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U.S. Government Sues Jackson Hewitt Tax Preparation Franchises in Four States

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    U.S. Government Sues Jackson Hewitt Tax Preparation Franchises in Four States

    U.S. Government Sues Jackson Hewitt Tax Preparation Franchises in Four States, Alleging Pervasive Fraud

    From http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/...169251,00.html

    APRIL 3, 2007

    WASHINGTON — The United States has filed civil injunction suits against five corporations that operate Jackson Hewitt tax preparation franchises, as well as 24 individuals who manage or work at the franchises, the Justice Department and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced today. According to the four lawsuits—filed in federal courts in Chicago, Atlanta, Detroit and Raleigh, N.C.—the corporations operate under franchise agreements with Jackson Hewitt Tax Services Inc. of Parsippany, N.J., the nation’s second largest tax preparation firm.

    The suits allege that one of the individual defendants, Farrukh Sohail of Atlanta, Ga., wholly or partly owns each of the five corporations, which prepared and filed over 105,000 federal income tax returns last year. The five corporations allegedly operate more than 125 Jackson Hewitt retail tax preparation stores in the Chicago, Atlanta, Detroit and Raleigh-Durham, N.C. areas.

    According to the government complaint, Sohail and other defendants “created and fostered a business environment” at the Jackson Hewitt franchises “in which fraudulent tax return preparation is encouraged and flourishes.” Examples of fraud alleged in the lawsuits include filing false returns claiming refunds based on phony W-2 forms; using fabricated businesses and business expenses on returns to claim bogus deductions; claiming fuel tax credits in absurd amounts for customers clearly not entitled to any credits; and massive fraud related to claiming the federal earned income tax credit.

    One complaint cites a Jackson Hewitt franchise customer whose Jackson Hewitt-prepared tax return claimed he was a barber who was entitled to a fuel tax credit for buying 25,000 gallons of gasoline for off-highway business use. The complaint alleges the customer would have had to drive 1,370 miles each day, seven days a week, to consume that much fuel in one year, leaving little if any time to cut hair. Last December, the Justice Department sued a Miami tax preparer alleging similar fraudulent claims of the fuel tax credit. In July 2006, a federal court in Miami enjoined a large Jackson Hewitt franchise from asserting frivolous positions on tax returns.

    The suits further allege that some of the Jackson Hewitt franchises’ managers and employees received kickbacks from customers for helping the customers file fraudulent tax returns. The suits further allege more than $70 million in combined losses to the U.S. Treasury, and seek court orders barring the franchises and other defendants from preparing tax returns for others.

    "Preparing federal income tax returns based on falsehoods and fabrications is a serious violation of the law," said Eileen J. O’Connor, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Tax Division. “The Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service are working vigorously to put a stop to these activities.”
    “When practitioners prepare a false tax return, it has a corrosive impact on the tax system,” said IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson. “I am deeply disturbed by the allegation that a major franchisee of the nation’s second-largest tax preparation firm is intentionally preparing improper tax returns with inflated refunds. I’m particularly concerned that many taxpayers of modest means could actually end up owing the government thousands of dollars if they claimed an improper refund.”

    The five Jackson Hewitt franchises named in the four suits are:

    Chicago: Smart Tax, Inc., d/b/a Jackson Hewitt Tax Service; Ask Tax, Inc., d/b/a Jackson Hewitt Tax Service;
    Atlantat: Smart Tax of Georgia, Inc., d/b/a Jackson Hewitt Tax Service;
    Detroitt: So Far, Inc., d/b/a Jackson Hewitt Tax Service; and
    Raleigh: Smart Tax of North Carolina, Inc., d/b/a Jackson Hewitt Tax Service

    Since 2001, the Justice Department’s Tax Division has obtained more than 230 injunctions to stop the promotion of tax fraud schemes and the preparation of fraudulent returns.

    #2
    I'm in the Raleigh area and one of our local reporters spoke to this guy

    He said, "My preparers don't need to know how to do taxes, it's just data entry for them." And also stated, "A monkey can do this" when referring to the tax prep his employees do.

    WOW!!!

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by JoshinNC View Post
      He said, "My preparers don't need to know how to do taxes, it's just data entry for them." And also stated, "A monkey can do this" when referring to the tax prep his employees do.

      WOW!!!
      Great idea for an advertising campaign: Taxes prepared--UNTOUCHED BY HUMAN HANDS!

      Comment


        #4
        I have discussed employment with a J/H Manager

        He said that he didn't care that I was an EA and in fact was a little concerned about hiring me because the company has found that EAs and CPAs often try to act as though they understand taxes. A J/H employee asks questions as prompted by the computer and per training inputs the answers. The computer then spits out the return and the preparer is taught to be confident in the computer's work. The J/H employee must ask each question provided by the computer and use exactly the language of the computer. He may not, even upon customer request, rephrase the question or try to explain what the question means. He may not ask any question not prompted by the computer. The computer is always right seems to be the corporate motto.

        Comment


          #5
          Don't know

          Originally posted by Bees Knees View Post
          U.S. Government Sues Jackson Hewitt...customer...claimed he was a barber who was entitled to a fuel tax credit for buying 25,000 gallons of gasoline for off-highway business use...would have had to drive 1,370 miles each day, seven days a week, to consume that much fuel in one year...
          if I could pull it off or not, but I have to admit, there's a deduction I had not considered before. And there's grass out back of the office, so maybe if I crank up my mower and hit it about ever' 30 minutes or so...hmm, let's see now...that'd be 12 times a day, seven days, 84 mows, quarter mile each, 21 miles per week...1,092 miles...hmm...not much help. Wait -- I just thought -- the plug is bad and I bet if I don't replace it then I won't get more'n a mile a gallon (wonder what credit per gallon is?). Still, I'm 24K gallons short and just cain't see how that boy managed to burn 25 (reckon he had a ridin' lawnmower?).

          Well, anyway, I've got the same problem the barber does -- who's gonna cut hair/do taxes while I'm practically settin' the woods on fire out back? I'll be busy around the clock and don't know if I can afford the wages to replace myself.

          Hey, I just thought -- Josh's guy answered the question. I'm off to PetCo. Does anybody happen to know if monkeys are subject to minimum wage?

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by JoshinNC View Post
            He said, "My preparers don't need to know how to do taxes, it's just data entry for them." And also stated, "A monkey can do this" when referring to the tax prep his employees do.

            WOW!!!
            Where can I get one of those monkeys?
            You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say will be misquoted, then used against you.

            Comment


              #7
              So Far....

              The one in Detroit was called So Far inc. maybe that meant So Far we have not been caught! What an idiot these people just never think thay will ever get caught. I have never seen the logic behind this thinking it is always just a matter of time. Also no surprise to me that most of these places will go back next year to another JH and not even think twice about it. The old saying there is a fool born every minute and most go to HR or JH for what I have seen.

              Comment


                #8
                Now I know who that "friend" was that told my client that they could deduct that.

                It was the JH monkey!

                Comment


                  #9
                  O.K. Everyone's taken their shots. Talking about the story is fine, but please return to the issues. This forum is not for bash-fests against particular companies.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Jackson-Hewitt corporation might want to check on its franchisees. It makes them look bad.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Resurrect for Bonnie

                      Bonnie hasn't read about this and has asked, so I'm responding to resurrect this thread so she can read for herself.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by Snaggletooth View Post
                        Bonnie hasn't read about this and has asked, so I'm responding to resurrect this thread so she can read for herself.
                        Thanks I appreciate it. I wonder if the monkey is the one in their commercials.

                        Bonnie

                        Comment

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