From today's NY Times:
>>The Justice Department filed civil lawsuits in April accusing more than 125 Jackson Hewitt offices of knowingly enabling tens of thousands of middle- and lower-income people to obtain $70 million by falsifying their federal tax returns. Late last week, Jackson Hewitt Tax Service Inc. disclosed in a securities filing that the company itself was the subject of an Internal Revenue Service investigation.
. . . in its securities filing, Jackson Hewitt said: “The company has learned recently that the Internal Revenue Service is conducting additional examinations of tax-return preparation activities of Jackson Hewitt franchisees and company-owned stores. The company is also a subject of an I.R.S. investigation relating to these matters.”
Last month, Jackson Hewitt began an internal review of the company’s practices and procedures, hiring a retired I.R.S. commissioner, Fred T. Goldberg Jr., to oversee the review. Mr. Goldberg, a tax lawyer at Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom, was also briefly the assistant secretary for tax policy in the Treasury in the early 1990s.
In its filing on Friday, Jackson Hewitt said that it “intends to complete the internal review promptly and to implement a variety of enhancements in the areas of compliance and monitoring for the 2008 filings season.”<<
>>The Justice Department filed civil lawsuits in April accusing more than 125 Jackson Hewitt offices of knowingly enabling tens of thousands of middle- and lower-income people to obtain $70 million by falsifying their federal tax returns. Late last week, Jackson Hewitt Tax Service Inc. disclosed in a securities filing that the company itself was the subject of an Internal Revenue Service investigation.
. . . in its securities filing, Jackson Hewitt said: “The company has learned recently that the Internal Revenue Service is conducting additional examinations of tax-return preparation activities of Jackson Hewitt franchisees and company-owned stores. The company is also a subject of an I.R.S. investigation relating to these matters.”
Last month, Jackson Hewitt began an internal review of the company’s practices and procedures, hiring a retired I.R.S. commissioner, Fred T. Goldberg Jr., to oversee the review. Mr. Goldberg, a tax lawyer at Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom, was also briefly the assistant secretary for tax policy in the Treasury in the early 1990s.
In its filing on Friday, Jackson Hewitt said that it “intends to complete the internal review promptly and to implement a variety of enhancements in the areas of compliance and monitoring for the 2008 filings season.”<<
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