Client phones and says his girlfriend wants him to ask me a question. She had no income all year, but her lawyer says she can claim her kids. I'm thinking, claim them for what?
The lawyer says he (she?) can make up a paper (W-2/1099? I don't know) saying the girlfriend had income. Girlfriend's question is how much income does she need to claim the kids?
I say, now she had no income right? Yes, right, no income. Well, I say, no income means she won't be filing or claiming anything as her taxable income is already zero. OK thanks, says client.
If this girlfriend shows up with any sort of income reporting document, I'll decline the job, as I've already gotten advance notice the doc'll be phony.
I wondered why a lawyer would risk their practice for this nonsense, but, based on jainen's earlier thread about fake W-2's, lots of us (me possibly included, as who wants to tangle with a lawyer?) would merely turn down the job, but not take steps to turn the crook in (to IRS or state bar.) So in practical terms we've minimized the risk to the lawyer. What would you guys do?
The lawyer says he (she?) can make up a paper (W-2/1099? I don't know) saying the girlfriend had income. Girlfriend's question is how much income does she need to claim the kids?
I say, now she had no income right? Yes, right, no income. Well, I say, no income means she won't be filing or claiming anything as her taxable income is already zero. OK thanks, says client.
If this girlfriend shows up with any sort of income reporting document, I'll decline the job, as I've already gotten advance notice the doc'll be phony.
I wondered why a lawyer would risk their practice for this nonsense, but, based on jainen's earlier thread about fake W-2's, lots of us (me possibly included, as who wants to tangle with a lawyer?) would merely turn down the job, but not take steps to turn the crook in (to IRS or state bar.) So in practical terms we've minimized the risk to the lawyer. What would you guys do?
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