For the fourth year in a row, a client has been unable to e-file because his dependent child (pre-teen) has been claimed by someone else.
The parents are happily married, neither has been married before, and the child lives with them the entire year. The Soc Sec number, name on the card, DOB, etc have all been verified to be correct for the child.
The routine now is to try to e-file, receive error code #507, then regroup and file a paper return. Aside from the hassle and delays, it is also a problem that the parents' tax return is fairly complex and I am fearful of some IRS employee messing up the data when it gets typed in.
The client has gone to Social Security, IRS, and all over and basically gets the run around. Each year the parents have eventually been able to claim the deduction, without any further "proof" on their part. Apparently "the other person" claiming the child loses each time.
The client has reached the point, again after four repeat performances, that he is now mad as hades. Is there no way the IRS can put an end to the fraudulent claim? Of course, it goes without saying that NO information as to who has claimed the child is ever divulged.
A contributing factor is also that because of investments, much of the parents' tax information is never available until very late March in the first place. Filing "earlier" is not a viable option. The father also tried to do a credit check on the child, but hit a brick wall there because the child is a minor.
I told the father to write his congressman.........
FE
The parents are happily married, neither has been married before, and the child lives with them the entire year. The Soc Sec number, name on the card, DOB, etc have all been verified to be correct for the child.
The routine now is to try to e-file, receive error code #507, then regroup and file a paper return. Aside from the hassle and delays, it is also a problem that the parents' tax return is fairly complex and I am fearful of some IRS employee messing up the data when it gets typed in.
The client has gone to Social Security, IRS, and all over and basically gets the run around. Each year the parents have eventually been able to claim the deduction, without any further "proof" on their part. Apparently "the other person" claiming the child loses each time.
The client has reached the point, again after four repeat performances, that he is now mad as hades. Is there no way the IRS can put an end to the fraudulent claim? Of course, it goes without saying that NO information as to who has claimed the child is ever divulged.
A contributing factor is also that because of investments, much of the parents' tax information is never available until very late March in the first place. Filing "earlier" is not a viable option. The father also tried to do a credit check on the child, but hit a brick wall there because the child is a minor.
I told the father to write his congressman.........
FE
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