I attended the MN Society of EAs meeting last night on Ethics. Paul Roberts, one of TheTaxBook authors was the speaker, and gave an interesting presentation on Ethics. It was a group discussion on real life ethical problems we face in the industry, based on letters submitted to NAEA from their national membership. The answers are from Circular 230 and NAEA’s Code of Ethics and Rules of Professional Conduct.
I thought it would be fun to discuss one of the questions through a poll to see what everyone would answer.
Here is the full question:
One of my clients is being audited for tax year 2004, and I will represent him at the audit. The audit notice indicates that a copy of the taxpayer’s return for 2003 is being requested along with the other items. There were no carryovers, and there is nothing in the 2003 return necessary to validate the 2004 return. The IRS can get the information themselves. I think the IRS is on a fishing expedition. Do we have to turn over the 2003 return?
I thought it would be fun to discuss one of the questions through a poll to see what everyone would answer.
Here is the full question:
One of my clients is being audited for tax year 2004, and I will represent him at the audit. The audit notice indicates that a copy of the taxpayer’s return for 2003 is being requested along with the other items. There were no carryovers, and there is nothing in the 2003 return necessary to validate the 2004 return. The IRS can get the information themselves. I think the IRS is on a fishing expedition. Do we have to turn over the 2003 return?
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