originally posted by Burke View PostJust large wage income reported and tax withholding to generate refund. Standard deduction, no dependents. Nothing else on the return.
What I was saying about lower income EIC clients having a higher incidence of identity theft is more about the type of people that become victims rather than the type of fraud that is done on the identity theft returns. And shopping preparers to find the one who will get you the biggest refund is perhaps one of the worst things you can do if you don't want your identity stolen. The sort of person who will create a return with a very high refund is often the same kind of person who will participate in identity theft.
Of course bad preparers are only one cause of identity theft. How does one protect themselves against something like the Anthem data breach? And that would affect all sorts of people.
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Originally posted by David1980 View PostThe IRS matches birth year for a dependent if that dependent is listed on Sch EIC. Otherwise they don't match it for dependent. You could see other weird rejects if the wrong DOB was entered for a dependent - like if the child is 17 years old in the IRS systems but you entered a DOB making the child 16 years old and thus claimed CTC.
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Originally posted by TAXNJ View PostWhy & What would you ask ask the software provider?
Doesn't the provider receive the reject code from the IRS?
Is so, should you want to find out from the IRS for an answer of the reject?
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Thanks
Originally posted by Y2KEA View PostThere was a discussion here last year about a high amount of ID theft which as it turns out occurred through a certain software provider. It appeared to be an inside job. I posited the question looking for a pattern.Last edited by TAXNJ; 04-16-2015, 03:46 PM.Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion
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Former Tax Preparer filed Ext w/o consent of TP
I e-filed the ext for my new client and it gets rejected due to "SS# was previously filed". Called tech support and come to find out it was e-filed in another state. Contacted TP and TP replied I didn't authorize that ext to be filed other then with you (me). That is a first for me.
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